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Book: Origin and Evolution of Languages

Chapter: New perspectives on the origin of languages

DOI: 10.1558/equinox.19034

Blurb:

We don’t often ask ourselves where languages come from because they just seem to be there: French in France, English in England, Chinese in China, Japanese in Japan, and so forth. Yet if we go back only a few thousand years none of these languages were spoken in their respective countries and indeed none of these languages existed anywhere in the world. Where did they all come from?
We believe that traces of this first fully-modern language can still be perceived in the world’s contemporary languages and the two examples
in Tables 3 and 4 are but a small portion of this evidence. If this hypothesis proves to be correct, then human language may turn out not only to support the ‘Out of Africa’ hypothesis, but to explain it as well.

Chapter Contributors

  • Merritt Ruhlen (ruhlen@equinoxpub.com - ruhlen) 'Stanford University'