Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.

Linguistic evolution mirrors cultural evolution, of which one of the most decisive steps was the "agricultural revolution" that occurred 11,000 years ago in W. Asia. Traditional comparative historical linguistics becomes inaccurate for time depths greater than, say, 10 kyr. Therefore it is...

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Main Authors: Noam Agmon, Yigal Bloch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3868553?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f05448a8b6c04474a5af6fc0113c4f8d2020-11-25T01:59:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01812e8378010.1371/journal.pone.0083780Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.Noam AgmonYigal BlochLinguistic evolution mirrors cultural evolution, of which one of the most decisive steps was the "agricultural revolution" that occurred 11,000 years ago in W. Asia. Traditional comparative historical linguistics becomes inaccurate for time depths greater than, say, 10 kyr. Therefore it is difficult to determine whether decisive events in human prehistory have had an observable impact on human language. Here we supplement the traditional methodology with independent statistical measures showing that following the transition to agriculture, languages of W. Asia underwent a transition from biconsonantal (2c) to triconsonantal (3c) morphology. Two independent proofs for this are provided. Firstly the reconstructed Proto-Semitic fire and hunting lexicons are predominantly 2c, whereas the farming lexicon is almost exclusively 3c in structure. Secondly, while Biblical verbs show the usual Zipf exponent of about 1, their 2c subset exhibits a larger exponent. After the 2c > 3c transition, this could arise from a faster decay in the frequency of use of the less common 2c verbs. Using an established frequency-dependent word replacement rate, we calculate that the observed increase in the Zipf exponent has occurred over the 7,500 years predating Biblical Hebrew namely, starting with the transition to agriculture.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3868553?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noam Agmon
Yigal Bloch
spellingShingle Noam Agmon
Yigal Bloch
Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Noam Agmon
Yigal Bloch
author_sort Noam Agmon
title Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
title_short Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
title_full Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
title_fullStr Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
title_full_unstemmed Statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
title_sort statistics of language morphology change: from biconsonantal hunters to triconsonantal farmers.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Linguistic evolution mirrors cultural evolution, of which one of the most decisive steps was the "agricultural revolution" that occurred 11,000 years ago in W. Asia. Traditional comparative historical linguistics becomes inaccurate for time depths greater than, say, 10 kyr. Therefore it is difficult to determine whether decisive events in human prehistory have had an observable impact on human language. Here we supplement the traditional methodology with independent statistical measures showing that following the transition to agriculture, languages of W. Asia underwent a transition from biconsonantal (2c) to triconsonantal (3c) morphology. Two independent proofs for this are provided. Firstly the reconstructed Proto-Semitic fire and hunting lexicons are predominantly 2c, whereas the farming lexicon is almost exclusively 3c in structure. Secondly, while Biblical verbs show the usual Zipf exponent of about 1, their 2c subset exhibits a larger exponent. After the 2c > 3c transition, this could arise from a faster decay in the frequency of use of the less common 2c verbs. Using an established frequency-dependent word replacement rate, we calculate that the observed increase in the Zipf exponent has occurred over the 7,500 years predating Biblical Hebrew namely, starting with the transition to agriculture.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3868553?pdf=render
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AT yigalbloch statisticsoflanguagemorphologychangefrombiconsonantalhunterstotriconsonantalfarmers
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