April 14, 2021
Curious Kids: How are languages formed?
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How are languages formed? â Pearl, 12, Regina, Sask.
Easily! In fact, you can create a new language right now.
Simply choose some sounds, like âf,â âm,â and âe,â and invent words with them: fme could mean âshrimp,â em could mean âeat,â e âit,â and ef âis.â Next, organize these words into sentences â and feel free to use a :
- e fme ef âitâs a shrimpâ (literally: it shrimp is)
- e em fme ef âit is eating shrimpâ (literally: it eat shrimp is)
- e fme em âit ate shrimpâ (literally: it shrimp eat)
- fme em e âshrimp ate itâ (literally: shrimp ate it)
By the way, !
This is the genius of human language. We can create and learn thousands of words by pairing meanings with arbitrary strings of meaningless sounds (or signs). We can also generate and understand an infinity of sentences according to the languageâs grammar â .
Over 7,000 languages
Today, our world , each with its own words and particular grammar. These languages are so mindbogglingly different that you might think, âanything goes!â But in reality, there are countless possibilities in and grammars that never occur.
For example, our invented sentences above involve a grammar that has not been found in any human languages, including past ones!
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In , the meaning of e em fme ef could be expressed with the equivalent of âit shrimp eat is,â or âit is shrimp eat,â or âit shrimp is eat.â
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Similarly, the meaning of e fme em could be expressed with the equivalent of âit shrimp ateâ in Old English, and the meaning of fme em e could be expressed with âshrimp it ate,â but apparently no speakers of Old English â or any other language â would insist on saying both âit shrimp ateâ and âshrimp ate it,â as in e fme em and fme em e.
The genius of human language is that we can create and learn thousands of words by pairing meanings with arbitrary strings of meaningless sounds (or signs).
Unsplash/Jason Leung
So, if we taught our newly invented language to children, chances are they would . Whatâs possible in a human language and by the way language works in our human brains. This is why the famous linguist Noam Chomsky claims that
Universal Grammar
As a very general example of universal grammar, we humans do not simply string words together in sentences, but rather we organize words into âchunksâ called phrases. This chunking allows us to create and make sense of complex sentences like âshrimp shrimp eat eat shrimp,â meaning âthe shrimp that other shrimp eat also eat shrimp.â
More generally, humans are in terms of sounds, words, meanings and grammar, so much so that it becomes increasingly difficult to understand our own distant relatives across time and space. In effect, we come to speak different languages!
So thatâs how new languages are formed, but to be honest, linguists arenât sure why languages change in the first place. We donât know why speakers of Old English shifted their grammar to âit is eating shrimpâ from earlier âit shrimp eating isâ or âit is shrimp eating.â
The older word order survives to this day in forming nouns: âshrimp-eating.â
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is associate professor of linguistics in the School of Languages, Linguistics, Literatures and Cultures at the University of Calgary.