Home Linguistics & Semiotics 27 Languages as dynamic systems: How grammar can emerge
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27 Languages as dynamic systems: How grammar can emerge

  • Marianne Mithun
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Abstract

The value of traditional languages as repositories of culture is well recognized: they embody the codification of patterns of thought passed from generation to generation. Many grammatical distinctions recur in languages around the globe, but others are richly developed only in some. The differences are no accident. They emerge out of what speakers choose to say the most often in everyday speech. Frequently-recurring turns of phrase can become routinized; words within them may lose their individual salience, erode in form, and gain more abstract meanings. Differences in vocabulary are also no accident. Speakers create terms for concepts they consider nameworthy. Languages indigenous to North America provide excellent examples of both processes. Understanding them brings home the fact that languages are not simply interchangeable: each represents a history, stretching over millennia, of what speakers have chosen to say the most often.

Abstract

The value of traditional languages as repositories of culture is well recognized: they embody the codification of patterns of thought passed from generation to generation. Many grammatical distinctions recur in languages around the globe, but others are richly developed only in some. The differences are no accident. They emerge out of what speakers choose to say the most often in everyday speech. Frequently-recurring turns of phrase can become routinized; words within them may lose their individual salience, erode in form, and gain more abstract meanings. Differences in vocabulary are also no accident. Speakers create terms for concepts they consider nameworthy. Languages indigenous to North America provide excellent examples of both processes. Understanding them brings home the fact that languages are not simply interchangeable: each represents a history, stretching over millennia, of what speakers have chosen to say the most often.

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