- Joined
- Mar 21, 2019
Who on Earth would want to change their whole vocabulary and way of speaking (and how did they get their way)? If we lived in a sane world, we would all be speaking Old English.
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It almost never works that way. Language change is a slow process that is almost always caused by (often violent) interaction with other ethnic groups. The primary reason that English had such a radical change was because our entire ruling class was replaced (not for the first time either) by vulgar Franco-latin speaking Normans in the 11th century and Norman became the prestige language.Who on Earth would want to change their whole vocabulary and way of speaking
*Proto-Indo-EuropeanIf we lived in a sane world, we would all be speaking Old English.
That's what people in Imperial Germany (Nazis-light) thought before World War I, and arguably, it could have happened if the evil powers would have won that war. Somebody tried to develope a conlang based on Standard German, Wede.if we lived in a sane world all of europe would be speaking german for the last 70 years
In Medieval Europe, linguists thought that all languages developed from Hebrew. Together with Latin and Greek, those were the three "noble tongues".There’s the biblical story about the Tower of Babel. Can you imagine how dull and boring a world with only one language and one culture would be?
*Proto-Indo-European
That's what people in Imperial Germany (Nazis-light) thought before World War I, and arguably, it could have happened if the evil powers would have won that war. Somebody tried to develope a conlang based on Standard German, Wede.
In Medieval Europe, linguists thought that all languages developed from Hebrew. Together with Latin and Greek, those were the three "noble tongues".
Old English is a West Germanic language and therefore a subset of Indo-European. Old Germanic may or may not have been the result of PIE conquest of non-Indo-European people since a lot of core words like blood that don't normally vary are different from every other Indo-European language, but its character is still predominantly Indo-European.Correct me if I'm wrong, but we would be speaking Old English in my hypothetical world.
PIE would be spoken by Europeans on the mainland.
English has become very analytic and abandoned most flexion. In terms of grammar and complexity, there is a huge leap between English and all languages in continental Europe. Though, the other Germanic languages, except Icelandic and German, have also lost a large amount of grammatical and morphological complexity and move away from synthetism.Old English is a West Germanic language and therefore a subset of Indo-European. Old Germanic may or may not have been the result of PIE conquest of non-Indo-European people since a lot of core words like blood that don't normally vary are different from every other Indo-European language, but its character is still predominantly Indo-European.
Funnily enough, people actually like when i say things like "Overyonder" or "Cheerio" as if it was nobody's business.Correct me if I'm wrong, but we would be speaking Old English in my hypothetical world.
PIE would be spoken by Europeans on the mainland.
Also, you gotta have in mind when new stuff happens/appears in the form of new technologies, social interactions and the such. We humans are coming up with new stuff by the day and we need new words to define such things. Luckly, we don't have the problem scientists had back in the day when there were so many discoveries that they couldn't name all of them.Language change is basically a long bizarre trend towards further simplicity compounded by the occasional violent change in flow from a large scale event which ironically creates new features as a result. As time goes on, tenses are lost, precision gives way to context, and sounds themselves are modified and shifted to fit new meanings. Its It's like if streamlining a video game worked as advertised.
Why? In fact, some things like genders and cases and conjugations have many advantages.Those are all improvements.
Case endings and etc can be useful but grammatical gender is just arbitrary noise that adds complexity for no gain. Why the fuck is a door feminine? That's not even getting into the bullshit African languages with genders for things that are long, or genders for natural things that aren't dogs.Why? In fact, some things like genders and cases and conjugations have many advantages.
Indonesian and Dutch have relatively free word order but no cases (anymore, for Dutch), but they really would be helpful for clarity.Case endings and etc can be useful but grammatical gender is just arbitrary noise that adds complexity for no gain. Why the fuck is a door feminine? That's not even getting into the bullshit African languages with genders for things that are long, or genders for natural things that aren't dogs.
There are some (((native Nazis and Frogs))) who think that the gendered nouns thing is "sexist" (doubleplusunfeminist). As if demanding to be called with pronouns that sound like space alien names isn't enough, those want to rewrite core parts of grammar! Of course, people won't take commands on how to speak from anybody, that's not how language drift works.Now, even learning gender in german or french is a stretch for some people.