[Lingtyp] Proto-World explains universals
Ian Maddieson
ianm at berkeley.edu
Mon Jan 20 21:04:58 UTC 2020
Bernard Comrie comes pretty close to suggesting something of the sort that Martin asks about in his 1992 paper cited below.
For example, the universal that "no language has only nasalized vowels" (or "all languages have oral vowels”) is
attributed to there being a sole historical source of nasalized vowels from a sequence of a vowel plus a nasal (either order).
While Proto-World is not given explicitly a role here, the implication that all proto-languages — projected back far
enough in time — had only oral vowels comes pretty close.
Comrie, B. 1992: Before complexity. In Hawkins, J.A. and Gell-Mann, M. , editors, The evolution of human languages, Santa Fe Institute Studies in the Sciences of Complexity XI, Redwood City, CA: Addison-Wesley , 193–211
Ian Maddieson
> On Jan 20, 2020, at 12:04, Harald Hammarström <harald at bombo.se> wrote:
>
> Re basic constituent order argued to be (partly) the reflection of proto-world SOV, see:
>
> Gell-Mann, Murray & Merritt Ruhlen. 2011. The origin and evolution of
> word order. PNAS: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of
> the United States of America 108(42). 17290-17295.
>
> Maurits, Luke & Thomas L. Gri?ths. 2014. Tracing the roots of syntax
> with Bayesian phylogenetics. PNAS 111(37). 13576?13581.
>
> Newmeyer, Frederick J. 2000. On the reconstruction of 'Proto-World' word
> order. In Chris Knight, Michael Studdert-Kennedy & James R. Hurford
> (eds.), The evolutionary emergence of language: social function and the
> origins of linguistic form, 372-390. Cambridge: Cambridge University
> Press.
>
>
>
> Pada tanggal Sen, 20 Jan 2020 pukul 18.45 Haspelmath, Martin <haspelmath at shh.mpg.de <mailto:haspelmath at shh.mpg.de>> menulis:
> Dear all,
>
> Does anyone know a case where it has been proposed (or suggested) concretely that an observed universal tendency (or absolute universal) is due to inheritance from Proto-World?
>
> Cysouw (2011: 417) has suggested this as a possibility:
>
> "It is possible that there are still founder effects available in the current distribution of the world’s languages, i.e., that there are preferences in the current world’s languages that go back to incidental events during the spread of languages over the world (Maslova 2000)."
>
> But while this is logically possible, are there any concrete suggestions with a global scope?
> Word order universals such as the Greenbergian correlations, or phonological universals such as vowel dispersion cannot be due to Proto-World (or some other founder effect), because the universality lies in the implicational patterns, not in specific structures that all languages share. Has anyone suggested that any other universal properties (e.g. the fact that all languages can express negation or questions, or that agent-patient organization is universal, or that all languages have recursion) may be due to Proto-World inheritance?
>
> Thanks,
> Martin
>
> ************
>
> References:
> Cysouw, Michael. 2011. Understanding transition probabilities. Linguistic Typology 15(2). 415–431.
> Maslova, Elena. 2000. A dynamic approach to the verification of distributional universals. Linguistic Typology 4. 307 – 333.
>
> --
> Martin Haspelmath (haspelmath at shh.mpg.de <mailto:haspelmath at shh.mpg.de>)
> Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History
> Kahlaische Strasse 10
> D-07745 Jena
> &
> Leipzig University
> Institut fuer Anglistik
> IPF 141199
> D-04081 Leipzig
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Ian Maddieson
Department of Linguistics
University of New Mexico
MSC03-2130
Albuquerque NM 87131-0001
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