| Literature DB >> 33877696 |
Padraic Monaghan1,2, Seán G Roberts3.
Abstract
Iconicity, the resemblance between the form of a word and its meaning, has effects on behavior in both communicative symbol development and language learning experiments. These results have invited speculation about iconicity being a key feature of the origins of language, yet the presence of iconicity in natural languages seems limited. In a diachronic study of language change, we investigated the extent to which iconicity is a stable property of vocabulary, alongside previously investigated psycholinguistic predictors of change. Analyzing 784 English words with data on their historical forms, we found that stable words are higher in iconicity, longer in length, and earlier acquired during development, but that the role of frequency and grammatical category may be less important than previously suggested. Iconicity is revealed as a feature of ultra-conserved words and potentially also as a property of vocabulary early in the history of language origins.Entities:
Keywords: Age of acquisition; Frequency; Grammatical category; Iconicity; Language evolution; Psycholinguistics; sSound symbolism
Year: 2021 PMID: 33877696 DOI: 10.1111/cogs.12968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Sci ISSN: 0364-0213