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4 - Consolidation of comparative linguistics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Lyle Campbell
Affiliation:
University of Utah
William J. Poser
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Summary

The diversity of languages originated in the building of the tower after the deluge … There are … three sacred languages: Hebrew, Greek and Latin which are the most excellent in the whole world … Five varieties of Greek can be distinguished … Koine … Attic … Doric … Ionic … Aeolic. Some say that the Latin language is four languages, that is Ancient, Latin, Roman and Mixed. Ancient … [was] used during the reign of Janus and Saturn … Latin is the language which the Etruscans and other peoples in Latium spoke during the reign of Latinus and the kings … Roman is the language which the Roman people after the banishment of the kings started to use and which the poets Naevius, Plautus, Ennius and Virgil and the orators Gracchus and Cato and Cicero and others made current. Mixed is the language which, after the empire had been enlarged … burst into the Roman state together with customs and nations and corrupted the integrity of the word through barbarisms and solecisms.

(Spanish Bishop Isidorus [c.560–636])(Hovdhaugen 1982:110)

Introduction

There is nothing in the methods used by scholars for establishing language families which distinguishes the pre-Jones era from post-Jones times, though the methods gradually came to be more refined and their employment led increasingly to the establishment of more language families and to further refinements in the language families already accepted. Our goal in this chapter is to chart these developments.

Type
Chapter
Information
Language Classification
History and Method
, pp. 48 - 73
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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