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Old 01-27-2003, 08:38 AM   #71
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Default And of course...

... the French word is "Guepe"
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Old 01-27-2003, 05:57 PM   #72
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Talking I know this is inappropriate, but I just have to post my obscure reference

Yeah. Yeah I know.
Did you know I had the titular line in "Out of Africa"?
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Old 01-27-2003, 08:03 PM   #73
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Quote:
Originally posted by Jan Haugland
....
I would also suggest that language changes more rapidly when:

1) there is no written version that tends to conserve language, at least if literacy is widespread
Bit difficult to test this, given the lack of records for non-written languages,
Quote:
2) groups are small. Small communities allow for faster changes and more complex grammar.
Eh, you're equating change=complex grammar. Why ?
Can work both ways.
Quote:
In European languages weak verbs are typically modern words, while strong verbs are old. The older a word is, the more complex and irregaluar grammar (e.g. go - went - gone; and the word for "to be" is highly irregalur in most languages as far as I know).

Small language groups can preserve arcane grammar, while the common languages of larger communities called for more regularity
eh, aren't you contradicting yourself in your example ?
In English, the strong and replacement verbs are typically those best known to a speaker --- those most used. Effects of repetition; and English is far from being a "small language group", yet it's preserving "arcane grammar".

The Indo-European Armenian, not very large, seems to have, IIRC, adopted a system of case endings for nouns from the non-Indo-European Turkish.

Mind you, your statement is perfectly correct for some small isolated communities ---- Basque groups in the more mountainous areas preserve older Basque grammatical features, for example.

But also, it isn't just say inflecting grammar, or whatever; for example, English makes up in complexity of syntax what it loses in complexity of morphology.
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