Historical Linguistics
Historical linguistics studies language change.
Change occurs in every human language, both ancient and modern.
Sir William Jones was the first to propose a genetic relation between different languages.
August Schleicher proposed family tree model of language change in 1871
Johannes Schmidt proposed wave model of language change in 1872
There are four explanations for similarities across languages:
1. genetic relationship (a historical relationship)
2. borrowing (substratum/superstratum influences)
3. universal tendencies
4. chance
Linguists use comparative method to establish genetic relationships
1. Compile cognate sets, eliminate any borrowings
2. Determine the sound correspondences
3. Reconstruct a sound for each position
4. Check for regularity of sound changes in other cognate sets
5. Use changes to reconstruct proto-forms (mark with asterisk)->proto-language
6. Reconstruct family tree
Jacob Grimm was the first to point to the systematic character of phonological change
He proposed Grimm’s Law to account for innovations common to Germanic language family
Borrowing occurs when languages come into contact
Areal features indicate languages were in contact over long periods—sprachbund
Universal tendencies limit the arbitrariness of the sound meaning correspondence
Chance can also produce apparent cognates
There are limits to linguistic reconstruction—10,000 years
Historical linguistics also makes it possible to reconstruct culture
This week’s lecture notes
Assignment #8: ex. 1, p. 516; ex. 6, p. 517; ex. 25, p. 521; ex. 36, p. 523
Due: November 6th