Posted on 03/04/2009 4:07:29 PM PST by billorites
A time travellers phrasebook that could allow basic communication between modern English speakers and Stone Age cavemen is being compiled by scientists studying the evolution of language.
Research has identified a handful of modern words that have changed so little in tens of thousands of years that ancient hunter-gatherers would probably have been able to understand them.
Anybody who was catapulted back in time to Ice Age Europe would stand a good chance of being intelligible to the locals by using words such as I, who and thou and the numbers two, three and five, the work suggests.
More nuanced conversation would be more of a challenge. The analysis of language evolution suggests that none of the adjectives, verbs and nouns used in modern languages would have much in common with those used then.
Mark Pagel, of the University of Reading, who leads the research, said that it was nonetheless becoming possible to create a rudimentary Stone Age phrasebook made up of the oldest known words.
If a time traveller wanted to go back in time to a specific date, we could probably draw up a little phrasebook of the modern words that are likely to have sounded similar back then, he told The Times. You wouldnt be able to discuss anything very complicated, but it might be enough to get you out of a tight spot.
Dr Pagels research also predicts which parts of modern vocabulary are likely to survive into English as it will be spoken 1,000 years in the future, and which will die out.
By the year 3000, words such as throw, stick, dirty, guts and squeeze could easily be gone. These already differ greatly between related languages, such as English and German, and are good candidates to evolve into new forms.
(Excerpt) Read more at timesonline.co.uk ...
Word. ;)
My word.
7 words you cant say on radio or TV.....?
Wasn’t that Arthur Dent in Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy?
I think that was Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy.....
So that pretty much rules out any discussion of Goedel’s Incompleteness Theorems.
At the rate we’re going we oughta be back in the Stone Age any day now, so it’s good to know the lingo.
These words listed here will only work with the people of the Indo-European (Europe, Persia, India) family / ancestry, and not those relating to Semitic/ Afro-Asian/ Sino-Tibetan, etc., families.
:o It was many years ago. Thanks for the correction.
You can always count on FReepers to embarrass you. Trust me on this.
:^)
Still, if you knew North American Indian sign language, or the Shang Dynasty hieroglyphics, you might do much better than with the approach proposed here.
For example, you are sitting there haggling over a buffalo robe. You raise your right arm straight up over your head, hand open, and cross your chest with your left arm.
So, what does that mean? Well, in the sign language, or Shang characters, or ancient Sumerian, or Aztec pictoglyphs, or Mongolian Deer Stones, or Finish/Russian pictoglyphs that's going to mean "ME", the most important word in any language on Earth.
You can start from there!
When I travel back in time, I'm bringing one of these. It'll get me out of a tight spot if the phrasebook doesn't work.
Stone Age phrasebook developed by scientists studying oldest words
Telegraph | 25 Feb 2009 | Alastair Jamieson
Posted on 02/26/2009 8:52:45 AM PST by BGHater
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2194604/posts
‘Oldest English Words’ Identified
BBC | Thursday, 26 February 2009
Posted on 02/26/2009 4:51:56 PM PST by nickcarraway
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2195013/posts
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Thanks billorites. |
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Anyone who watched Ringo Star’s “Cave Man” already has the stone age lexicon!
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