المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

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Language Mixture Basic examples  
  
338   09:23 صباحاً   date: 2024-01-17
Author : P. John McWhorter
Book or Source : The Story of Human Language
Page and Part : 37-21


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Date: 2024-01-22 352
Date: 2024-01-20 341
Date: 2024-01-22 238

Language Mixture Basic examples

A. Clicks in Khoi-San and Bantu. The Khoi-San (“Bushman”) languages of southern Africa are not the world’s only languages with clicks. For example, some Bantu languages spoken near them have clicks: Miriam Makeba even made the clicks famous in a popular song in her native Xhosa. These Bantu languages inherited the clicks from Khoi-San languages long ago.

 

B. Indo-Aryan languages. We saw that Indo-European languages in India, such as Hindi, place the verb last in a sentence.

Hindi:

“I met Apu.”

 

This is not an accident. Indo-European languages of Europe usually do not place their verbs at the end of the sentence or only do so optionally. Indian Indo-European languages borrowed this word order from languages of another family originally spoken in India, the Dravidian family. Below is a sentence in one of the main Dravidian languages, Kannada:

Kannada:

Avanu nanage bisket̩annu tinisidanu.

he    to-me     biscuit    fed

“He fed me a biscuit.”

 

C. Among linguists, it has always been known that languages regularly exchange words, but until rather recently, grammar mixture has often been treated as marginal, with basic processes of independent change seen as “basic.” But it is increasingly clear that all of the languages of the world bear marks from both the words and the grammars of languages spoken close by.