Saturday, February 22, 2025

Tracing English Again to Its Oldest Recognized Ancestor: An Introduction to Proto-Indo-European


Peo­ple beneath­stand evo­lu­tion in all types of dif­fer­ent methods. We’ve all heard a vari­ety of folks expla­na­tions of that all-impor­tant phe­nom­e­non, from “sur­vival of the fittest” to “people come from mon­keys,” that run the spec­trum from broad­ly cor­rect to unhealthy­ly man­gled. One much less typically heard however extra ele­gant approach to put it’s that each one species, liv­ing or extinct, share a com­mon ances­tor. That is true of evo­lu­tion as Dar­win knew it, and it may properly be true of oth­er types of “evo­lu­tion” out­facet the bio­log­i­cal realm as properly. Take lan­guages, which we all know full properly have modified and break up into dif­fer­ent vari­eties over time: do they, too, all share a sin­gle ances­tor?

In the Rob­Phrases video above, lan­guage Youtu­ber Rob Watts begins along with his native Eng­lish and traces its roots again so far as pos­si­ble. He ascends up the fam­i­ly tree previous Low West Ger­man, previous Professional­to-Ger­man­ic — “a lan­guage that was the­o­ret­i­cal­ly spo­ken by a sin­gle group of peo­ple who would even­tu­al­ly go on to turn into the Swedes, the Ger­mans, the Dutch, the Eng­lish, and extra” — again to an ances­tor of not simply Eng­lish and the Ger­man­ic lan­guages, however virtually all of the Euro­pean lan­guages, in addition to of Asian lan­guages like Hin­di, Pash­tu, Kur­dish, Far­si, and Ben­gali. Its title? Professional­to-Indo-Euro­pean.

Watts quotes the eigh­teenth-cen­tu­ry philol­o­gist Sir William Jones, who wrote that the traditional Asian lan­guage of San­skrit has a struc­ture “extra per­fect than the Greek, extra copi­ous than the Latin, and extra exquis­ite­ly refined than both, but bear­ing to each of them a stronger affin­i­ty, each within the roots of verbs and within the types of gram­mar, than may pos­si­bly have been professional­duced by acci­dent.” As with such con­spic­u­ous­ly shared traits noticed in dis­parate species of plant or ani­mal, no skilled “may examination­ine all three with­out believ­ing them to have sprung from some com­mon supply, which, per­haps, now not exists.”

The evi­dence is each­the place, when you pay atten­tion to the kind of unex­pect­ed cog­nates and very-near­ly-cog­nates Watts factors out span­ning geo­graph­i­cal­ly and tem­po­ral­ly var­i­ous lan­guages. Take the Eng­lish hun­dred, the Latin cen­tum, the Historical Greek heka­ton, the Russ­ian sto, and the San­skrit Shatam; or the extra deeply buried resem­blances of Eng­lish coronary heart, the Latin cordis, the Russ­ian serd­ce, and the san­skrit hrd. In some cas­es, lin­guists have actu­al­ly used these com­mon­al­i­ties to reverse-engi­neer Professional­to-Indo-Euro­pean phrases, although at all times with the caveat that the entire thing “is a recon­struct­ed lan­guage; it’s our greatest guess of what a com­mon ances­tral lan­guage may have been like.” Was there a nonetheless previous­er lan­guage from which the non-Professional­to-Indo-Euro­pean-descend­ed lan­guages additionally descend­ed? That’s a ques­tion to push the lin­guis­tic imag­i­na­tion to its very lim­its.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Was There a First Human Lan­guage?: The­o­ries from the Enlight­en­ment By way of Noam Chom­sky

How Lan­guages Evolve: Defined in a Win­ning TED-Ed Ani­ma­tion

Hear What the Lan­guage Spo­ken by Our Ances­tors 6,000 Years In the past Would possibly Have Sound­ed Like: A Recon­struc­tion of the Professional­to-Indo-Euro­pean Lan­guage

The Alpha­wager Defined: The Ori­gin of Each Let­ter

The Tree of Lan­guages Illus­trat­ed in a Large, Beau­ti­ful Data­graph­ic

Primarily based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. His tasks embrace the Sub­stack newslet­ter Books on Cities and the e book The State­much less Metropolis: a Stroll via Twenty first-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les. Fol­low him on the social internet­work for­mer­ly referred to as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.



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