Unit 3: Chapter 6 Vocab Flashcards

1
Q

backward reconstruction

A

The tracking of sound shifts and hardening of constants “backward” toward the original language

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2
Q

Conquest Theory

A

One major theory of how ProtoIndoEuropean diffused into Europe which holds that the early speakers of ProtoIndoEuropean spread westward on horseback, overpowering earlier inhabitants and beginning the diffusion and differentiation of IndoEuropean tongues

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3
Q

Creole Language

A

a language that began as a pidgin language but was later adopted as the mother tongue by a people in place of the mother tongue

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4
Q

Deep reconstruction

A

technique using the vocabulary of an extinct language to recreate the language that proceeded the extinct language

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5
Q

Dialect chains

A

a set of contagious dialects in which the dialects nearest to each other at any place in the chain are most closely related

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6
Q

dialects

A

local or regional characteristics of a language. While accent refers to the pronunciation differences of a standard language, a dialect, in addition to pronunciation variation, has distinctive grammar and vocabulary

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7
Q

Dispersal hypothesis

A

hypothesis which hold that the IndoEuropean languages were first carried eastward into Southwest Asia, next around the Caspian Sea, and then across the RussianUkrainian plains and on into the Balkans

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8
Q

Extinct Language

A

Language without any native speakers

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9
Q

Germanic Languages

A

Languages (English, german, danish, Norwegian, and Swedish) that reflect the expansion of peoples out of Northern Europe to the west and south

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10
Q

Global Languages

A

the Language used most commonly around the world; defined on the basis of either number of speakers of the language, or prevalence of use in commerce and trade

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11
Q

Isogloss

A

a geographic boundary within which a particular linguistic feature occurs

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12
Q

Language

A

a set of sounds, combination oof sounds, and symbols that are used for communication

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13
Q

Language Convergence

A

the collapsing of two languages into one resulting from the consistent spatial interaction of peoples with different languages; the opposite of language divergence

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14
Q

language divergence

A

the opposite of language convergence; a process suggested by German linguist August Schleicher whereby new languages are formed when a language breaks into dialects due to a lack of spatial interaction among speakers of the language and continued isolation eventually causes the division of the language into discrete new languages

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15
Q

Language families

A

A group of languages with a shared but fairly distant origin

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16
Q

lingua franca

A

a term deriving from “Frankish language” and applying to a tongue spoken in ancient Mediterranean ports that consisted of a mixture of Italian, French, Greek, Spanish, and even someArabic. today it refers to a “common language,” a language used among speakers of different languages for the purposes of trade and commerce

17
Q

monolingual states

A

countries in which only one language is spoken

18
Q

multilingual states

A

countries in which more than one language is spoken

19
Q

mutual intelligibility

A

the ability of two people to understand each other when speaking

20
Q

Nostratic

A

Language believed to be the ancestral language not only of ProtoIndoEuropean, but also of the Kartvelian languages of the southern Caucasus region, the UrialicAltaic languages (including Hungarian, Finnish, Turkish, and Mongolian), the Dravidian languages of India, and the Afroasiatic language family

21
Q

Official language

A

in multilingual countries the language selected, often by the educated ad politically powerful elite, to promote internal cohesion; usually the language of the courts and government

22
Q

pidgin language

A

when parts of two or more languages are combined in a simplified structure and vocabulary

23
Q

place

A

fourth theme of geo; uniqueness of a location

24
Q

ProtoIndoEuropean

A

linguistic hypothesis proposing the existence of an ancestral IndoEuropean language that is the hearth of the ancient Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit languages which hearth would link modern languages from Scandinavia to North Africa and from North America through parts of Asia to Austrailia

25
Q

Romance Languages

A

Languages (French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, and Portuguese) that lie in the areas that were once controlled by the Roman Empire but were not subsequently overwhelmed

26
Q

Slavic Languages

A

Languages (Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Ukrainian, Slovenian, SerboCroation, and Bulgarian) that developed as Slavic people migrated from a base in present-day Ukraine close to 2,000 years ago

27
Q

Sound shift

A

slight change in a word across languages within a subfamily or through a language family from the present backward toward its origin

28
Q

standard language

A

the variant of a language that a country’s political and intellectual elite seek to promote as the norm for use in schools, government, the media, and other aspects of public life

29
Q

subfamilies

A

Divisions within a language family where the commonalities are more definite and the origin is more recent

30
Q

toponyms

A

place name