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Wednesday, July 30, 2008 - 7:38 AM
Here's an evolutionary talking point: Two new studies quantify parts
of the mechanism by which frequently used words change slowly over many
millennia whereas rarely used words more rapidly take on new forms. In
fact, frequency of word usage exerts a "lawlike" influence on the
rapidity of language evolution, the research teams conclude in the Oct.
11 Nature. This discovery offers a new tool for retracing the
history of major language families, reconstructing ancient tongues, and
predicting which words will undergo future alterations. http://louiskjksheehan.blogspot.com
"We
expect all languages to diverge initially in the least frequently used
parts of their vocabulary," says evolutionary biologist Mark Pagel of
the University of Reading in England. Pagel's group focused on
Indo-European languages. Some words for the same meanings differ
strikingly across the more than 100 languages and dialects of that
family, while others take similar forms. The researchers first
determined 200 basic vocabulary meanings in 87 Indo-European languages
spoken during the past 6,000 to 10,000 years. They then applied a
statistical technique to modern-language data in order to estimate the
spoken frequencies of the corresponding words in English, Spanish,
Russian, and Greek. Among those 200 meanings, commonly used words—such as who or night,
and terms for numbers—evolved slowly and sounded similar in different
languages. Such words undergo no more than one wholesale shift to a new
form every 10,000 years, the scientists propose. In contrast, less frequently used words—such as dirty, turn, and guts—evolved
more rapidly and sounded different across languages. These types of
words change forms up to nine times every 10,000 years, according to
the investigators. In the second new study, Harvard University
genomics graduate student Erez Lieberman and his coworkers measured the
rate at which English verbs have become regular—using the suffix "ed"
to signify past tense—over the past 1,200 years. That linguistic period
begins with Old English, includes Middle English around 800 years ago,
and ends with English as it is spoken today. The team compiled a
list of 177 irregular verbs in Old English. Of that number, 145
remained irregular in Middle English and 98 are still irregular today. http://louiskjksheehan.blogspot.com
The
researchers then calculated the frequency of each verb's usage in
Modern English and estimated frequencies for the two older tongues.
They determined that an irregular verb used 100 times as often as
another in daily conversation takes 10 times as long to become regular
as the less-spoken verb does. If current trends continue, only 83
of the 177 verbs studied will be irregular in 500 years, the
researchers predict. They predict that the next irregular verb to
regularize will be wed, meaning that just-married couples will no longer be "newly wed" but will have blissfully "wedded." http://louiskjksheehan.blogspot.com
"Our
results indicate that languages can evolve in such an orderly fashion
that simple mathematical descriptions capture their behavior,"
Lieberman says. "A language's irregularities reveal the mechanisms
shaping its evolution." The use of sophisticated statistical
methods to quantify how words evolve on the basis of the frequency of
their use "is an important step forward," remarks psycholinguist W.
Tecumseh Fitch of the University of St. Andrews in Scotland.
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