Friday, February 07, 2014
Posted by bibbah
No comments | Friday, February 07, 2014
Of course, it’s likely that groups of human-like animals had
different types of languages well before then. Where sentient beings
gathered together, some form of language would have been a necessity to
communicate, even if it was just a few grunts like those popularly
uttered by cavemen in movies.
Discounting these, the origin of modern language is still largely
unknown. The first language could have been similar to one spoken today,
or languages could have changed so much that they bear no resemblance
to the first known language, and may not have even been spoken at all,
rather relying on gestures or even whistles, such as with Silbo Gomera, the whistling language.
Unfortunately, language predates the written word, and without
historical texts to look back on, linguists can only guess at what the
first language.
There are a few criteria that people use to decide on “the first
known language.” One way people determine the first known language is by
looking at the first written language, which happens to be Egyptian or
Sumerian. There are both Egyptian and Sumerian texts dating back to
around 3200 BC. There were, of course, many other languages spoken at
that time all over the world—it’s just that these two communities seem
to have developed a written language first, or at least wrote their
languages on material that was able to persevere through the
wear-and-tear of time. These texts are the first real evidence of
language, and the only thing that linguists can prove with any
certainty.
As for spoken language, there are many, many theories that have been
developed over the years. For the purposes of this article, we’ll look
at the argument over polygenism and monogenism—that is, figuring out if
many languages developed independently in different parts of the world
at the same time, or if all languages stem from one proto-language a la
the Tower of Babel. (If you’re not familiar, the story goes that
everyone in the world initially spoke the same language. When they
resolved to build a tower to Heaven, God decided to scatter humans
across the world and give people different languages to speak so that
they couldn’t communicate with one another.) If you believe in
monogenism, then there actually was a true “first language.” But if you
believe in polygenism, there were many different “first languages” that
developed around the same time.
Both theories rely on a lot of speculation. With monogenism,
linguists have been tracing the roots of modern languages but can only
go as far back as written languages before things get murky. There have
also been studies based on genetics; there is a correlation between
genetic diversification and the diversification of languages that were
spoken over time. That would mean that when the human population was
small, there could have been just one language. (And,
indeed there is a known instances that the human population diminished
so much that all of us can trace our ancestry through one woman who
lived about 150,000-200,000 years ago, known as Mitochondrial Eve).
The various studies come to different conclusions about how reliable
this method of determining the first language is, making it somewhat
controversial.
Monogenism largely fell out of favour in the 19th and 20th
centuries when polygenism—the thought that all races developed
independently of each other—was developed. Linguistically speaking,
polygenesis depends on the idea that all languages developed
independently of each other based on the environment that humans found
themselves in. Monogenism argues that this is unlikely, especially since
many languages can be traced back to “mother” languages.
What linguists can tell is that most of the 5000 languages spoken
today on Earth can be grouped into branches. So, Spanish and Italian are
grouped together with French and Romanian and are called “Romance
languages.” English, together with German and Dutch, are “Germanic
languages.” Both Romance and Germanic come together with Celtic, Greek,
and Indian languages (among others) under the banner “Indo-European
Languages.” As far as history is concerned right now, Indo-European is
the oldest known family of languages, going back as far as Anatolian
around the 20th-19th century BC. Some argue that the Afroasiatic family
of languages may be older, but the earliest estimates there only go to
about the 16th century BC.
There are, of course, many other branches of language. Japonic,
Amerindian, Paleo-Siberian—the list goes on. Languages can usually be
traced to their various branches, but the problem is finding out if they
share one common ancestor, or “trunk” so to speak, which would give us
the first language (if you accept monogenism, that is!).
Whether languages came from one language—called “proto-Human”—or many
languages, it’s quite likely that our languages today simply changed
and developed over time as the need for names and words for different
things arose. Languages change and grow all the time, and that’s
something that all linguists can agree on. For instance, in the last few
years words like “senioritis,” “flash mob,” and “woot” have appeared in
the Oxford English Dictionary for the first time.
With new words emerging all the time, it’s not hard to see how
language has changed from Chaucer’s Middle English to textspeak in such a
short amount of time. Now expand that to many millennia and it’s no
wonder linguists haven’t yet come to a consensus on what the first
language might have been.
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