The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo...

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The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University

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Page 1: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

The Origins and Development of the English Language

Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English

John Algeo and Thomas Pyles

Michael Cheng National Chengchi University

Page 2: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Similarities between languages

English:

mom

miaow-miaow

me

pistachio

choose

glide

Welsh mam

Chinese mi-mi

Swahili mimi

Italian pistacchio

French choisir

Swedish glida

Page 3: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

One original language?

Some languages share many common featuresLanguage familyCognates – languages within a language familyNot a biological family – languages don’t get born and die at specific times, or separate creatures from their parents

Page 4: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Models of languages

Family tree

Wave model

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http://farm1.static.flickr.com/226/472574816_7a659b8d85.jpghttp://www.answers.com/topic/wave-model

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http://www.intersolinc.com/newsletters/images/Language%20Tree.gif

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English – fatherGerman – VaterDutch – vaderIcelandic – faðerNorwegian – fader

http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/34/2034-004-9211C072.gif

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The language spoken in England is related to the language spoken in India

http://etc.usf.edu/maps/pages/2900/2965/2965.jpg

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The language in the Bible is related to the language in the Rig Veda

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Page 12: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

William Jones (September 28, 1746 – April 27, 1794)

Greek, Latin, Persian, Arabic, Chinese

Knew 13 languages; familiar with 28

1768 Oxford

1773 law degree

1783 Supreme Court judge in Calcutta

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Indian culture was a new subject for European scholarship1786 – Sanskrit bore a resemblance to Greek, Latin, Gothic, Celtic, and possibly PersianSanskrit: pitar Greek: patēr Latin: paterSuggested a common root language that no longer exists

Page 14: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Languages from Iceland to India are related to a common languageBased on the geographic locations of these languages, we now call the language that Jones hypothesized Proto Indo-European

Page 15: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Jones’ philologer passage, 1786

His third annual discourse before the Asiatic Society on the history and culture of the Hindus (delivered on February 2, 1786 and published in 1788) with the famed "philologer" passage is often cited as the beginning of comparative linguistics and Indo-European studies. This is Jones' most quoted passage, establishing his tremendous find in the history of linguistics:

The Sanscrit language, whatever be its antiquity, is of a wonderful structure; more perfect than the Greek, more copious than the Latin, and more exquisitely refined than either, yet bearing to both of them a stronger affinity, both in the roots of verbs and the forms of grammar, than could possibly have been produced by accident; so strong indeed, that no philologer could examine them all three, without believing them to have sprung from some common source, which, perhaps, no longer exists; there is a similar reason, though not quite so forcible, for supposing that both the Gothic and the Celtic, though blended with a very different idiom, had the same origin with the Sanscrit; and the old Persian might be added to the same family.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Jones_(philologist)

Page 16: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

The Proto Indo-European people

Who were the people who spoke Proto Indo-European and where did they come from?

Page 17: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

PIE dispersion hypotheses

Kurgan Migration

Anatolian Farmer

Balkan

Black Sea Flood

Paleolithic Continuity Theory

Page 18: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Kurgan Migration--Gimbutas

Cognates for:– Alder, apple, ash, beech, birch, elm, hazel,

linden, oak, willow, yew– Wolf, bear, lox

No common words for:– Olive, cypress, palm– Ocean

Suggests inland culture in temperate zone

Page 19: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Kurgan Culture

Herded domesticated animals

Mobile – used wagons

Warrior nobility

Worshipped sky god associated with thunder

Sun, horse, boar, snake

Elaborate burials in mounds (kurgans)

Page 20: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Zeus pater

Jupitar

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5000 BCE

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Kurgans 4000 BCE

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3000 BCE Anatolian

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Expansion 2000 BCE

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Evolution 500 BCE

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500 CE Huns invade from East

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Medieval 1500 CE Turks invade

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Indo-European languages today

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World Language families

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Official Indo-European languages today

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Armenian homeland

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Page 34: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Features of Proto Indo-European

Types of languages: Isolating, Agglutinative, InflectiveIsolating– Every morpheme forms a different word– Chinese

Agglutinative (Incorporative)– Combine grammatical morphemes with a lexical stem– Grammatical morphemes are discrete & don’t change– Strung onto the lexical stem– Swahili, Turkish

Page 35: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Agglutinative example

SwahiliI will like you: nitakupenda– ni – ta – ku – penda– (I) (future) (2nd person object) (verb stem: like)

I liked you: nilakupenda– ni – la – ku – penda– (I) (past) (2nd person object) (verb stem: like)

I like him: nitampenda– ni – ta – m – penda– (I) (future) (him as object) (verb stem: like)

Page 36: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Inflective languages

Inflective– Inseparable inflections are fused to the lexical

stem– Greek, Latin– I love: Amo– Am – o– (love) (first person, singular, present tense,

indicative)

Page 37: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

What kind of language is English?

says– inflective

unfriendliness– agglutinative

the, for, to, by, no– isolating

Page 38: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

PIE Morphology

Parts of speech– Nouns/Adjectives– Pronouns– Verbs– Prepositions

Nouns/Adjectives and Pronouns were inflected for Case, Number, and Gender

Page 39: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Noun/Adj Infections: 8 cases

Nominative: They saw me. (subject)

Vocative: Officer, I need help. (person addressed)

Accusative: They saw me. (direct object)

Genitive: Shakespeare’s play. (possessor or source)

Dative: Give her a hand. (indirect object, recipient)

Ablative: He abstained from it. (what is separated)

Locative: We stayed home. (place, where)

Instrumental: She ate with chopsticks. (means, instrument)

Page 40: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Germanic cases

Nominative: They saw me. (subject)

– Vocative: Officer, I need help. (person addressed)

Accusative: They saw me. (direct object)

Genitive: Shakespeare’s play. (possessor or source)

Dative: Give her a hand. (indirect object, recipient)• Ablative: He abstained from it. (what is separated)

• Locative: We stayed home. (place, where)

– Instrumental: She ate with chopsticks. (means, instrument)

Page 41: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Noun/Adj Number and Gender

Number: singular, plural, dual

Gender: male, female, neuter

Page 42: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Proto Indo-European Nouns

Singular

Nom.

Voc.

Acc.

Gen.

Dat.

Abl.

Loc.

Ins.

*ekwos

*ekwe

*ekwom

*ekwoso

*ekwōy

*ekwōd

*ekwoy

*ekwō

Plural

Nom/Voc

Acc.

Gen.

Dat./Abl.

Loc.

Ins.

*ekwōs

*ekwons

*ekwōm

*ekwobhyos

*ekwoysu

*ekwōys

Page 43: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Pronouns

Cases (3)

Number (3)

Gender (3)

Person: first, second, third

Page 44: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Verb Inflections

Person

Number

Aspect (kind of like tense): Completion, duration, repetition of action

Voice

Mood

Page 45: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

IE Verb Aspect

Present: continuing action in progressImperfect: continuing action in the pastAorist: momentary action in pastPerfect: completed actionPluperfect: completed action in the pastFuture: actions to come(Evolved into only present and past tense in Germanic languages)

Page 46: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

IE Voice

Active

Passive

Middle (reflexive)

Germanic lost the passive and middle voices and expressed these notions by phrases rather than inflections

Page 47: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

IE Mood

Indicative: statements or questions of fact

Imperative: expressing commands

Optative: expressive wishes

Subjunctive: expressing will

Injunctive: expressing unreality

Page 48: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

IE Mood evolution into Germanic

Indicative: statements or questions of fact– Imperative: expressing commands

Optative(Subjunctive): expressive wishes• Subjunctive: expressing will

• Injunctive: expressing unreality

Page 49: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Proto Indo-European was an inflective language: Verb inflectionsEnglish Sanskrit Greek Latin I-EI bear

you bear

he bears

we bear

you bear

they bear

bharā-mi

bhara-si

bhara-ti

bharā-mas

bhara-tha

bhara-nti

pherōpherei-s

pherei

phero-mes

phere-te

phero-nti

ferōfer-s

fer-t

feri-mus

fer-tis

feru-nt

*bherō*bheresi

*bhereti

*bheromes

*bherete

*bheronti

Page 50: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Word Order

Greenburg (Some Universals of Grammar)SVO languages:– verb + object: The workman made a horn.– noun + modifier: the size of the building– conjunction + noun: the Senate and the House– preposition + object: Harold fought with him.

SOV languages usually reverse these features

Page 51: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Word Order

Most Indo-European languages are SVOProto Indo-European was SOVProto-Germanic had more SOV characteristics than modern GermanEnglish is evolving to being more SVO in characteristics– 10th century 84.4% of possessives before nouns– 14th century 15.6% of possessives before nouns– the building’s size vs. the size of the building

Page 52: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

PIE Phonology

Prosody: – Accent (stress) based on pitch differences– Free accent: could occur on different syllables

depending on the form of the word Germanic Prosody– Word stress based on loudness not pitch– Primary stress on root syllable– Weak stress on other syllables– Intermediate stress on secondary root or prefix

Later Germanic word stress became fixed on first syllable

Page 53: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

PIE Consonants

Stops, Fricative, Resonants, Laryngeal

Fricative [s]

Resonants [m, n, l, r, j, w]

Stops:

Bilabial Dental Velar Labiovelar

Voiceless p t k kw

Voiced b d g gw

Voiced Aspirated

bh dh gh ghw

Page 54: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

First Sound Shift – Grimm’s Law

In the first millennium BCE IE stops transformed into different stops in Germanic languages

Probably took several centuries to complete the change

Page 55: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Voiced aspirated stops

Indo-Euro bh

bhrāter

dh

dhug(h)tēr

gh

ghosti

Latin f-/-b-

frāter

f-/-b- h-/-d-/-g-

hostis

Greek ph th

thugatēr

kh

Germanic b

brother

d

daughter

g

guest

Page 56: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Voiceless stops

Indo-Euro p

pətēr

t

treyes

k

krn-

Latin p

pater

t

tres

k

cornu-

Greek p t k

Germanic f

father

θthree

h

horn

Page 57: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Voiced stops

Indo-Euro b

treb/abel-

d

dwō/drew

g

genu-/gwen-

Latin b

trabs

d

duo

g

genu

b (Russian)

jabloko

d (Greek)

drūs (oak)

g (Greek)

gunē

Germanic p

thorp/apple

t

two/tree

k

knee/queen

Page 58: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Exceptions

After s– spuo – spit– stella – star

After voiceless stop– octo – eahta– capto - hafta

Page 59: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

More Exceptions

PIE – pətēr

Latin – pater

Greek – patēr

English – father

Gothic – fadar [faðar]

Icelandic faðir

Old English – fæder [fæðer]

Page 60: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Verner’s Law: Surrounded by voiced sounds after unstressed syllable

IE voiceless stops

Germanic Verner’s Law

Exception

p f β b

t θ ð d

k x/h γ g

s z r

Page 61: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Examples of Verner’s Law

was – were

exert, exist vs. exercise, exigent

OE: leosan “to lose” vs. -loren “lost” (lovelorn)

Page 62: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

http://www.danshort.com/ie/iecentum.htm

http://www.danshort.com/ie/iesatem.htm

Page 63: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Colin Renfrew’s tree

Page 64: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

Major Changes from PIE to Germanic

Page 65: The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 4: The Backgrounds of English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University.

West Germanic Languages