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Erosion in Chadic

  • Herrmann Jungraithmayr
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In Hot Pursuit of Language in Prehistory
This chapter is in the book In Hot Pursuit of Language in Prehistory

Abstract

The Chadic language family in the Central Sudan is comparable to a landscape the surface of which consists of plains, valleys and mountain ridges. Some areas were more resistant than others against the forces of erosion. Different degrees of hardness and resistibility caused languages to preserve or reduce the original substance with regard to lexicon or grammar of an individual language or the entire language group. Chadic with its ca. 130–150 languages is probably the one branch of Hamitosemitic (Afroaasiatic) which has been subject to the strongest transformational processes in which erosion, i.e., attrition of language material in space and time, played a dominant role. The paper presents numerous examples illustrating different stages of progressive erosion which may characterize the nature of Chadic linguistic history.

Abstract

The Chadic language family in the Central Sudan is comparable to a landscape the surface of which consists of plains, valleys and mountain ridges. Some areas were more resistant than others against the forces of erosion. Different degrees of hardness and resistibility caused languages to preserve or reduce the original substance with regard to lexicon or grammar of an individual language or the entire language group. Chadic with its ca. 130–150 languages is probably the one branch of Hamitosemitic (Afroaasiatic) which has been subject to the strongest transformational processes in which erosion, i.e., attrition of language material in space and time, played a dominant role. The paper presents numerous examples illustrating different stages of progressive erosion which may characterize the nature of Chadic linguistic history.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Acknowledgments xiii
  5. Photographs xv
  6. Works of Harold Crane Fleming xix
  7. Part I. African peoples
  8. Geography, selected Afro-Asiatic families, and Y chromosome lineage variation: An exploration in linguistics and phylogeography 3
  9. A dental anthropological hypothesis relating to the ethnogenesis, origin, and antiquity of the Afro-Asiatic language family: Peopling of the Eurafrican-South Asian triangle IV 17
  10. African weeks 25
  11. Part II. African languages – synchronic studies
  12. Gender distinction and affirmative copula clauses in Zargulla 39
  13. Riddling in Gidole 49
  14. Part III. African languages – Classification and prehistory
  15. Lexicostatistical comparison of Omotic languages 57
  16. The primary branches of Cushitic: Seriating the diagnostic sound change rules 149
  17. Erosion in Chadic 161
  18. On Kunama ukunkula 'elbow' and its proposed cognates in Nilo-Saharan languages 169
  19. The problem of pan-African roots 189
  20. Part IV. Languages of Eurasia, Oceania, and the Americas
  21. Some thoughts on the Proto-Indo-European cardinal numbers 213
  22. Some Old World experience of linguistic dating 223
  23. The languages of Northern Eurasia: Inference to the best explanation 241
  24. Slaying the Dragon across Eurasia 263
  25. Trombetti: The forefather of Indo-Pacific 287
  26. Otomanguean loan words in Proto-Uto-Aztecan maize vocabulary? 309
  27. Historical interpretations of geographical distributions of Amerind subfamilies 321
  28. Part V. Human origins, Language origins, and Proto-Sapiens language
  29. Current topics in human evolutionary genetics 343
  30. A wild 50,000-year ride 359
  31. Can Paleolithic stone artifacts serve as evidence for prehistoric language? 373
  32. The origin of language: Symbiosism and symbiomism 381
  33. Some speculations on the evolution of language, and the language of evolution 401
  34. The age of Mama and Papa 417
  35. The millennial persistence of Indo-European and Eurasiatic pronouns and the origin of nominals 439
  36. General index 465
  37. Index of languages and languages families 471
  38. Index of scholars discussed 475
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