Languages evolve in punctuational bursts
- PMID: 18239118
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1149683
Languages evolve in punctuational bursts
Abstract
Linguists speculate that human languages often evolve in rapid or punctuational bursts, sometimes associated with their emergence from other languages, but this phenomenon has never been demonstrated. We used vocabulary data from three of the world's major language groups-Bantu, Indo-European, and Austronesian-to show that 10 to 33% of the overall vocabulary differences among these languages arose from rapid bursts of change associated with language-splitting events. Our findings identify a general tendency for increased rates of linguistic evolution in fledgling languages, perhaps arising from a linguistic founder effect or a desire to establish a distinct social identity.
Comment in
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Parsing the evolution of language.Science. 2008 Apr 25;320(5875):446; author reply 446. doi: 10.1126/science.320.5875.446a. Science. 2008. PMID: 18436755 No abstract available.
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