Lecture The emergence of comparative-historical linguistics in the XIX century


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Bog'liq
Lecture 5

Using the principle of regular sound change, scholars were able to reconstruct “ancestral” common forms from which the later forms found in particular languages could be derived. By convention, such reconstructed forms are marked in the literature with an asterisk. Thus, from the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word for “ten,” *dekm, it was possible to derive Sanskrit daśa, Greek déka, Latin decem, and Gothic taihun by postulating a number of different sound laws that operated independently in the different branches of the Indo-European family.

The role of analogy

Analogy:

  • a comparison of two otherwise unlike things based on resemblance of a particular aspect;
  • resemblance in some particulars between things unlike;
  • similarity;
  • inference that if two or more things agree with one another in some respects they will probably agree in others

Analogy has been mentioned in connection with its inhibition of the regular operation of sound laws in particular word forms. This was how the Neogrammarians thought of it.

Analogy has been mentioned in connection with its inhibition of the regular operation of sound laws in particular word forms. This was how the Neogrammarians thought of it.

In the course of the 20th century it came to be recognized that analogy plays a far more important role in the development of languages than simply that of sporadically preventing what would otherwise be a completely regular transformation of the sound system of a language.

When a child learns to speak he tends to regularize the anomalous, or irregular, forms by analogy with the more regular and productive patterns of formation in the language; e.g., he will tend to say “comed” rather than “came,” “dived” rather than “dove,” and so on, just as he will say “talked,” “loved,” and so forth. The fact that the child does this is evidence that he has learned or is learning the regularities or rules of his language. He will go on to “unlearn” some of the analogical forms and substitute for them the anomalous forms current in the speech of the previous generation. But in some cases, he will keep a “new” analogical form (e.g., “dived” rather than “dove”), and this may then become the recognized and accepted form.


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