Grammar
Tenses
Present
Present Simple
Present Continuous
Present Perfect
Present Perfect Continuous
Past
Past Continuous
Past Perfect
Past Perfect Continuous
Past Simple
Future
Future Simple
Future Continuous
Future Perfect
Future Perfect Continuous
Passive and Active
Parts Of Speech
Nouns
Countable and uncountable nouns
Verbal nouns
Singular and Plural nouns
Proper nouns
Nouns gender
Nouns definition
Concrete nouns
Abstract nouns
Common nouns
Collective nouns
Definition Of Nouns
Verbs
Stative and dynamic verbs
Finite and nonfinite verbs
To be verbs
Transitive and intransitive verbs
Auxiliary verbs
Modal verbs
Regular and irregular verbs
Action verbs
Adverbs
Relative adverbs
Interrogative adverbs
Adverbs of time
Adverbs of place
Adverbs of reason
Adverbs of quantity
Adverbs of manner
Adverbs of frequency
Adverbs of affirmation
Adjectives
Quantitative adjective
Proper adjective
Possessive adjective
Numeral adjective
Interrogative adjective
Distributive adjective
Descriptive adjective
Demonstrative adjective
Pronouns
Subject pronoun
Relative pronoun
Reflexive pronoun
Reciprocal pronoun
Possessive pronoun
Personal pronoun
Interrogative pronoun
Indefinite pronoun
Emphatic pronoun
Distributive pronoun
Demonstrative pronoun
Pre Position
Preposition by function
Time preposition
Reason preposition
Possession preposition
Place preposition
Phrases preposition
Origin preposition
Measure preposition
Direction preposition
Contrast preposition
Agent preposition
Preposition by construction
Simple preposition
Phrase preposition
Double preposition
Compound preposition
Conjunctions
Subordinating conjunction
Correlative conjunction
Coordinating conjunction
Conjunctive adverbs
Interjections
Express calling interjection
Grammar Rules
Preference
Requests and offers
wishes
Be used to
Some and any
Could have done
Describing people
Giving advices
Possession
Comparative and superlative
Giving Reason
Making Suggestions
Apologizing
Forming questions
Since and for
Directions
Obligation
Adverbials
invitation
Articles
Imaginary condition
Zero conditional
First conditional
Second conditional
Third conditional
Reported speech
Linguistics
Phonetics
Phonology
Semantics
Pragmatics
Linguistics fields
Syntax
Morphology
Semantics
pragmatics
History
Writing
Grammar
Phonetics and Phonology
Reading Comprehension
Elementary
Intermediate
Advanced
Reversing language obsolescence
المؤلف: David Hornsby
المصدر: Linguistics A complete introduction
الجزء والصفحة: 252-12
2024-01-02
439
Reversing language obsolescence
For linguists, the loss of any language is to be mourned in the same way as a zoologist mourns the loss of a species. Many languages can indeed be likened to ‘endangered species’: only around 10 per cent of the world’s estimated 6,000 languages are thought sure to survive to the end of the twenty-first century. For activists, too, the loss of a language represents a loss of cultural heritage which must be resisted. Arresting the decline of a language or language variety is known as language revitalization, and often begins with demands for its recognition by a nation state and for the granting of language rights to its speakers, for example the right to be educated or tried in that language in a court of law, or merely to have it included in the school curriculum. Noteworthy language revitalization success stories include Catalan, suppressed for decades under Franco in Spain, but now a first language for most Catalans (almost all of whom also speak Spanish), and enjoying co-official status with the national language in Catalonia, and Welsh, which has stabilized after years of decline.
All too often, however, activists face an uphill battle. Firstly, by the time a language has become threatened, both it and its speakers have generally become stigmatized as ‘backward’ or ‘old-fashioned’, while the dominant language is perceived to symbolize modernity by virtue of assocation with socially favored groups. To speak the threatened language is then to identify with qualities which mainstream society presents as undesirable, reinforcing these negative associations in what quickly becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. A second major problem is the lack of a standard or prestige variety. Standard languages tend to emerge because they are associated with a prestige or elite group, but in the case of a threatened language, those who would form such a group are generally among the first to abandon it as they rise in society.
The absence of a recognized standard removes normative pressure, leaving the language to fragment into microdialects, which are either mutually incomprehensible or, equally importantly, perceived to be so by speakers themselves, prompting recourse to the dominant language as a lingua franca. This in turn means that attempts to produce a standard language are less likely later on to be supported by the speakers themselves. This has important consequences, because resources are generally too limited to support preservation of a multiplicity of obsolescent microdialects.
Activists may well see promotion of a standard variety as the best route to preserving a language, but a standard created artificially by intellectuals, may well encounter resistance, as indeed might a standard variety created on the basis of regional criteria, as in Ireland, where a standard Irish was based largely on Connacht usage, a central variety seen to bridge north and south. A final option is polynomia, i.e. a multiplicity of norms: in effect ‘anything goes’. This approach appears to have worked reasonably well in Corsica, an island community where linguistic and physical boundaries coincide, and internal communications are good enough for most Corsican speakers to be aware of other variants, but it would not appear a practical option in Brittany or in Gaelic-speaking Scotland, where dialectal fragmentation is coupled with isolation.