LANGUAGE Language Introduction n Language one of the

  • Slides: 43
Download presentation
LANGUAGE

LANGUAGE

Language Introduction n Language= one of the oldest, most geographically diverse and most complex

Language Introduction n Language= one of the oldest, most geographically diverse and most complex cultural traits on earth • Prehistoric past – at least 10, 000 languages spoken • Today 5, 000 -7, 000 • Africa and Asia = most linguistically diverse continents • New Guinea = most diverse country w/ isolated tribes speaking over 900 lang

Language Introduction n n Language is critical b/c it’s the means by which other

Language Introduction n n Language is critical b/c it’s the means by which other cultural values are communicated United Nations 6 official languages: • Russian • French • Chinese Spanish English Arabic

5. 1 Where is English Distributed? n Look at English as a case study

5. 1 Where is English Distributed? n Look at English as a case study of how lang is diffused • Eng spoken by ½ billion people (2 nd behind Mandarin Chinese). Nearly all Chinese speakers in China but English speakers distributed across the globe • Eng = official lang of 42 countries, more than any other lang

English Diffusion n Diffusion of English is a result of migration/colonization/imperialism. Every time the

English Diffusion n Diffusion of English is a result of migration/colonization/imperialism. Every time the English colonized a place, they made English the official lang. Modern day English speaking countries is a map of colonialism: • • • To N. America – 17 th C Ireland 17 th C S. Asia mid 18 th C S Pacific late 18 th C S. Africa late 19 th C

English Origins n How did English dominate the British Isles in the first place

English Origins n How did English dominate the British Isles in the first place and why is it classified as a Germanic language? • Celtic tribes arrive @ 2000 BC • 450 AD 3 Germanic tribes from present day Denmark and Germany, the Angles, Jutes, and Saxons invade. Push Celts to remote N and W parts of the island rename it “Angle’s Land” (i. e. England)

Origins of English – cont’d n 1066 England is conquered by French speaking Normans

Origins of English – cont’d n 1066 England is conquered by French speaking Normans who est French as the official lang for 300 yrs. When French lose control, English returns as official lang. During that 300 yrs, Germanic lang was used by the common people and French used by the leaders/conquerors…. the two mingled to form new lang of Eng.

Dialects of English n Dialects: regional variation of a lang distinguished by distinctive vocab,

Dialects of English n Dialects: regional variation of a lang distinguished by distinctive vocab, spelling, and pronunciation • Ex: Southerners say ya’ll, Australians say “mate” n American and British English = diff dialects • Differ b/c of isolation – evolved independently during 18 th and 19 th C http: //www. wimp. com/tangierisland/

Dialects of English – cont’d n Noah Webster created 1 st American dictionary, wanted

Dialects of English – cont’d n Noah Webster created 1 st American dictionary, wanted unique American dialect to increase national pride

Dialects of English – Con’t Webster……. • Ex: substituted “s” for “c” in many

Dialects of English – Con’t Webster……. • Ex: substituted “s” for “c” in many words (“defence” to “defense”) • Ex: eliminated “u” from words like “honour” and “colour” • Changed pronunciation

Dialects of English – cont’d n Dialects within the US – existed originally b/c

Dialects of English – cont’d n Dialects within the US – existed originally b/c of differences in dialects among original settlers • Dialects continue today mostly in the east (esp South and New England) • Isogloss: word usage boundary for any word not used nationally (ex: pop, ya’ll, hoagie) • Dialects become less prominent b/c of mobility

Soda v. Pop Dialect

Soda v. Pop Dialect

Examples of Regional Vocab n n n n n n ALLIGATOR PEAR An avocado

Examples of Regional Vocab n n n n n n ALLIGATOR PEAR An avocado in New Orleans. BETTY A beauty in Los Angeles. BUBBLER A drinking fountain in Wisconsin. BUGGY A shopping cart in the South. BULKIE A sandwich roll in Boston. CABINET A milkshake in Rhode Island. FRAPPE A milkshake in Boston. GAPER'S BLOCK A traffic jam because of rubbernecking in Chicago. GOOBER A peanut in the South. HOT DISH A casserole in Wisconsin and Minnesota. IRON DOG A snowmobile in Alaska. JIMMIES Ice cream sprinkles in Boston. KITTY-WAMPUS Cater-corner in Wisconsin. NEB To nose into someone else's business in Pittsburgh. PARTY BARN A drive-through liquor store in Texas. POKE A bag in Pittsburgh. ROTARY A traffic circle in New England. SHOOTS O. K. in Hawaii. SKROK To spit in Buffalo. STAND ON LINE To stand in line in New York. WALLERED Useless or wrecked in the Southwest. WOOLIES Dustballs beneath your bed in Pennsylvania

Language Families n All lang belong to a family – collection of many lang

Language Families n All lang belong to a family – collection of many lang which come from same original tongue, long ago, b/f written history but have since evolved w/ diff characteristics (i. e. have same ancestor)

Indo-European Family n n n I-E family = largest family…spoken by over 50% of

Indo-European Family n n n I-E family = largest family…spoken by over 50% of world Families divided into smaller branches and groups I-E as 8 branches, 4 BIG ones • Germanic Branch: dominant in N and W Europe (Swedish, Dutch, Danish, English, Norwegian)

Indo-European Family – cont’d • Indo-Iranian Branch: branch w/ most speakers (over 100 lang

Indo-European Family – cont’d • Indo-Iranian Branch: branch w/ most speakers (over 100 lang spoken by over 1 bill people) Indic (Eastern) Group: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh (Hindi, Urdu) n Iranian (Western) Group: Iran, Afghanistan (Persian, Kurdish, Pathan) n

Indo-European Family – cont’d n n Balto Slavic Branch – Russian, Ukrainian, Polish, Czech,

Indo-European Family – cont’d n n Balto Slavic Branch – Russian, Ukrainian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian Romance Branch evolved from Latin spoken by Romans 2, 000 yrs ago. Conquering Romans diffused their lang through the empire. After fall of empire, regions were isolated and lang developed distinctly

Indo-Euro Lang Family Tree

Indo-Euro Lang Family Tree

Indo-Euro Family – most widely diffused language

Indo-Euro Family – most widely diffused language

Pidgins and Creole Languages n When 2 groups meet w/ diff lang a new

Pidgins and Creole Languages n When 2 groups meet w/ diff lang a new lang with new characteristics of both emerges. • Pidgin: simplified form of lingua Franca (usually forms as a simple trade lang); no native speakers; used for communication among speakers of 2 diff. languages (i. e. hodge podge combination - ex. African slaves) • Creole: lang combined between colonizers and colonized/indigenous peoples - blended n Ex: French Creole in Haiti

Indo-European Ancestor? n Called Proto-Indo-European – difficult to prove b/c existed thousands of yrs

Indo-European Ancestor? n Called Proto-Indo-European – difficult to prove b/c existed thousands of yrs before written history. 2 theories…. • Kurgan Hearth: Russia/Kazakhstan, N. of Black Sea, spread by nomadic herders • Anatolian Hearth: present day Turkey – spread by farmers

Other Lang Families n n n Indo-European – 50% Sino Tibetan – 20% (Chinese,

Other Lang Families n n n Indo-European – 50% Sino Tibetan – 20% (Chinese, Cantonese, Thai) Afro-Asiatic 5% - Middle East – Arabic, Hebrew Niger-Congo 5% - Africa (Africa – most diverse languages…unknown #. Over 1, 000 distinct lang and several thousand dialects. Nigeria alone has over 200 distinct lang. Austroneasean – 5% SE Asia Dravidian 5% - parts of India

Global Lang Families

Global Lang Families

Language Preservation n Distribution of a lang is a measure of the fate of

Language Preservation n Distribution of a lang is a measure of the fate of an ethnic group. Lang displays the 2 competing geographic trends: GLOBALIZATION Versus LOCAL DIVERSITY

Language Extinction n n No longer in use by any living people Thousands have

Language Extinction n n No longer in use by any living people Thousands have become extinct over history but process has accelerated in recent past Colonialism in 18 th and 19 th C and globalization of 20 th C driven many lang to extinction Ex: when Spanish arrive in Amazon found over 500 lang. Today 57 survive, half of which will die in next few yrs as elderly speakers pass away

Language Extinction – cont’d n n Pressures of econ and social acculturation responsible for

Language Extinction – cont’d n n Pressures of econ and social acculturation responsible for today’s extinction (i. e. adoption of cultural traits like lang by one group under the influence of another) Lang ext can lead to cultural extinction: an entire culture obliterated by war, disease, acculturation. When a culture and its lang disappear it takes w/ it a tremendous amnt of history

Language Extinction n “To lose my mother tongue would be like being forced into

Language Extinction n “To lose my mother tongue would be like being forced into language exile. I would lose my family’s history and culture. ” n n James Jansen – director of “In Language We Live” – documentary on extinct languages http: //fora. tv/2009/03/20/Daniel_Everett_Endangered_Lan guages_and_Lost_Knowledge

Language Extinction

Language Extinction

Language Revival n Movements to revive near extinct lang • Parts of Scotland, Ireland,

Language Revival n Movements to revive near extinct lang • Parts of Scotland, Ireland, Wales – revive Celtic • Hebrew revived after WW II when Israel became a state. Hebrew made one of two official lang (with Arabic). B/x that Hebrew was used primarily for religious services and was not commonly spoken. • (Official lang: all govnt business occurs in this lang – schools, documents, road signs, etc. )

Official Languages…. n n n Lang given a unique status in the constitution of

Official Languages…. n n n Lang given a unique status in the constitution of countries Govnt’ makes a declarative statement Typically lang used in nation’s legislative bodies Over half the countries in the world have official languages Some have one; others have more than one USA doesn’t have an official language…. should we?

Official Languages

Official Languages

Multi Lingual States n n Have multiple official lang – can cause difficulty Belgium-

Multi Lingual States n n Have multiple official lang – can cause difficulty Belgium- Walloons in S speak French, Flemings in N speak Flemish. Lang boundary sharply divides country. Each region has own elected assembly that runs their region and often antagonism betwn the two.

Multi Lingual States n CANADA – French and English. Quebec has had separatist movement

Multi Lingual States n CANADA – French and English. Quebec has had separatist movement in past. Separation only voted down by slim majority

Multi Lingual States n Basques – Pyrenees mountains in N. Spain, ETA – separatist

Multi Lingual States n Basques – Pyrenees mountains in N. Spain, ETA – separatist movement – engaged in terrorist attacks

Global Dominance of English n n Globalization produces a need for a common lang

Global Dominance of English n n Globalization produces a need for a common lang of communication. Today that lang is English. Lingua Franca: when people of diff lang need to communicate quickly and efficiently they use a lingua franca…a lang of international communication. (ex: Russian was t he lingua franca of USSR)

English = Global Lingua Franca n n n Polish airline pilot flying over France

English = Global Lingua Franca n n n Polish airline pilot flying over France speaks Eng to air traffic control Eng = official lang in many factories and businesses around the globe Most info on WWW = in Eng Lang of pop culture = Eng Among EU countries, 83% of high scholars speak Eng

English = Lingua Franca n n Japanese schools require 6 yrs of Eng and

English = Lingua Franca n n Japanese schools require 6 yrs of Eng and Japanese government has considered making Eng an official 2 nd lang Universities around the globe that teach in Eng are often most competitive b/c students feel it’s necessary to enter global economy

n Modern English is very difficult to learn for non-native speakers b/c of odd

n Modern English is very difficult to learn for non-native speakers b/c of odd spellings, unusual grammar rules, lots of exceptions to the rule (Eng is hodge podge of Celts, Welsh, Normans, Vikings, mixed with Romance languages, etc. )