173 research outputs found

    Modeling the emergence of contact languages

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    Contact languages are born out of the non-trivial interaction of two (or more) parent languages. Nowadays, the enhanced possibility of mobility and communication allows for a strong mixing of languages and cultures, thus raising the issue of whether there are any pure languages or cultures that are unaffected by contact with others. As with bacteria or viruses in biological evolution, the evolution of languages is marked by horizontal transmission; but to date no reliable quantitative tools to investigate these phenomena have been available. An interesting and well documented example of contact language is the emergence of creole languages, which originated in the contacts of European colonists and slaves during the 17th and 18th centuries in exogenous plantation colonies of especially the Atlantic and Indian Ocean. Here, we focus on the emergence of creole languages to demonstrate a dynamical process that mimics the process of creole formation in American and Caribbean plantation ecologies. Inspired by the Naming Game (NG), our modeling scheme incorporates demographic information about the colonial population in the framework of a non-trivial interaction network including three populations: Europeans, Mulattos/Creoles, and Bozal slaves. We show how this sole information makes it possible to discriminate territories that produced modern creoles from those that did not, with a surprising accuracy. The generality of our approach provides valuable insights for further studies on the emergence of languages in contact ecologies as well as to test specific hypotheses about the peopling and the population structures of the relevant territories. We submit that these tools could be relevant to addressing problems related to contact phenomena in many cultural domains: e.g., emergence of dialects, language competition and hybridization, globalization phenomena

    Restructuring, Feature Selection, and Markedness: From Kimanyanga to Kituba

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    Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: Special Session on Historical Issues in African Linguistics (1994

    Gullah's Development: Myth and Sociohistorical Evidence

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    Les créoles. L'état de notre savoir

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    RÉSUMÉLes créoles. L'état de notre savoirDans cet article, je définis les vernaculaires créoles d'un point de vue sociohistorique plutôt que structurel et je passe en revue la littérature qui explique comment ils se sont développés. Pendant cet exercice, j'explicite des problèmes qui émanent des définitions traditionnelles et ce dont les hypothèses courantes de genèse ne rendent pas compte et j'argue que la meilleure approche est la linguistique historique et génétique. Celle-ci est fondée dans les histoires socioéconomiques où se sont développés ces vernaculaires. elle reconnaît les différents dialectes des langues lexificatrices qui sont entrées en contact avec des langues non européennes et elle articule les principes qui régissent la sélection des traits intégrés dans le vernaculaire naissant à partir des variétés en compétition.Mots clefs : Mufwene. créole, substrat, superstrat. lexificatrice. relexificationABSTRACTCréoles : The State of the AnIn this article I define creole vernaculars sociohistorically. rather than strucrurally. and survey the literature that accounts for how they developed. In this exercise I explain the problems inherent to traditional definitions and what is not accounted for by current hypotheses of creole genesis. I argue that the best approach to theeeee subject matter is one that treats the development of creoles as a topic of historical and genetic linguistics. well grounded in the socio-economie histories in which these vernaculars developed. factoring in the relevant dialects of the lexifiers that came in contact with non-European languages. and articulating principles that govern the sélection of features from the competing varieties into the emerging vemacular.Key words: Mufwene. creole, substratum. superstratum. lexifier. relexificatio

    Utterance Selection Model of Language Change

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    We present a mathematical formulation of a theory of language change. The theory is evolutionary in nature and has close analogies with theories of population genetics. The mathematical structure we construct similarly has correspondences with the Fisher-Wright model of population genetics, but there are significant differences. The continuous time formulation of the model is expressed in terms of a Fokker-Planck equation. This equation is exactly soluble in the case of a single speaker and can be investigated analytically in the case of multiple speakers who communicate equally with all other speakers and give their utterances equal weight. Whilst the stationary properties of this system have much in common with the single-speaker case, time-dependent properties are richer. In the particular case where linguistic forms can become extinct, we find that the presence of many speakers causes a two-stage relaxation, the first being a common marginal distribution that persists for a long time as a consequence of ultimate extinction being due to rare fluctuations.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figure

    Predicting language diversity with complex network

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    Evolution and propagation of the world's languages is a complex phenomenon, driven, to a large extent, by social interactions. Multilingual society can be seen as a system of interacting agents, where the interaction leads to a modification of the language spoken by the individuals. Two people can reach the state of full linguistic compatibility due to the positive interactions, like transfer of loanwords. But, on the other hand, if they speak entirely different languages, they will separate from each other. These simple observations make the network science the most suitable framework to describe and analyze dynamics of language change. Although many mechanisms have been explained, we lack a qualitative description of the scaling behavior for different sizes of a population. Here we address the issue of the language diversity in societies of different sizes, and we show that local interactions are crucial to capture characteristics of the empirical data. We propose a model of social interactions, extending the idea from, that explains the growth of the language diversity with the size of a population of country or society. We argue that high clustering and network disintegration are the most important characteristics of models properly describing empirical data. Furthermore, we cancel the contradiction between previous models and the Solomon Islands case. Our results demonstrate the importance of the topology of the network, and the rewiring mechanism in the process of language change
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