L'Anatra
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Today at 07:42 PM JohnR7 said this in Post #279
If your to lazy to check it out, then why are we having this conversation? The experts who study langage from all different parts of the world, all point back to a single language that all the other languages came from. That single language that they all point to, points directly to Adam and Eve.
Again, I'm gonna chime in here about language. Go figure...
This claim is completely false, John. Language reconstruction is on much less sturdy ground than many of the scientific theories you seem to think are debunked so easily by "shady evidence."
An American linguist called Joseph Greenberg gained some fame in the proposition of his hypothesis of a "Proto-World" language, the supposed ancestor of all human languages. However, the lingusitics community in general considers his process flawed because his comparisons have only been made on the basis of general vocabulary. Of course, they are completely unattested anyway. In addition, even if it could possibly have existed, this language would have been spoken countless thousands of years ago...
However, it is certainly possible that you are referring to the much more commonly known and accepted (though hypothetical) "Proto-Indo-European" language. Although also completely unattested, it is known that many languages spoken in Europe, Persia, and India did derive from a common ancestor that was spoken 6,000-8,000 years ago somewhere in the Black Sea region. The Indo-European family of languages (which descended from this tongue) includes the groups listed below. I have included a few languages within each group to help:
1. Indo-Iranian - Sanskrit, Hindi, Persian, Avestan
2. Italo-Celtic - Gaelic, Welsh, Latin and its descendants, the Romance Languages (Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Rumanian)
3. Germanic - English, German, Dutch, Swedish, Norse, Gothic
4. Balto-Slavic - Latvian, Lithuanian, Russian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian
5. the Illyrian languages (extinct)
6. the Albanian language
7. the languages of Anatolia (extinct) - Hittite, Luwian, Lydian, Lycian
8. the languages of the Tocharians (extinct) - A and B
9. the Hellenic language - all dialects of Greek, modern and ancient
10. the Armenian language
I left a great number of languages out of their respective groups, but I'd hope you agree that this hardly accounts for all the tongues of the world. Indeed, the classification of Proto-Indo-European languages (although the "evolution" of various groups into their current forms is very historical indeed) is still widely argued. There are several other hypothetical families of world languages. For instance, the Afro-Asiatic family has been studied extensively as well, though nowhere near as deeply as the Indo-European. In this family we have languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic, and Akkadian (the language of the Babylonians). Which languages are included in any of these hypothetical groupings (and, of course, the groupings themselves), however, continue to be debated by linguists.
"Proto-World," although an interesting thought, has no current basis in reality. I do hope progress can be made, however. It shouldn't surprise anyone who speaks the English language today (especially with the disputes YECs seem to have over the definitions of certain words), that most languages have an incredibly short recorded history. How anyone living in our modern world could believe that reconstructing a "Proto-World" would be so easy is totally beyond me.
Indeed, being that "Proto-World" (if it existed) had to exist before written history seems to tell me that we'll never know whether it existed or not. I wonder why that is?
Just so you know, John, there is a language known as Basque spoken on the north of the Iberian Peninsula (Spain, if you will) that's evaded all attempts at being classified at all? Many languages like Basque exist; they are known as language isolates. Maybe you should do YOUR research, before you call people lazy...
I'd encourage everyone who's gotten this far (I'm horribly long-winded
), to take some time (not now, for Pete's sake!
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