Bell Ringer 19. A Hindu temple located in Texas is most likely the result of which kind of diffusion? Expansion Hierarchical Contagious Relocation Stimulus.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Language Chapter 6.
Advertisements

The History of Language and Ethnolinguistic Theories/Hypotheses Katie Agnos Chapter 6.
 Scholars believe it existed, but where?  Theories abound (see p. 149 for details)
Why are Languages Distributed the way they are?
Ch. 5 Key Issue 2 Why is English related to other languages?
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Indo-European Languages
Chapter 6 Language.
Language.
Language Chapter 5 Pretest An Introduction to Human Geography
Sound Shifts Sounds shifts are a great way to find similarities and differences within and among differences. A sound shift is a slight change in a word.
Language Chapter 5 An Introduction to Human Geography
Language Chapter 5 An Introduction to Human Geography
LANGUAGE Chapter 5. Origin, Diffusion & Dialects of English  English colonies  Origin of English in England  Dialects in England  Differences between.
By: Jade Rinehart & Sydney Black
Language. Human capacity for acquiring and using complex systems of communication. Cultural trait that is learned from one generation to the next. Fundamental.
Language Chapter 6. Language Language – a set of sounds, combinations of sounds, and symbols that are used for communication.
Chapter 5 language.
AP HG – Spring 2013.
1. Anglo America Language: English Religion: Protestant (Christian)
LANGUAGE The ability to communicate with others orally or in writing. Language insures the continuity of a culture. (culture bag) It is estimated there.
Lindsey Miller and Reid Scholz
Chapter 5: Language. Language -definition -not just a way of communication -way to preserve culture.
© 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 6: Languages By: Alex B and Allison S.
Warmup How does the last scene of the movie tie together the elements of the Maori culture and the conflict in the movie? How does the last scene of the.
Language.
Language. One spatial display of language: Toponyms (place names) Toponyms is a part of cultural identity –a sense of belonging – Language is considered.
Ch. 5 Vocab. Standard Language Def: the form of language used for official government, business, and mass communication Sig: as with English, it doesn’t.
Language Chapter 6. Language Language – a set of sounds, combinations of sounds, and symbols that are used for communication.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Language. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Where Are English Language Speakers Distributed? Origin and diffusion of English.
Languages Review Ch. 6. Language Language families Dialects Divergence Convergence Diffusion of Language Mutual Intelligibility Distribution of Language.
Hosted by Alex Boyle and Alli Schlossberg Types of Languages Language Definitions People and Languages Identity
Chapter 5 Language PPT by Abe Goldman An Introduction to Human Geography The Cultural Landscape, 8e James M. Rubenstein.
Language Chapter 6. Language Language – a set of sounds, combinations of sounds, and symbols that are used for communication.
WORLD GEOGRAPHY Oct. 24, Today Unit 5 – Language (continued)
LANGUAGE Chapter 6.
LANGUAGE Chapter 6. Thinking Geographically Linguist Bert Vaux’s study of dialects in American English points to the differences in words for common things.
LANGUAGE Chapter 6 Lecture.
Regions and Structure Formal Region: An area of near uniformity (homogeneity) in one or several characteristics. Sometimes defined properly! Functional.
Chapter 6 LANGUAGE. Fact of the day Fastest growing culture/language is….. Hispanic/Spanish.
Language: “A set of sounds, combinations of sounds, and symbols that are used for communication.” By: Scott R.
Chapter 5 – Language AP Human Geography Boucher. What Are Languages, and What Role Do They Play in Culture? Language – A set of sounds, combinations of.
Language Chapter 5. World Language Families Language – a set of sounds, combinations of sounds, and symbols that are used for communication.
Language Chapter 5. What are Languages, and what Role do Languages Play in Cultures? Key Question:
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5: Language The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
LANGUAGE. Key Questions  What are languages, and what role do languages play in culture?  Why are languages distributed the way they are?  How do languages.
LANGUAGE Chapter 6 © Barbara Weightman Concept Caching: Burmese Script -Burma.
Language Families. A group of languages descended from a single, earlier tongue.
Key Question What Are Languages, and What Role Do Languages Play in Cultures? © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Language. French Road Signs, Québec Origin, Diffusion, & Dialects of English Origin and diffusion of English –English colonies –Origin of English in.
LANGUAGE. Language & Culture Language is a set of sounds and symbols that is used for communication. Language is a set of sounds and symbols that is used.
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
LANGUAGE.
Chapter 5 language.
Why is English Related to Other Languages?
Types of Language Non-spoken languages Sign language Body language
Why is English Related to Other Languages?
OBJECTIVE Students will analyze the key points of language in order to determine how language is a fundamental element of cultural identity.
Chapter 6 review.
Key Issues Where are folk languages distributed? Why is English related to other languages? Why do individual languages vary among places? Why do people.
OBJECTIVE TWW review the organization of language families and analyze the development of lingua franca in order to evaluate whether we should change.
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY CHAPTER 9 CLASS NOTES
Language.
AP HUMAN GEOGRAPHY CHAPTER 9 CLASS NOTES
Why is English Related to Other Languages?
Origin & Diffusion of Languages
Geography of Language.
Chapter 6 review.
Romance Branch of Indo-European Fig. 5-8: The Romance branch includes three of the world’s 12 most widely spoken languages (Spanish, French, and Portuguese),
Presentation transcript:

Bell Ringer 19. A Hindu temple located in Texas is most likely the result of which kind of diffusion? Expansion Hierarchical Contagious Relocation Stimulus 20. Compared to popular cultures, folk cultures are More cosmopolitan More homogeneous More diffuse More transitory More contagious

Bell Ringer 21. Which of the following terms best describes the geographic boundary of one particular linguistic feature? Language border Toponym Choropleth interval Linguistic hearth Isogloss 22. The predominance of English as the preferred language spoken at many international business meetings and political summits could be sited to support the claim that English is a popular Creole Language Pidgin language Language branch Dialect Lingua franca

Bell Ringer 23. The English language belongs to which of the following branches of the Indo-European Language family? Romanic Hellenic Celtic Germanic Armenian

CH III.1: Cultural Patterns and Processes (Language)

Language Language is a set of sounds and symbols that is used for communication Language is important to culture, reflecting, shaping, and influencing out thoughts Loss of a language (Assimilation) can destroy a cultural identity Language is also personal, explains how people view reality, and can be used as a weapon Quebec (French Canada) largely has French as the “at home” language, and force business to operate in French, advertisements to be in French, and have attempted to succeed from Canada on multiple occasions.

Languages are not so simple Monolingual Countries have only one official language that is spoken for all government business (France, Thailand, Brazil) Multilingual countries have more than one official language (Canada, Belgium, Switzerland) The USA has no official language, but notably only teaches in English English has become the default language for the world, especially when multiple languages are involved. It is the new Lingua Franca (Airline Pilots ALWAYS speak English with a mixed passengers or flying from one language to another)

Can you communicate without speaking the same language Can you communicate without speaking the same language. Short answer, Yes (sorta) Mutual Intelligibility: argues that two people speaking to each other will understand each other (two people speaking different dialects) Tricky because different languages and dialects prove exceptions Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese Chinese speakers can not communicate with one another though they both speak CHINESE Some Danish and Norwegian speakers CAN understand each other though you would think that those are two different languages.

Dialects & Standard Languages Variants of the same language along regional or ethnic lines are called dialects (English & PROPER ENGLISH) Dialects are unique in sound, speed, syntax, and vocabulary (lexicon Snow) Isogloss is the boundary of a dialect [in which a particular linguistic feature occurs] (which can be hard to determine) Dialect chains acknowledge that languages CLOSE to each other will be more similar, but while distance increases dialects become less recognizable Standard Languages Is a language that is widely published, distributed, and purposefully taught Standard languages could be maintained through state examination France pushes French, Ireland pushes Irish, China pushes Mandarin Chinese even though it is just called Chinese

Language Families Languages are broken into families to help differentiate them. Subfamilies are used to show commonalities are more definite and origin is more recent Language Groups refer to people whose language descended from the same common tongue (Romance Languages) There are 20 major Language families The Indo-European language family stretches the farthest Chinese has the most speakers Some languages are spoken in relatively few places, and survive in just 1 or part of 1 country (Laos, Cambodia) Madagascar speaks a language from the Austronesian family (Southeast Asia), not the African Language Family as there is a believe that Madagascar & SEAsia one traded.

Language Formation Languages are grouped into families based on similarities and differences A Sound Shift is a slight change in a word across languages within a subfamily or through a language family Family: Indo-European Subfamily: Romance (All from Latin) Languages: Italian, Spanish, French Example: Milk Latin: Lacte Italian: Latta Spanish: Leche French: Lait

Proto-Indo European (PIE) William Jones (1700s) Studied Sanskrit in South Africa After a period of time he became convinced that Greek, Latin, and Sanskrit were all connected Jakob Grimm (19th Century- Yes the Fairytale guy) Explained that languages have similar, but not identical, consonants He suggested that consonants were “harder” the farther back towards the hearth a language went Jones’ & Grimm’s ideas were combined together to suggest the existence of a Proto-Indo European language. This would suggest a common hearth for Greek, Latin, and Sanskrit This would link languages from Sandinavia to Africa, and from North America to Asia & Australia. Proto-Indo European (PIE)

Linguists call the process backward reconstruction, tracing the hardening of consonants “backwards” towards the original language Sometimes it is possible to use large parts of extinct languages can be used to re-create the language (The whole process is called deep reconstruction) Two Russian scholars (Vladislav Illich-Sqitych & Aharon Dolgopolsky) worked together to reconstruct the Nostratic Language The Nostratic language is possibly the ancestor of the Proto-Indo-European, Indo-European, but also Kartvelin, Uralic-Altaic, and the Dravidian languages

August Schleicher (German) was the first to suggest the idea of the world’s languages as being branches on a tree Languages form through language divergence, the breakdown in language first into dialects and then into new languages If languages have consistent spatial interaction (are close enough constantly enough) language convergence can occur two languages become one If no one speaks a language, a language becomes extinct

Renfrew Hypothesis Colin Renfrew (British) Suggests that the three areas near the Fertile Crescent gave the rise to 3 language families From Anatolia came the Indo-European Languages, from Western Fertile Crescent came the languages of North Africa and Arabia, & from Eastern Fertile Crescent came the languages of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India

The Diffusion of Language There are multiple theories of how language diffuses (Europe is always the focus Why?) It is clear that language diffused into Europe There is significant research and archeological studies done on the early peopling of Europe Conquest Theory: The Speakers of (PIE) spread east to west on horses, conquering and defusing their language as they went Agricultural Theory: The diffusion of PIE diffused west with the spread of agriculture Luca Cavalli-Sforza & Albert Ammerman proposed that every generation (25 years) the agricultural frontier would me 18 KM (11 Miles). Languages would slowly be replaced, but some languages (Basque language) still survives The Diffusion of Language

Dispersal Hypothesis: That Indo-European languages that came from PIE were first carries East into Southwest Asia, and then around the Caspian Sea, into the Russian-Ukrainian plains, and then into the Balkans The exact hearth of the PIE is still unknown

Languages: Pidgin, Trade, & Creole Sometimes languages combine to create a new language. A highly simplified mixture of languages for the purpose of communication between diverse groups is known as Pidgin Languages When two groups with different languages need to trade they will create a modified language in order to communicate, known as a trade language. (An extension of Pidgin SPECIFICALLY for trading) A stable language resulting from the blending of two or more languages that often do not share features of one another is known as a creole language. (Haitian African Languages & French) [Once a pidgin becomes a native language it becomes Creole] A Creole is a person who is of European descent who was born in a European colonial area (Latin America or Carribean)

Languages: Families & Examples Indo European Language Family Subfamilies: Romance (French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Portuguese), Germanic (English, German, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish), Slavic (Russian, Czech, Polish, Slovak, Ukrainian, Serbian, Bulgarian) Largest in the world There is a high correlation between language and political organization of space in Europe Celtic survives in some places ( Parts of France, Wales, Ireland, & Scotland) but was largely overtaken by other languages The Basque language has remained almost unchanged for 100s of years, and it strongly linked to the regions autonomy. The mountains of the region are credited with helping the language survive.

Sino-Tibetan Language Family Examples: Chinese, Thai, Cantonese (Chinese), Burmese About 20% of the world’s population The most widely spoken language comes from this family Mandarin Chinese (Han Chinese, which 75% of Chinese people speak) The Dialects of this language family can make it next to impossible for individuals to communication (as we discussed)

Afro-Asiatic Family Predominately spoken in Northern Africa Arabic (most common) Arabic is commonly spoke in Northern Africa & the Middle East Other languages in this family are Hebrew, Somali, and Berber Berber is spoken in Morocco and Algeria Afro-Asiatic Family

Niger Congo Family & Outliers The Language family that dominate Sub-Saharan Africa Important languages are Swahili and Zulu Over 9 million speak Zulu as their native language and 5 million Swahili Outliers in Africa The oldest language in Sub-Saharan Africa is the Khoisan Language, with are based of “clicks” Khoisan was largely overtaken by Bantu after invasions of Bantu speaking people Part of South Africa falls in the Indo-European Family for Afrikaans & English (a result of colonialization)

A place is a reflection of people’s activities, ideas, and tangible creations To NAME a place, bringing a certain characteristic indicative to the people or culture that live there. This idea is known as a Toponym Bayou Los Angels Kentucky (Iroquois- Land of tomorrow) Cheektowaga (Seneca- Land of Crabapples Minnesota (Lakota- sky-tinted water) Cape of Good Hope (Originally Cape of Storms) Place & Toponyms