| Literature DB >> 28738867 |
Abstract
Human language is unique among all forms of animal communication. It is unlikely that any other species, including our close genetic cousins the Neanderthals, ever had language, and so-called sign 'language' in Great Apes is nothing like human language. Language evolution shares many features with biological evolution, and this has made it useful for tracing recent human history and for studying how culture evolves among groups of people with related languages. A case can be made that language has played a more important role in our species' recent (circa last 200,000 years) evolution than have our genes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28738867 PMCID: PMC5525259 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-017-0405-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Linguistic descent with modification spanning nearly three millenniaa
| Word | Homeric Greek | Modern Greek |
|---|---|---|
| One | eis | ena |
| Day | emar | emera |
| Two | dyo (thuo) | dyo |
| Father | pater | pateras |
| To eat |
| faei |
| Bird |
| pouli |
aHomeric Greek of the Iliad dates from ~750 BCE. Words in bold have been replaced in Modern Greek
Fig. 1.Phylogenetic tree of a small subset of the approximately 400 or so Indo-European languages. Words that the languages use for the meaning ‘hand’ are colour-coded to identify cognate classes. Rectangles along the branches identify regions of the tree where new cognate classes might have arisen. Here the French and Spanish languages share cognate forms for ‘hand’ derived from an earlier Latin form ‘manus’. French and Spanish are part of the familiar grouping of Romance languages. By comparison, the word ‘hand’ is cognate between English and German and this cognate class identifies part of the Germanic grouping of languages. The words for ‘hand’ in Greek and in the extinct Anatolian languages Hittite and Tocharian form two additional cognate sets. Combining many different cognate sets from many different vocabulary items allows investigators to draw detailed phylogenetic trees of entire language families (see text)
Some parallels between biological and linguistic evolution
| Biological evolution | Language evolution |
|---|---|
| Discrete heritable units (for example, nucleotides, amino acids and genes) | Discrete heritable units (for example, words, phonemes and syntax) |
| DNA copying | Teaching, learning and imitation |
| Mutation (for example, many mechanisms yielding genetic alterations) | Innovation (for example, formant variation, mistakes, sound changes, and introduced sounds and words) |
| Homology | Cognates |
| Natural selection | Social selection and trends |
| Drift | Drift |
| Speciation | Language or cultural splitting |
| Concerted evolution | Regular sound change |
| Horizontal gene transfer | Borrowing |
| Hybridization (for example, horse with zebra and wheat with strawberry) | Language Creoles (for example, Surinamese) |
| Geographic clines | Dialects and dialect chains |
| Fossils | Ancient texts |
| Extinction | Language death |