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<H2>The sci.lang FAQ: 8</H2>

<P><HR><STRONG><A NAME="8">8</A> <IMG  Align=Top SRC="redball.gif"> How are present-day languages related?</STRONG> 

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<P>[--<a href=mailto:[email protected]>Scott DeLancey</a>] 

<P>This is an <B>incomplete</B> list of some of the world's language families.  More detailed classifications can be found in Voegelin and Voegelin, <CITE>Classification And Index Of The World's Languages</CITE> (1977), and M. Ruhlen, <CITE>A Guide To The  World's Languages</CITE> (1987).  (Note: Ruhlen's classification recognizes a  number of higher-order groups which most linguists regard as speculative).  

<P>A language family is a group of languages that have been proven to have descended from a common ancestral language.  Branches of families likewise represent groups of languages with a more recent common ancestor.  For  example, English, Dutch, and German have a common ancestor which we label Proto-West-Germanic, and thus belong to the West Germanic branch of Germanic. Icelandic and Norwegian are descended from Proto-North Germanic, a separate  branch of Germanic.  All the Germanic languages have a common ancestor,  Proto-Germanic; farther back, this ancestor was descended from Proto-Indo- European, as were the ancestors of the Italic, Slavic, and other branches.  

<P>Not all languages are known to be related to each other.  It is possible that  they are related but the evidence of relationship has been lost; it's also  possible they arose separately.  It is likely that some of the families  listed here will eventually turn out to be related to one another.  

<P>While low-level close relationships are easy to demonstrate, higher-order  classification proposals must rely on more problematic evidence and tend to  be controversial.  Recently linguists such as Joseph Greenberg and Vitalij  Shevoroshkin have attracted attention both in linguistic circles and in the  popular press with claims of larger genetic units, such as Nostratic  (comprising Indo-European, Uralic, Altaic, Dravidian, and Afroasiatic) or  Amerind (to include all the languages of the New World except Na-Dene and Eskimo-Aleut).  Most linguists regard these hypotheses as having a grossly insufficient empirical foundation, and argue that comparisons at that depth  are not possible using available methods of historical linguistics.  For more see <A HREF="lang21.html#22">question 22</a>.

<P>This list isn't intended to be exhaustive, even for families like Germanic and Italic.  Nor is it the last word on what's a 'language'; see <A HREF="lang9.html#12">question 12</A>.  

<P>  Note: English is not descended from Latin. 
<BR>        English is a Germanic language with a lot of Latin vocabulary, borrowed from French in the Middle Ages. 
<P><HR>
<P><A HREF="Langmaps.html">[<b>Maps of the world's language families</b>]</A>
<br><A HREF="numbers.html">[Numbers from 1 to 10 in thousands of languages]</A>


<P><B><A NAME="IE">INDO-EUROPEAN</A></B> 

<BR><B>Germanic</B> 
<UL><LI><I>North Germanic:</I>  Icelandic, Norwegian / Swedish / Danish 
<LI><I>East Germanic:</I>  Gothic (extinct) 
<LI><I>West Germanic:</I>  English, Dutch, German, Yiddish</UL>

<B>Italic</B> 
<UL><LI><I>Osco-Umbrian:  </I> Oscan, Umbrian (extinct languages of Italy)
<LI>Latin and its modern descendants (Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Rumanian, French, etc.) </UL>

<B>Celtic</B>      
<UL><LI><I>P-Celtic:</I>  Welsh, Breton, Cornish      
<LI><I>Q-Celtic:</I>  Irish, Scots Gaelic, Manx     
<LI>Some extinct European languages were also Celtic, notably those of Gaul</UL>

<B>Hellenic</B>:  Greek (ancient and modern)
<BR><B>Slavic</B>:  Russian, Bulgarian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croatian, etc. (but not Rumanian or Albanian)
<BR><B>Baltic</B>:  Lithuanian and Latvian

<BR><B>Indo-Iranian</B>
<UL><LI><I>Indic:</I>  Sanskrit and its modern descendants (Hindi-Urdu, Gypsy (Romany), Bengali, etc.) <BR>      
<LI><I>Iranian:</I> Persian (ancient and modern), Pashto (Afghanistan), others</UL>

<B>Albanian</B>:  Albanian
<BR><B>Armenian</B>:  Armenian
<BR><B>Tokharian</B>: Tokharian (an extinct language of NW China)
<BR><B>Hittite</B>: Hittite (extinct language of Turkey) 

<P><B>AFRO-ASIATIC</B> 
<BR><B>Semitic</B>:  Arabic, Hebrew (not Yiddish; see above), Aramaic, Amharic       and other languages of Ethiopia 
<BR><B>Chadic</B>:  languages of northern Africa, e.g. Hausa 
<BR><B>Cushitic</B>:  Somali, other languages of eastern Africa 
<BR><B>Egyptian</B>:  Ancient Egyptian 
<BR><B>Berber</B>:  languages of North Africa 

<P><B>NIGER-KORDOFANIAN</B>:  includes most of the languages of sub-Saharan   Africa.  Most of the languages are in the <B>Niger-Congo</B> branch; the     most widely known subgroup of N-C is <I>Bantu</I> (Swahili, Zulu, Xhosa, etc.)  

<P><B><A NAME="Uralic">URALIC</A></B>: Finnish, Estonian, Saami (Lapp), Hungarian, and several languages of central Russia

<P><B>MONGOL</B>:  Mongolian, Buryat, Kalmuck, etc. 
<BR><B>TURKIC</B>:  Turkish, Azerbaijani, Kazakh, and other languages of Central Asia
<br><b>TUNGUSIC</b>: Manchu, Juchen, Evenki, Even, Oroch, and other languages of northeastern Asia
<P>    Some linguists group these three families together as <B><A NAME="Altaic">ALTAIC</A></B>.    Rather more controversially, some add Korean and Japanese to this group.
<BR>    It has been claimed that <A HREF="lang8.html#Uralic">URALIC</A> and ALTAIC are related (as <B>URAL-ALTAIC</B>),  but this idea is not widely accepted. 

<P><B>DRAVIDIAN</B>:  languages of southern India, including Tamil, Telugu, etc. 

<P><B><A NAME="Sino-Tibetan">SINO-TIBETAN</A></B> 
<BR>    <B>Sinitic</B>:  Chinese (several 'dialects', or arguably distinct languages:       Mandarin, Wu (Shanghai), Min (Hokkien [Fujian], Taiwanese),  Yue (Cantonese), Hakka, Gan, Xiang 
<BR>    <B>Tibeto-Burman</B>: Tibetan, Burmese, various languages of Burma,       China, India, and Nepal

<P><B>AUSTROASIATIC</B> 
<BR>    <B>Mon-Khmer</B>:  Vietnamese, Khmer (Cambodian), and various minority   and tribal languages of Southeast Asia 
<BR>    <B>Munda</B>:  tribal languages of eastern India 

<p><B><A NAME="Austronesian">AUSTRONESIAN</A></B> 
<UL><LI>Malay/Indonesian, other languages of Indonesia (Javanese, etc.) 
<LI><I>Philippine languages: </I>Tagalog, Ilocano, Bontoc, etc. 
<LI>Aboriginal languages of Taiwan (Tsou, etc.) 
<LI><I>Polynesian languages: </I>Hawaiian, Maori, Samoan, Tahitian, etc. 
<LI><I>Micronesian:  </I>Chamorro (spoken in Guam), Yap, Truk, etc. 
<LI>Malagasy (spoken in Madagascar) </UL>
Most of these languages fall in a branch called <I>Malayo-Polynesian</I> 

<P><B>JAPANESE</B>:  A number of linguists argue that Japanese is <A HREF="lang8.html#Altaic"><B>ALTAIC</B></A>; others, <BR>    that it is most closely related to <B>Austronesian</B>, or that it represents  <BR>    a mixture of <A HREF="lang8.html#Austronesian"><B>Austronesian</B></A> and <B>ALTAIC</B> elements.

<P><B>TAI-KADAI</B>:  Thai, Lao, and other languages of southern China and  <BR>    northern Burma.  Possibly related to <A HREF="lang8.html#Austronesian"><B>Austronesian</B></A>.   
<BR>    An outdated hypothesis that <I>Tai</I> is part of <A HREF="lang8.html#Sino-Tibetan"><B>SINO-TIBETAN</B></A> is still      often found in reference works and introductory texts. 

<P><B>AUSTRALIA</B>:  the Aboriginal languages of Australia are conservatively     classified into 26 families, the largest being <B>PAMA-NYUNGAN</B>, consisting>    of about 200 languages originally spoken over 80-90% of Australia. 

<P>A large number of language families are found in North and South America. There are numerous proposals which group these into larger units, some of which will probably be demonstrated in time.  To date no New World language has been proven to be related to any Old World family.  The larger <B>North American</B> families include: 

<P><B>ESKIMO-ALEUT</B>:  two Eskimo languages and Aleut. <P><B>ATHAPASKAN</B>:  most of the languages of Alaska and northwestern Canada,  also includes Navajo and Apache.  Eyak (in Alaska) is related to     Athapaskan; some linguists put these together with Tlingit and Haida  in a <B>NA-DENE</B> family. 

<P><B>ALGONQUIAN</B>:  most of Canada and the Northeastern U.S., includes Cree, Ojibwa, Cheyenne, Blackfoot 

<P><B>IROQUOIAN</B>:  the languages of NY state (Mohawk, Onondaga, etc.) and Cherokee 

<P><B>SIOUAN</B>:  includes Dakota/Lakhota and other languages of the Plains  and Southeast U.S. 

<P><B>MUSKOGEAN</B>: Choctaw, Alabama, Creek, Mikasuki (Seminole) and other     languages of the southeast U.S. 

<P><B>UTO-AZTECAN</B>:  a large family in Mexico and the Southwestern U.S.,    includes Nahuatl (Aztec), Hopi, Comanche, Paiute, etc. 

<P><B>SALISH</B>:  languages of Washington and British Columbia 

<P><B>HOKAN</B>:  languages of California and Mexico; a controversial grouping <P><B>PENUTIAN</B>:  languages of California and Oregon; also controversial 
 
<P>Work on documentation and classification of <B>South American</B> languages still  has a long way to go.  Generally recognized families include:  

<P><B>ARAWAKAN</B>, <B>TUCANOAN</B>, <B>TUPI-GUARANI</B> (including Guarani, a national language of Paraguay), <B>CARIBAN</B>, <B>ANDEAN</B> (including <A HREF="quechua.html">Quechua</a> and Aymara)  

<P><B>LANGUAGE ISOLATES</B>:  A number of languages around the world have never been successfully shown to be related to any others-- in at least some cases  because any related languages have long been extinct.  The most famous  isolate is Basque, spoken in northern Spain and southern France; it is apparently a survival from before the Indo-Europeanization of Europe.

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