Originally posted by Pabmusic
View Post
The Evolution of Language
Collapse
X
-
The thread has rather focused on delving into (what might loosely be called) Medieval usages. The Evolution of Language is happening all the time though. Pedants (including me) may rage against buzz-words and against fashionable grammatical practices such as using nouns as verbs (accessing) or pluralising (outcomes, challenges, musics), but many of these will be perfectly normal currency in the not-too-distant future (or should I say going forward?)
The process is only too evident to those who try to keep abreast of a foreign language. Everyday spoken French (despite the best efforts of l'Academie Francaise) is different from the stuff we learned at school, and those who struggle to keep branche (sorry, can't do accents) find that brache is no longer cool. OMG is cool still cool?
So we are swept along in an unstoppable rushing river, and fighting against the current is useless.
Comment
-
-
Simon
No time to do this in depth, but as I said elsewhere, thanks for all the scholarship and interesting posts - and the thread itself.
I have a mid-C20 book somewhere, by one of the old experts on words. Went back and back and had a stab at the original word for horse. I mean, the very first word anybody ever used as a descriptor. he admitted it was a long shot, but the logic was fascinating. I'll try to look it out when I'm back.
And so to bed...
Comment
-
Originally posted by Simon View Post...I have a mid-C20 book somewhere, by one of the old experts on words. Went back and back and had a stab at the original word for horse. I mean, the very first word anybody ever used as a descriptor. he admitted it was a long shot, but the logic was fascinating...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Simon View PostNo time to do this in depth, but as I said elsewhere, thanks for all the scholarship and interesting posts - and the thread itself.
I have a mid-C20 book somewhere, by one of the old experts on words. Went back and back and had a stab at the original word for horse. I mean, the very first word anybody ever used as a descriptor. he admitted it was a long shot, but the logic was fascinating. I'll try to look it out when I'm back.
And so to bed...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post"Horse" is also an example of metathesis like third/third. The Germanic root is "hros". In English it switched letters to become "horse" but is still found in place names such as Rosthwaite in the Lake District (horse clearing) In German it lost the initial h to become Roß (new spelling Ross) but came to be used mainly poetically (eg by Richard Wagner), like "steed" in English. In normal German it gave way to "Pferd".
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostIn German it lost the initial h to become Roß (new spelling Ross) but came to be used mainly poetically (eg by Richard Wagner), like "steed" in English. In normal German it gave way to "Pferd".
Helpful consonant changes between Greek and Latin [and cf Welsh, where Welsh seems often to follow the Greek and Irish the Latin (see 'P' and 'Q' Celts)]. All very fascinating, with many language realationships still obscure.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd next lesson, in Romance linguistics, how 'equus' became 'cheval' . According to phonological rules, it can almost be done! I used to know how, by metatheses, reduplications, diminutive formations &c.
.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... but since classical Latin had, in addition to equus ( a horse), the word caballus ( a work horse, a hack, a nag) - surely it is more likely that cheval is derived from the latter??
Ceffyl, like fenestr &c., came into Welsh via the Norman French invaders, which explains how a word of Latin origin crops up in a Celtic language.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
Comment