| Literature DB >> 29410636 |
Johanna Nichols1,2,3.
Abstract
An attractor, in complex systems theory, is any state that is more easily or more often entered or acquired than departed or lost; attractor states therefore accumulate more members than non-attractors, other things being equal. In the context of language evolution, linguistic attractors include sounds, forms, and grammatical structures that are prone to be selected when sociolinguistics and language contact make it possible for speakers to choose between competing forms. The reasons why an element is an attractor are linguistic (auditory salience, ease of processing, paradigm structure, etc.), but the factors that make selection possible and propagate selected items through the speech community are non-linguistic. This paper uses the consonants in personal pronouns to show what makes for an attractor and how selection and diffusion work, then presents a survey of several language families and areas showing that the derivational morphology of pairs of verbs like fear and frighten, or Turkish korkmak 'fear, be afraid' and korkutmak 'frighten, scare', or Finnish istua 'sit' and istutta 'seat (someone)', or Spanish sentarse 'sit down' and sentar 'seat (someone)' is susceptible to selection. Specifically, the Turkish and Finnish pattern, where 'seat' is derived from 'sit' by addition of a suffix-is an attractor and a favored target of selection. This selection occurs chiefly in sociolinguistic contexts of what is defined here as linguistic symbiosis, where languages mingle in speech, which in turn is favored by certain demographic, sociocultural, and environmental factors here termed frontier conditions. Evidence is surveyed from northern Eurasia, the Caucasus, North and Central America, and the Pacific and from both modern and ancient languages to raise the hypothesis that frontier conditions and symbiosis favor causativization.Entities:
Keywords: attractor; causative; language spread; linguistic frontier conditions; linguistic symbiosis; mixed language; selection; verb
Year: 2018 PMID: 29410636 PMCID: PMC5787147 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.02356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1m-T pronoun paradigms (N = 230). Red = m-T paradigm present; white = absent (Nichols and Peterson, 2013a,b). http://wals.info/feature/136A#2/24.8/153.6.
Figure 2n-m pronouns (N = 230). Red = n-m paradigm present; white = absent; pink = non-paradigm present (Nichols and Peterson, 2013a,b). http://wals.info/feature/137A#2/24.8/153.6.
Some causal/non-causal verb pairs.
| ‘fear, be afraid’ | ‘frighten, scare’ | |
| Macedonian | plaši | |
| Russian | bojat'- | pugat' |
| Estonian | hirmuma | hirmu- |
| Norwegian | frykte | skremme |
| Catalan | témer, tenir por | espantar, esporuguir |
| ‘break’ (intransitive) | ‘break’ (transitive) | |
| Czech | lomit | lomit |
| Spanish | romper- | romper |
| Aymara | p'aki- | p'aki- |
| Kazakh | synu | syn- |
| German | brechen | brechen |
The suffix or other morphology deriving one from the other is boldface. Hyphens are for clarity (they are not orthographic in the languages).
Surveyed causal-noncausal verb pairs.
| laugh | make laugh, amuse | (come to) boil | (bring to) boil |
| die | kill | burn, catch fire | burn, set afire |
| sit | seat | break | break |
| eat | feed | open | open |
| learn | teach | be/get dry | dry (off, out) |
| see | show | straight | straighten (out) |
| be/get angry | anger, make angry | hang, dangle | hang (up) |
| fear, afraid | scare, frighten | turn over | turn over |
| hide | hide | fall | drop |
Animate, inanimate = typically undergone by animate or inanimate entity.
Figure 3Distribution of high and low frequencies of causativization in the 9-pair verb list (N = 200). Black = above mean; blue = below mean (Mean = 54%).
Avar-Andic-Tsezic pronouns.
| Avar | dun | mun | nił | niž | nuž |
| Godoberi (Andic) | den | min | ié | išše | bitté |
| Hunzib (Tsezic) | de | me | ile | miže |
Nominative case only. 1sg = first person singular, 2pl = second person plural, etc.
Avar verb pairs.
| ‘laugh’, ‘make laugh’ | beł-ize | beł-iz- |
| ‘sit’, ‘seat’ | k'us-ize | k'us-iz- |
| ‘eat’, ‘feed’ | k'wan-aze | k'wan-az- |
| ‘see’, ‘show’ | bix-ize | bix-iz- |
| ‘get angry’, ‘make angry’ | ccin+daxx-ine | ccin+daxx-in- |
| ‘fear’, ‘frighten’ | - hinq'-ize | - hinq'-iz- |
| ‘hide’ | baxč-ize | baxč-ize; |
| baxč-iz- |
Causativizing suffix bold. Hyphens (not orthographic) segment off the infinitive ending and the causative suffixx.
Eastern and central Caucasus: Proportion of the nine verb pairs that use causativization.
| Avar sphere: | Avar | 0.72 |
| Akhvakh | 0.89 | |
| Karata | 0.89 | |
| Bagwalal | 0.78 | |
| Godoberi | 0.89 | |
| Tsez | 0.78 | |
| Hinuq | 0.67 | |
| Hunzib | 0.50 | |
| Nearby: | Lak | 0.50 |
| Dargwa | 0.67 | |
| Chechen | 0.67 | |
| Distant: | Ingush | 0.56 |
| Archi | 0.39 | |
| Udi | 0.56 | |
| Tabassaran | 0.25 | |
| Rutul | 0.11 | |
| Tsakhur | 0.25 | |
| Lezgi | 0.56 |
Languages are listed within groups in order of increasing distance from the Avar capital (in the Avar sphere this amounts to increasing altitude). Hunzib is peripheral to the Avar sphere; its winter pastures and other connections were in Georgia to the south.
The Turko-Mongol steppe and neighbor Tungusic: Proportion of the nine verb pairs that use causativization.
| Turkic | Tatar | 0.88 |
| Kazakh | 1.00 | |
| Turkmen | 1.00 | |
| Chuvash | 1.00 | |
| Yakut | 0.88 | |
| Uighur | 0.75 | |
| Kirgiz | 0.89 | |
| Tuvan | 0.88 | |
| Khakas | 0.67 | |
| Mongolic | Khalkha | 0.75 |
| Buriat | 1.00 | |
| Dagur | 0.67 (only six pairs found) | |
| Khamnigan | 0.67 (only three pairs found) | |
| Tungusic | Manchu | 0.88 |
| Nanai | 0.78 | |
| Udehe | 0.83 | |
| Evenki | 0.63 | |
| Even | 0.50 |
Within each family, languages closer (or historically closer) to the centers of expansion are listed first.
Proportions not accurate as not all of the nine pairs could be found.
Uralic languages: Proportion of the nine verb pairs that use causativization.
| North Saami | 0.78 |
| Kildin Saami | 0.83 |
| Finnish | 0.89 |
| Estonian | 0.72 |
| Erzya Mordvin | 0.50 |
| Mari | 0.61 |
| Udmurt | 0.44 |
| Hungarian | 0.67 |
| Mansi | 0.61 |
| Khanty | 0.44 |
| Tundra Nenets | 0.78 |
Languages are ordered from west to east (Hungarian is placed with the eastern languages where it originated).
Hungarian has a fairly high level of causativization, the reasons for which are not examined here. Hungarian has not undergone a major spread; it moved from southern Siberia to central Europe by migration, keeping its language (and apparently its ethnic and language identity) through several centuries as an enclave in a Turkic confederation and then in the Iranian-speaking western steppe population of the post-Roman centuries.
Indo-European: Proportion of the nine verb pairs that use causativization.
| Latin | 0.14 |
| Albanian | 0.11 |
| Greek (modern) | 0.22 |
| W. Armenian | 0.83 |
| Germanic mean | 0.08 |
| Romance mean | 0.26 |
| Slavic mean | 0.11 |
| Baltic mean | 0.53 |
| Indo-Iranian: | |
| Kurdish | 0.28 |
| Ossetic | 0.38 |
| Persian | 0.78 |
| Pashto | 0.78 |
| Waigali | 0.40 (Only five pairs found) |
| Palula | 1.00 |
| Hindi | 1.00 |
Ordering of Indo-Iranian is west to east.
Uto-Aztecan languages: Proportion of the nine verb pairs that use causativization.
| Tümpisa Shoshone | 0.89 | |
| Hopi | 0.67 | |
| Tohono O'odham | 0.38 | |
| Raramuri | 0.78 | |
| Huastec Nahuatl | 0.60 | 0.75 (different analyses) |
Languages are listed from north to south.
Austronesian languages: Proportions of the nine verb pairs that use causativization, and broad locations.
| Paiwan | 0.61 | (Taiwan) |
| Malay | 0.78 | (Island Southeast Asia) |
| Acehnese | 1.00 | (Island Southeast Asia) |
| Javanese | 0.60 | (Island Southeast Asia) |
| Tolai | 0.67 | (Coastal New Guinea) |
| Tawala | 0.50 | (Coastal New Guinea) |
| Drehu | 0.57 | (Remote Oceania) |
| Samoan | 0.71 | (Remote Oceania) |
Languages are listed by increasing distance from the homeland.