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    MIRACLES OF HUMAN LANGUAGE: AN

    INTRODUCTION TO LINGUISTICS.

    MARC VAN OOSTENDORP

    LEIDEN UNIVERSITY

    Week 1:

    1.1

    Human Language and Animal Communications Systems.

    Hi, and welcome to this very first video of our very first module in our MOOC on the miracles of human

    language. Finally, the fun can begin. Finally, we can start exploring the basics of human language

    together.

    This course is all about variety

    because that's what human

    language is all about. It's all about

    diversity. But we will also look at

    things that are the same in all

    languages. This particular module is

    our introduction, and that may

    mean that it's actually the most

    important module of all, because we're going to define our field

    of research by asking certain questions. Questions such as what is

    language? Do animals have language? How many languages are

    there in the world? How do we count those languages? How arethey related to each other? What do linguists do? How do they

    get their data? And what are informants?

    In this first video, were going to look a little bit at animals. Do animals have a language as well? Well, it's

    clear that animals communicate, so your cats may communicate to you a little bit or chimpanzees in a

    zoo may clearly talk to each other in some way. But it's also clear that there are differences between

    animal communication, and human communication. Your cat can communicate maybe some of her

    needs to you, but you will never be able to have a full conversation with her. And apes may have even

    more complicated systems of talking to each other. But they will never teach a MOOC about ape

    language.

    We have more signs clearly than those apes or cats. We have more words.

    But is that the only difference? Is the only difference that we have more?

    Well, obviously the answer to that question is no. And we're going to look

    at three dimensions in which language, human language, and animal

    communication are different: discrete infinity, displacement, and joint

    attention. Don't worry, I'm going to explain all three of them.

    First, discrete infinity that maybe sounds a little bit complicated, but it's

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    actually quite simple. Discrete means limited or countable. A discrete

    system is a system with a limited number of things in it. The alphabet is

    excellent example. English has an alphabet of 26 letters. That's a limited

    discrete set, but with these limited items, you can make many different

    words, and with those many different words, you can make many different sentences. How many?

    While I would claim infinitely many, any thought which gets into your head you can express, and there

    are infinitely many thoughts, probably. I can also prove that there are infinitely many sentences,

    because if there would be finitely many, there would be one sentence which would be the longest of

    these finite sentence. Now I could take that sentence and say, Pete says,and then that sentence would

    already be longer. And I could repeat that procedure. I could say John says that Pete says that, and

    then our longest sentence. Mark says that Pete says that John says and so on. But admittedly those

    sentences would not be extremely interesting, but they would be longer and longer and longer, infinitely

    long, as a matter of fact. Not so for animals. Apes also have a discreet set system of calls, a limited

    number of calls, but they cannot combine them to make more and more complicated systems. They only

    have a limited number of combinations.

    The second difference with animal communication is called displacement. We

    humans can talk about our here and now, but also about things far away inthe past, on the moon or even about completely abstract things, which we

    have never seen and will never see. Most animals don't have that. Bees can

    communicate about space, because they can dance and wiggle and show

    other bees where to find their honey. It's a lovely system, but it's very limited.

    They can only talk about honey they have really seen. They cannot talk about

    some abstract honey on the moon, or something like that.

    Finally, there's a notion of joint attention, and shared intentionality. We

    humans work together as a team very often. We work as a team where we

    have a shared goal and each has their own role in achieving that goal. In

    order to be able to do that, it means we have to read each others minds alittle bit. We have to see what the other person is trying to do so that we can

    help that other person in achieving that goal. Language helps in that.

    Language is inherently cooperative. But for animals this is very different. Some apes have joint

    attention, that means that they can look at the same thing and maybe be aware that they look at the

    same thing, but they don't work together in this very complicated way in which we humans can do so.

    We have now seen in this video that animals do have systems of communication, at least some kinds of

    animals do. But that they are always different in certain key aspects from human language. These key

    aspects are first, humans can make an infinite amount of messages with this limited set of building

    blocks. Second, humans can talk about things other than the here and now. And thirdly, language is a

    fundamentally cooperative tool for humans. In the next video, we will look a little bit further at what

    language is. Is it really true that all humans have language?

    1.2Human Language vs. other Languages

    In the previous video we looked at differences between

    animal communication and human language. In this

    video we're going to look a little bit deeper into human

    language, and more specifically, into the question, is it

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    true that every human being has a language?

    Language arguably is one of the most important distinguishing

    characteristics of human beings. We use language for many different things.

    We use it, at least, in order to communicate, to think, and to show who we

    are, to which group of human beings we belong or want to belong. It's also

    very hard to imagine a field in society where no language is used at all. So

    it's a characteristic not just of human beings, but also of human society.

    Let's first look at certain things which are called languages in English, but may

    not really be languages in the sense we want to talk about here. Programming

    languages for computers are, I think, clear examples of those, or the language

    of flowers, or the language of music. We call them

    languages in ordinary life, but not so in linguistics or in

    this course. What is important for human language is

    first, that there are native speakers, that there are

    people that learn those languages as infants. Secondly, that one can speak

    about basically everything in it. That's something we saw in the previous video.And thirdly, that it is carried and recognized by a more or less well-defined

    group of human beings as their language. There should be some people who say

    this is our shared language.

    So what about sign language? Is sign language also a language? You

    may also wonder whether being spoken is not actually a

    characteristic of human language. So using speech to transfer my

    information from my head to your head, isn't that also what human

    language is about? Well if that's what you think, you may wonder

    about deaf people. Do they have a language as well if they don't

    hear? Very often they have sign language. Is this sign language alsoa language? The first thing you have to understand about that is not

    necessarily every sign, every gesture I make is a language. But the systems which

    are used by deaf people are called sign languages, and linguists consider them to

    be real human languages as well. They're basically the same as spoken language

    with this one difference, that they don't use speech. There are many sign

    languages in the world. That's another interesting thing about them. So there's a

    lot of variation in sign language, just as there is in spoken language. We don't

    know how many different sign languages there are in the world. They're more

    difficult to count. We know much less about sign languages than about spoken

    languages, but there must be hundreds of them. Furthermore, sign languages

    have exactly the same kind of functionality as spoken languages. They can be

    used to express any kind of

    thought. You can make infinitely

    many sentences in them. They have native speakers.

    They're groups of people, deaf communities, who

    consider them to be their language.

    So if deaf people have a language, does that mean that

    everybody in the world speaks a language? Well

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    unfortunately, there are some exceptions. They're very few, and they're always people who are

    suffering from some very physical, psychological or social impediments, or even some combination

    thereof. Examples of people suffering from these very strong, social impediments are so called wolf

    children. They're children who grew up without their parents, or where their parents didn't want to

    speak to them for some strange reason. They may have been deaf children with hearing parents where

    the hearing parents were ashamed of having deaf children. That, unfortunately, sometimes happens. Or

    there may be cases of physical and psychological abuse.

    One very famous example of this for linguists is the example of Genie. Genie was an American girl who

    was locked up in her room from when she was 20 months old until the age of 13. She didn't have any

    human interaction in that part of her life. Her parents were kind of crazy. Her father would only bark at

    her like a dog, and her mother was not allowed to say anything to her. Therefore, she didn't learn any

    human language during her youth. Also later on, she was not able to figure out this system of combining

    all these words into infinitely many sentences.

    Fortunately, these are, of course, very exceptional cases. Something very exceptionally bad must

    happen to you to end up in such a state. People might also sometimes lose their language. They then

    suffer from a medical condition called aphasia. This is something whichusually hits people after they had a stroke. They will lose part of their

    language capacity because part of their brain no longer functions.

    Interestingly, that can be just a very tiny part of using your language. They

    may use their ability to pronounce, or their ability to understand language, or

    their ability to speak coherently or their ability to make grammatical

    sentences. So they can reveal a message, but their sentences will always be

    very strange. In the 19th century, the study of such aphasic patients was one

    way to find out what was the relation between language and the brain? So

    after an aphasic patient would die, you would study the brain of the person to see where the problem of

    that person was.

    So the answer to our original question, whether all humans have language, seems to be yes. Something

    must be really wrong for a human being not to develop some kind of language. But this raises an

    additional question. What's the evolutionary origin of language, then? Is it as old as us, as homo

    sapiens? Is it older? Or is it younger? It's very difficult to decide about this, for instance, because we

    dont have falsifiable evidence. Language is something abstract. The moment I speak it, it's already gone.

    Let alone that we can reconstruct language of 50,000 or 100,000 years ago.

    There are theories about it. The main division is between continuity

    based theories and discontinuity based theories. Continuity based

    theories say that language is based on animal communication. It's

    just a somewhat more complicated form of them. Discontinuity

    theories say that human language is really something different.

    Something must have happened in our development to make

    human language possible. In the 19th century, there was a learned

    society in Paris which disallowed linguists from even talking about

    these matters, because they were so difficult to decide. In the past

    few decades, we have started to speculate and think about them

    again. But still, it's very difficult to give a definitive answer to that particular question.

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    In this video, we have seen there's really a very strong link between being human and using language.

    Almost every human being uses language, even deaf people. If you have enough deaf people, they will

    create and use a sign language. And they are definitely languages as well. We have seen that. We've also

    seen that those very few humans who don't have a language live in very exceptional circumstances. It

    might be either some kind of social condition as in the case of Genie, or some medical condition, as for

    aphasic patients. Otherwise, being human means using language. A very obvious next question is, if

    language is so important, how come we have so many different languages? That's what I will discuss

    with Marten and Inge in the next video.

    i.

    1.3Discussion with Marten and Inge: Language Diversity

    In the previous video, I have shown to you that humans and language really belong together. And that isnot just because human language is different from animal communication systems. It's also because all

    humans have a language unless there is something really, really wrong. And this MOOC, in every

    module, I will also discuss topics like this with my students, Inge and Marten. This is going to be our first

    discussion.

    [Inge] Okay. I would like to ask the first question then, because you just said that all humans have

    language, then so how come we do not all speak the same language?

    [Marc] That's a very intriguing question. It's something which has intrigued people forever, for

    thousands of years. Because it's so strange, it's so weird. It's maybe you could even think it's so bad that

    we don't all speak the same language, because we can't all understand each other. Well, actually, I thinkyou can debate whether that's a bad thing or not, but you could say, at least it's strange. How come it is

    a something, which is so human, why don't we all do it in the same way? And there are different

    answers to this question. One of them is that, actually this whole idea that language serves as a

    communication system. I have an idea in my head and I transfer it to you. That might not just be the

    only function of language, maybe not even the primary function of language. There might be other

    things, so to actually show that I am really different than you might be another function of language.

    And I can show that by speaking differently, so that's one factor. And another factor might be just that

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    every generation has to learn the language again and language is really complicated. So things can go

    wrong when you are learning the language. So when the children are learning the language, they might

    do it just slightly differently. And this is how we believe for instance, that from Latin in Italy, Italian

    derived and in France, French derived. Just because people started speaking differently and slowly over

    the generations these languages drifted apart.

    [Inge] So languages change and that's why there's so much variation, but do all languages also have the

    same origin. So it could be possible that there was one region or place or a speech community even in

    which there was a language that was like an ancestor of all the languages that exist now.

    [Marc] That's a fantastic idea. That would be still so, okay. Maybe we don't all speak the same language

    now, but at least we derive from ancestors who spoke the same language. So Latin maybe had a mother

    and a grandmother, etc. And maybe if we go back far enough, we will find this one language, which is

    the origin of all. One thing which makes this extra appealing is that it does seem to be the case that our

    species, homo sapiens, does have one origin. I brought the globe to show where this origin is. Mainly

    here, in East Africa. So we know for sure, at least it seems to be quite sure, that this is where we all

    came from and people then migrated to different parts of the world in the course of time. Now, if it is

    the case that homo sapiens already had a language, if it's really the case that humans and languagebelong together, then maybe there was one language spoken already here, and then maybe all

    languages derived from that. The problem is this is speculation. This is just mere speculation. And the

    reason for that is languages have been written for maybe 5,000 years or something like that. 100,000

    years ago when these migrations maybe started, people only spoke their language, and speaking is just

    moving the air. That disappears. The things I said just now have already disappeared. They are no longer

    there. They were in the air. They are no longer there, let alone the things of a 100,000 years ago. So it's

    a nice idea that maybe there was a language, a common language a 100,000 years ago. Maybe it's even

    true, but I don't think we will ever know what that language was.

    [Marten] I also have question and that has to do with human language. We've seen that animals and

    humans have different communication systems. But there surely are some things that look likelanguages, and that sound like languages that humans use, but that I'm not sure that they qualify as

    languages. For example, in what they use in Lord of Rings or in Star Trek or in Game of Thrones. There is

    a system, and it's different from anything else that I know. So, is it then another language?

    [Marc] Yeah. It's has become quite popular in the last decades to make a movie or science fiction movie

    or some movie about some fantasy people and to give a language to those people. Actually, those

    languages are very often made by linguists. They're produced by linguists. So, it's something which

    linguists do. So can linguists make languages then? And the answer to that, in the end, it seems to be no.

    A linguist cannot really make a language. And the reason for that is that an important criteria for

    distinguishing a natural language from an artificial language is native speakers. Is the language learned

    by children, from a very early age on? Is it learned in a natural way? So not like from a book or in the

    classroom setting, but just by picking it up from their parents. And that doesn't seem to be the case for

    these languages. So we don't consider them natural languages for this reason.

    [Marten] Yeah. So, if I would learn Elvish from talking really well and I would teach it to my children.

    Would they then be considered native speakers and is this happening? Does somebody do this, actually?

    [Marc] I'm not sure whether anybody is doing this for Elvish. I don't think I would advise it for anybody

    to do it for Elvish. But if it would be done, and if it would be done seriously, there would be several

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    problems for these children, because who would they speak Elvish to, except for their parents? But it

    would be in my view an interesting case for linguists. It would be something which would become worth

    studying. Still many linguists consider this to be a problem problematic kind of case, because there are

    still all these issues of do, you'll probably learn many other languages as well this will just be a tiny part.

    There's no community. That was another criteria we saw. There's not a community of speakers. We

    distinguish natural languages and artificial languages also in that way. So there's still no community for

    Elvish. So, in a crazy world where there would be a village that would all start speaking Elvish, in a few

    generations it would be a natural language. It would be a wonderful experiment for linguistics. It would

    maybe not be such a good experiment for humanity.

    In this video, we've seen that although it might seem preferable for everybody to speak the same

    language, there's also various reasons why this is not the case. There are historical reasons. There are

    reasons of language acquisition. And we have seen that there are certain things, which in every day life,

    we might call languages, but which linguists are more hesitant to take into account. And we mentioned

    some of those like Dothraki, and I'm sure that among you there will be people who speak some of these

    languages, like Klingon, or maybe you speak Esperanto. Do you think that those are natural languages,

    given our criteria or not? You can go to our forum and discuss topics like this.

    In the next video, we're going to look more into the diversity of the world's languages. I'm going to talk a

    little bit about the question, whether languages are really countable and how many languages there are

    in the world. And we're going to look into an important online reference work for studying language

    diversity in individual countries and in the world.

    1.4

    Language Diversity and Ethnologue

    After my discussion with Inge and Marten, in this video I want to look a little bit more into language

    variation. How many languages are there in the world? How do we count them? How many languages

    are there in the world?

    It's actually difficult to decide, maybe it's impossible to decide on real scientific

    criteria. We have to guess. The reason is that there's many areas in the world

    where we simply don't know which languages are spoken there. And in other

    areas, it's sometimes difficult to decide whether something is, for instance, a

    dialect rather than a language. There are no objective criteria for making this

    decision, so we guess. The most heard estimate is something between 6,000 and

    7,000 languages in the world. That's also the number which is given by probably

    the most authoritative list of languages, which is an online encyclopedia of

    languages called Ethnologue. We're going to use that encyclopedia quite a lot in this course. Ethnologue

    is free, and you can use it to find information about countries, about languages, about language families

    etc.

    This (top of next page) is an example of a webpage about a language from the Amazon called Itonama.

    What you can see is that Ethnologue tells you where the language is spoken and what its status is. If

    Itonma used to be spoken in some places in Bolivia, from the status we can see that the language is

    actually dying out.

    Ethnologue also gives us information about countries. Look at this page about Brazil, for instance. You

    have to be very careful in interpreting the results about what Ethnologue actually says. Also, the editors

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    of Ethnologue sometimes make arbitrary

    decisions about what to call a language or not. Take a look. As you see in Ethnologue, if you study it a

    little bit more, you will find that many languages in Ethnologue are very small. Many have fewer than

    say 1,000 speakers. Many of those languages are dying out, they will no longer be spoken in a century

    from now. As a matter of fact, some people estimate that by the end of this century, there will be only

    about 300 languages left in the whole world. This obviously

    makes it very important to document these smaller

    languages and to do so now.

    So other languages are very big. Here's the top 10, with

    Chinese as number one with the biggest population of

    speakers, and followed by Spanish and English. But let's take

    a closer look at Chinese. That's not just one language. There

    are actually many

    different varieties. And

    those varieties in some

    other parts of the world

    might be called separate

    languages.

    In this MOOC, you will discover that those 6,000 or 7,000 languages

    can differ from each other in many different ways. For instance,

    there are languages which seem to have around 20 different vowelsounds where as other may have only two or three. Or it is even

    claimed that there are languages which have only one vowel sound.

    Some languages seem to put a lot of information in one long big

    word. Turkish is an example of such a language. Others seem to

    have very short words and therefore, they have sentences with

    many words. Vietnamese is an example of such a language. In

    Chinese, we have different words for the older brother of your father and the younger brother of your

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    father. In English, you would always use the same word for those two

    different people. On the other hand, if you speak English, you always

    have to distinguish between the sentences. He is nice, masculine, and

    she is nice, feminine, which Chinese speakers do not have to do.

    In the next modules, we're going to look

    in much more detail into these kinds of

    differences. But in spite of those

    differences, languages can also be very

    similar. One factor for these similarities

    is that they are organized in families, in languages which are historically

    related to each other. For instance, French and Italian are so called sister

    languages because they have the same parent language, namely Latin.

    You can also see this because many of their words are very similar. The

    French word un, of course in Italian uno. The French word main

    corresponds to Italian mano. The French word hommecorresponds to

    uomo.

    German and English are also related to each other. And again, we can see this. The German word einis

    the English word one. The German word Handis the English word hand. Languages are just structurebased on these kinds of relationships. And we can go even further. We call German and English

    Germanic languages because they are related to each other. French and Italian we call Romance

    languages. But in turn, Romance and Germanic are part of the same language family. Mainly Indo-

    European, so they are related at a slightly different level. Most of the languages in Europe belong to this

    family, as do many languages spoken in Asia.

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    There are a lot of these families around the world. Other examples are the

    Dravidian languages spoken in South Asia, of which Tamil is an example. Or

    Niger-Congo, spoken in sub Sahara Africa, of which Swahili is a famous

    example. In some regions, there's still much confusion about how languages

    are exactly related to each other. For instance, in South America, there's still a

    lot of debate about this. Also, there are languages that do not seem to be

    related to any other language in the world. A well known example of this in

    Europe is Basque. It's spoken in Europe, in Spain and France. But it's not clearly

    related to any other language spoken in this continent.

    There are also other reasons why languages can be similar. For instance, they

    can be in contact with each other. They can be spoken in the same area and

    people may borrow words from each other.

    Internet is an English word that we now find in many languages,

    because many languages are in contact with English.

    And finally, all human languages are built according to a similar scheme

    because they're all spoken by humans. We all have similar bodies. Wehave similar brains. And therefore, also our languages are similar.

    In summary, we now know there are about 6,000 languages. But we

    also know that it's actually very hard to count them precisely. I've shown you around on Ethnologue a

    little bit, which is a very useful tool. I would like to invite you to use it, to explore it a little bit on your

    own, to find out things about your own language, your own country, or other languages and other

    countries. We've also looked about what are the factors which make languages be similar or related to

    each other. And I've given you a few teasers about how languages can be different, and the same. And

    we're going to talk a lot more about that in the next modules.

    So now you know a little bit about languages as a research topic. But in the next video, I'm going toexplore a very intriguing question with the students Inge and Marten. The question, what do linguists

    really do?

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    1.5Discussion with Marten and Inge: What do linguists do?

    In the previous video, I introduced you into the miracle of linguistic variety. There are so many different

    languages in the world, and we cannot even count them. And I introduced you into one of the most

    important resources we have for studying linguistic variety in the world and in individual countries, the

    so-called Ethnologue website. I'm now going to discuss topics like this more with my students Marten

    and Inge.

    [Marten] So, I first have a seemingly stupid question about linguists and Ethnologue. Is that just the tool

    that they use? Do linguists just sit at their desk all day looking at Ethnologue?

    [Marc] Yes, typing on words, then trying to see on this website. No, that would indeed be a little bit silly,

    I think. For one thing, obviously there are also linguists who make the Ethnologue website, so they

    would definitely do something else. But actually linguists do many different things. I think this is one of

    the nice things about being a linguist, you can work in many different kinds of places. The famous

    American social linguist, William Labov, once said, linguists work in five different fields, in five different

    areas in the world. They work in the library, they work in the bush, they work in the closet, they work in

    the laboratory, and they work on the street.And I think that's a very nice distinction, and maybe wecan discuss these five a little bit more now.

    [Marten] Okay, so, the first was library. So, I would expect a linguist who works in the library to look at

    books, to work with books, maybe history books.

    [Marc] Right, I have to say Labov said this in the 1970s, so this was really before the Internet. So I think

    looking at Ethnologue would be something which you would do in the library at that time as well, and

    looking in the Internet now counts as being in the library sometimes. But it is, indeed, associated with

    looking into reference works. An important group of linguists who uses the library a lot is so-called

    historical linguists. They are the people who study the history of the individual language, or the way in

    which languages are related in language families. They can also study the way in which language is used,for instance in literary work, those are called philologists. They may sometimes be called linguists,

    sometimes not, but, if they are a bit egomaniacal, then we can say they are linguists, as well. That's a,

    that's a large group. It's an important group. It has been the traditional place where linguists work.

    [Inge] Okay. In a library. So they also work in the bush? I was thinking what does this mean? Does it

    mean like, there are linguists who go to far away places, in the bush maybe? Who try to find new

    languages, or try to describe them, or...

    [Marc] Right, well, yes. So, these are very admirable people I think. They go indeed to difficult places

    usually to study languages, which are new in the sense that we don't know anything about them. And

    for most of the 6-7,000 languages of the world, we hardly know anything, because they're spoken in

    areas where people are difficult to reach, they're spoken by small groups of people. Most, or a large

    majority of the languages, have really not been described. Maybe we know a handful of words, and

    that's actually a problem, given that many of these languages seem to disappear. So people say they're

    going to disappear over the next hundred years. Maybe in a hundred years from now we only have a

    few hundred languages left. We may not want these languages to be gone without leaving any trace

    because they can give us a lot of information about what human language can do. So, it's a pity for us as

    linguists, if they disappear. It might also be a pity for the people involved. Very often these people move

    to some kind of dominant, often European language. For instance, in Brazil they might move to

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    Portuguese, or in Indonesia they might move to Indonesian. And they do so for good reasons, namely,

    they want to have a good career or want to give their children a good career opportunity. But it's a pity

    that these languages are sometimes lost, because their children, in the end, might want to go back to

    their roots, and want to know more, at least know more about it. If you haven't written anything, we will

    never know anything more about it. So this is a big concern to a very large group of linguists nowadays,

    to try to conscribe and describe the languages of the world.

    These languages, as I said, they are very often spoken, while the bush is just one kind of term, but

    they're spoken in areas which are not very easy to reach. People go there and spend a few years of their

    life, to describe these languages and live with those people. And that's another thing which linguists do,

    it's a very different area than working in the library, of course.

    [Marten] And I think it's also very different from working in the closet, right? I think, maybe from that

    list, that one was the one that puzzled me most, because in the closet, well what would someone do

    there? Presumably you're alone, because there's not a lot of space. And you're, you know, you have

    tunnel vision that some project that you're working on, in solitude.

    [Marc] Well, what would you think that a linguist does in the closet?

    [Marten] Well, write, probably.

    [Marc] Write. Well, okay, so that's obviously something that every scholar needs to do at some point, so

    in that sense, it's clear that every scholar needs a closet. But there's also many linguists who spend their

    time in the closet, for instance, because we need a lot of thinking, we have already seen, just in the few

    videos before, we have seen that there's many puzzles about human language. There are many things

    we just don't understand, and in order to understand them, you might want to be alone, or with a

    colleague together and just sit behind your desk and think, or you might want to write a grammar of an

    individual language. So if you think, that's what we typically call a theoretical linguist.

    And if you write a grammar, you would be a grammarian, obviously. Grammarians are often theoretical

    linguists as well, because they spend their time in this closet. Again, there's a large group of linguists

    who spent their life like that. If you're describing, just your own language, if you're describing the

    language which you speak every day, and there's many things, there's no language which has been

    described completely. English, obviously, is a language on which many people have worked. The

    grammar of English has been described, really fairly well, and still, there are things we don't know. Still,

    linguists can spend their time working on it. If they speak English as their native language, they don't

    need to go to the bush to find other people who speak that, they can just consider their own knowledge

    about these languages. So, linguists can easily spend their life in the closet as well.

    [Inge] Okay, and other linguists work in the lab? It seems an interesting place, I was wondering what are

    they doing there? I can imagine that you need, if you want to study language, in a lab, you need people,

    so, and what happens? You have to make them speak.

    [Marc] Yeah, well I mean obviously, if you think about language in the lab. Yeah, you're probably going

    to bring in people into that lab, because they will produce the language. And you also need some

    machines, right? So do we have any idea about what kind of machines they could be?

    [Inge] Well, I'd say computers and microphones and that kind of...

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    [Marc] Yeah, so microphones is obviously a good thing. So there's phoneticians, we're going to look a

    little bit into that next module. Phoneticians who study speech sounds, so we can record those speech

    sounds, and then typically put them in the computer and study them in detail. Exactly what do you do,

    when you produce these sounds? How do these sounds look like and how are they different from one

    speaker to the next? So that's one thing you can do.

    There's another big group of linguists, they're usually called psycholinguists, so they study linguistics in

    combination with psychology or from a psychological point of view, so the way in which people in their

    mind work with language. Very often, they also work in a lab. In the lab, again, they put people, maybe

    they put a computer, and they do little tests with the people on that computer. All right, so it's

    languages which we already know, but we don't know how exactly people behave, how they react to

    words, how fast can they recognize a word when they see it. Well, if you have very precise technology,

    you can see that.

    And maybe there's a third kind of lab, which is interesting now days, you can also put people in a brain

    scanner, and look into their brain and see what happens there, when they use language. If language is

    something which is so specifically human, there must be certain things in our brain, which arespecifically human and which go on when we are using language. That's something you can study. So the

    lab is indeed, as you say, a very interesting place. It's an interesting place to be, it's a place where

    linguists have learned many things about how language works.

    [Inge] Yes, and Labov's final point was at the street, so linguists work on the street. So I can imagine that

    there are linguists who just go on the street and who listen very carefully to what the customer says to

    the butcher and the butcher says to the customer and vice versa.

    [Marc] Right, yeah. So you, so you could say the street in that sense, the street is like the bush, but it's

    just a little bit closer to home. But what Labov meant specifically with the street is not just to describe

    one language, but he is very interested in the small differences. If the butcher talks to the customer, dothey speak differently, or does the butcher speak differently to the customer than to his mother? Well,

    the answer's probably yes, unless his mother is his customer. That's small variation, and those are things

    which people find interesting as well. And about where we can learn many things, because these small

    variations, they're very tiny, but, well they may end up being as big as the difference between French

    and Italian. So from studying that, we can also learn how languages start varying at a larger scale.

    [Marten] So now that we've seen all these five things, everybody of course wants to be a linguist after

    taking this course, so where do you think would be best for people to go?

    [Marc] Yeah, would it be best to be a linguist in the library or would it be best to be a linguist, well, in

    one of these other places? Labov said, and I think he is completely right in that, we need all five of those.

    In this video, we have seen that linguists work in many different kinds of areas in the world. In the next

    video, you are going to do some field work yourself. But don't worry, you don't have to go into the bush,

    you can just do this behind your desk in the library or in your closet.

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    Interview with Dr. Victoria Nyst

    [Marten] Hello. Today, we're doing an interview with Dr. Victoria Nyst who is a sign language linguist at

    Leiden University Center for Linguistics. And she's going to explain to us all about sign languages and

    why they're such interesting topics of research. So first, could you maybe introduce your field of

    research, what is it that you do?

    [Nyst] My field of research is sign

    languages as you just mentioned. Sign

    linguists study the linguistic structure of

    sign languages as used by deaf

    communities all around the world. My

    main focus is on sign languages used in

    Africa. I've taken a cross linguistic

    perspective on that.

    [Marten] Okay. So, when you say sign

    language is used in Africa. That means

    that there are also other sign

    languages, for example, used in Europe.

    So, there's not just one sign language

    that everybody uses.

    [Nyst] That's a common

    misunderstanding that many people

    have, that there would be one universal

    sign language. And they're usually a bit disappointed to hear that that's not the case. But actually there

    is a lot of variation just like with spoken languages. We see that spoken languages have a multitude of

    different structures and the same holds for sign languages, which may differ in their lexicon or their

    phonology, morphology, syntax, etc.

    [Inge] You know, this reminds me of one of the videos in our MOOC week. We also spoke the phonology

    of spoken languages, and we saw that spoken languages are built from sounds, so these are the building

    blocks, but how does this work for sign languages then?

    [Nyst] Yes. Well, perhaps surprisingly, we also talk about phonology, in the context of sign language

    linguistics. Why is that? On the one hand, of course, many people are surprised because phonology,

    contains the word phonos, sound. And obviously, being used by deaf people, sign languages don't

    majorly depend on sound as distinctive units. But we do see the same kind of systematic use of, abstract

    building blocks. Whereas spoken languages use sounds, sign languages use what we call parameters that

    are articulated simultaneously. And these parameters are the hand shape that is used to articulate the

    sign, the movement that the hand makes in the articulation of the sign, the location where the hand

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    located. Is it located in space, on the body, on the head? Also the orientation of the hand, so do the

    fingers point upwards or to the front? What about the orientation of the palm? That can also be

    distinctive. And lastly also non-manual features like facial expressions or particular mouth movements

    like puffed cheeks or different kind of facial expressions can also be distinctive. So these parameters are

    phonemic in sign languages in a sense that like sounds, they can be distinctive. So when we look at

    minimal pairs in spoken languages we see that sign languages have equivalents, but then differing only

    in one parameter.

    [Marten] So could you give an example of that?

    [Nyst] Yes I can give an example of a sign language I've been studying

    extensively in West Africa, Adamorobe signing language. In Ghana, this sign

    language has a sign for snail and a sign for snake, which are very similar but

    differ in only one parameter, the hand shape parameter. So the sign for snail

    and the sign for snake, I will show them to you and you can see what the

    difference is. So the sign for snail looks like this.

    And the sign for snake looks like this. I guess you

    can see the difference in hand shape, right? So

    we have a fist, and an extended index, and that

    generates this difference in meaning in

    distinguishing snail from snake.

    [Inge] Okay. And if you look at spoken languages and sign languages, what is

    it that makes sign languages special? What do, can sign languages show us

    that spoken languages cannot maybe?

    [Nyst] That's a very important question. There are many issues that are similar in sign language, many

    phenomena that are similar in spoken language and sign languages. At the same time, there is one very

    important crucial point that sign languages can contribute to the field of linguistics, and that is basically

    what is the effect of modality on language structure? So over the past decades, we've focusing on

    spoken languages. We've been studying universal tendencies, et cetera, in spoken languages. But now

    when we start looking at sign languages, this opens a whole new window on how human language

    functions when it passes through a different channel.

    [Marten] And you said earlier that you, your focus of research lies mainly with African languages? Are

    there differences between African sign languages and European sign languages with respect to this

    iconicity of what you just talked about?

    [Nyst] Yes, yes, yes. So I guess that's one of the reasons why I got drawn to this subject. I noticed there

    seemed to be different tendencies going on in West African sign languages on the one hand, and, for

    example, European sign languages on the other. One of things is that often you have more than one

    option to iconically depict an object. Take for example a bottle. How would you use your hands to depict

    Figure 1 Snail (circular arm

    motion)

    Figure 2 Snake - Arm motion

    moving forward

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    a bottle? One of the ways is to trace the outline in space. So, the round

    hand shape shows that the object is round. The upward movement shows

    the extent of the bottle. And well, so you get an idea of a bottle. Right?

    You trace the outline in space. Another way would be to embody that size

    and shape, so for example like this. You can see a forearm kind of

    embodies or becomes the bottle. So those are two

    different options. So I am on the one hand

    outlining, on the other hand embodying or

    becoming the object. Now if we look at West

    African sign languages it seems that the

    embodiment strategy is kind of more popular, is

    the preferred one, and the outline strategy is used

    much less as compared to sign languages of

    European origin. So there is a marked difference

    there and that is, well, a topic I am currentlyworking on

    [Marten] One final question I would like to ask. When I am talking to you, and

    when everyone is talking, we are making movements, gestures with our hands.

    Is that also sign language, and is there a relationship between what I do and

    like, for example, Dutch sign language?

    [Nyst] Well, I think that that's really a very hot topic actually in sign language

    linguistics now. For a long time the area of gesture studies and sign language studies, these fields were

    quite separate and because both of them were quite new, I guess. Now these fields have matured a

    little bit, and now we start looking at the overlap between the two. So what is actually, what do they

    share, where is the difference? And personally I am again interested in the use of iconicity also in the

    gestures of hearing speakers. For that purpose I have also been thinking is there a kind of gestural

    correlate or gestural explanation for the difference between West African sign languages and European

    sign languages?So this kind of preference for outlining in space, is there a gestural explanation for that

    in the gestures of human speakers? So we've been interviewing speakers of three West African

    languages and we found that whereas European speakers, for example French and Dutch, typically have

    one strategy, which is, showing the size and shape of an object in space, West African speakers tend to

    have two options. Either they show in space or, they show the size and shape of an object on the part of

    a body part, like this. So there appears to be a clear difference in the gestural strategies of hearing

    speakers and somehow there may be a relation there or a kind of causal effect on the structure of

    iconicity in sign languages.

    [Marten] Okay, thank you very much for this interview. Thank you for explaining some things about

    what sign linguists do. And if you would like to know more about that, we'll post some background

    reading for you to have a look at. And we'll see you in the next video.

    Figure 3 Bottle: Round hand

    moves upward to trace

    volumetric shape

    Figure 4 Bottle: arm is the

    shape of a bottle

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    [Nyst] Well thank you for having me here. I'll be really curious to know from all the viewers to what

    extent they recognized the use of body based signs and shape gestures. Are you familiar with these,

    these kind of systems? Did you see other people use it? Or do you use it yourself? Please share with us

    on the forum. Thank you.

    Introducing Han Hu, speaker of Mandarin Chinese

    Hi, we have been talking a lot about languages now, but maybe it's time to also look at some real

    languages and some real speakers. And that's what we're just about to do. So, at this point in every

    module of this MOOC, we're going to look at some real language data. We found informants from all

    over the world to give us data about their language. And in every module, we will look at the specific

    topic we're studying in that module for all those different languages, and you are going to do that, you

    are going to do most of that analysis. I'm going to present you a little bit about how to get data from an

    informant, and we will show to you how you can analyze those data, but in most of the videos will be

    there for you to study, and that's going to be part of your homework. In this very first module we're just

    introducing the different speakers we have. We're asking them a few things about their languages. It's

    going to be your task to check what they say against some of the available sources like Ethnologue,

    which we have discussed before.

    With me now here is Han Hu, who is going to tell me a little bit

    about her language and her own linguistic situation. So, tell me,

    what is your language, and tell me a few things about it.

    [Hu] My language is Mandarin Chinese. Mandarin Chinese is

    spoken by Han people. There are nearly 1 billion people who

    speak it, and I know that people in Singapore and Malaysia also

    speak Chinese. In a narrow sense, Mandarin Chinese refers to

    standard Chinese and it is the official language in People Republic

    of China.

    [Marc] And this is your native language.

    [Hu] Yes. I think I speak Jinyu. It is a dialect branch of Mandarin Chinese. And I think it's very different

    from Mandarin Chinese. I began to study standard Chinese when I was 6 years old. At that time I went to

    the elementary school. It was a compulsory to study Mandarin Chinese, standard Chinese. And we have

    to speak it in the public areas.

    [Marc] And are there any other languages you speak?

    [Hu] I just speak English hm, [LAUGH].

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    [Marc] Fortunately. You will find our analysis of the data you have just heard on the course page. On

    that course page, you will also find all the other introductory videos of our informants. And we invite

    you to study those. You will find a form on the course page which will guide you in making that kind of

    analysis.

    If you're following the advanced track, or if you're just into this kind of things, there's a very fun thing for

    you to do, this is to upload your own video. In every module, you can upload your own video for a

    language which interests you for some reason. Maybe it's your own language, maybe it's some language

    of your neighbor, of your friend, or a language which interests you for some other reason. Find a

    speaker of that language, ask them the questions which we are asking of our informants, make a video,

    and upload that video. In that way, it will also be fun for all the rest of us, we will have many more data

    to look at and to study. But in any case come over to the last video of this particular module. In this last

    video, we will summarize what we've seen so far, and we will discuss a little bit more some of the

    interesting, of the marvelous miracles of human language.

    Introducing Roberta DAlessandro, speaker of Abruzzese

    Hello, my name is Roberta D'Alessandro. And I'm here for

    Abruzzese. Abruzzese is a Southern Italian language, not a

    dialect as it is usually classified. And it is spoken in Italy, of

    course, by about 1 million speakers. And it is spoken mostly by

    bilinguals. So everybody who speaks Abruzzese also speaks

    Italian, which is the official language of Italy. And I, myself, also

    speak of course, Italian, and English as you can see, and then I

    know some other languages. German, Dutch, Spanish,

    Portuguese, a bit of Finnish and Russian.

    Introducing Beste Sevindik, speaker of Turkish

    Hello, I'm Beste, and I'm a native Turkish speaker. Turkish is the official language of Turkey and northern

    Cyprus, and it has around 80 million native speakers. I can speak

    Turkish, English, a little bit Dutch and German and a really tiny

    little bit Japanese. I learned English in elementary school, and

    since then I watched a lot of TV shows, and it's really helped me

    to learn more about English. Now I'm very much comfortable

    with expressing myself and reading articles and books in English.

    And with Dutch I'm living in here in Netherlands for almost one

    and a half year now, and I heard a lot of Dutch, of course, and I

    now I can understand a lot of things all ready, and I, but of

    course I want to learn how to speak as well, so I will take some

    lessons for that. And with Japanese, I love watching Anime, and I

    love Japanese culture, I love literature and also music and

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    everything, so, well that's how I learned Japanese, a little bit. Well, and, but here I'm here now to speak

    Turkish.

    Introducing Khalid Mourigh, speaker of Tarifit Berber

    Hello. My name is Khalid Mourigh. I'm speaker of Tarifit

    Berber. Tarifit Berber is a Berber language spoken in

    northeastern Morocco by approximately 1.5 to 2 million

    people. It is not only spoken in northeastern Morocco, but

    also in many European countries, as there are large

    immigrant communities in these countries. In the

    Netherlands, for example Tarifit Berber is the second

    immigrant language after Turkish. Beside Tarifit Berber, I

    learn Dutch spoke both languages at home. And later on I

    learned other languages at school, for example French,

    German, English, and Moroccan Arabic.

    Introducing Varun Decastro-Arrazola, speaker of Basque

    Hi I am Varun, and I am a speaker of Basque. Basque is a

    language spoken in the Western Pyrenees. It falls under

    the administration of two states, France and Spain. There

    are around 7 or 800,000 speakers of Basque. And about a

    half a million of these have learned at home as a native

    language. Virtually all of the speakers of Basque are

    bilingual with French or Spanish. In France it doesn't have

    any official stages, but it does in Spain, which means that,

    for example, it's being used in education at all levels. Since

    I come from the border area, the border between France

    and Spain, I speak both French and Spanish on top of

    Basque. I've also lived in other places, so, I also speak Catalan, Dutch, and English.

    Introducing Enoch Aboh, speaker of Gungbe

    My name is Enoch Olade Aboh. I'm a speaker of

    Gungbe. Gungbe is a Bey language of the Kwa family of

    Niger-Congo. It is spoken in Benin, in the southern part

    of Benin. In a town which is, actually also the capital of

    Benin, but it has three names. One Gungbe, which is

    Hogbonou. The other one in, Yorubar, which is Adjace.

    And the third one in Portuguese, which is, Porto-Novo.

    It's a tone language in the sense that it makes

    distinction between toe, which is ear, and toe, which is

    country. In addition to Gungbe, I speak French. I

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    consider myself as a bilingual because I pick up French at home and also at school. I also, speak English,

    which I learned, in school. I learned a little bit of, Spanish. So that's for, let's say, the Romance and

    Germanic languages. But Gungbe itself is what I call my father's tongue. Because it's not, my mother

    tongue. It's the language of my father's community. And my mother's community is which is related to.

    And from the part of what we call the Western Bey languages. Gungbe is also spoken in Nigeria and also

    Lagos in Nigeria. I think are about one million people who speak this language in this area.

    1.6

    Summary: Language and Dialect

    Hi, and wow this is already the last video in this module. I hope you have enjoyed it. I hope you have the

    feeling that you have learned a few things. I hope you got our main message. I think the main message

    of this module is that these words, human and language, really belong together, that language is

    something very specifically human on the one hand, and on the hand that virtually all human beings

    have language in one form or another. I'm sure that you still have many questions. And hopefully, some

    of these questions will be answered in later modules of this MOOC. There will be other questions which

    you can already ask now and can start discussing now with each other and with us. For this, you can go

    to the online forum which we have on our course page. Here you can discuss all kinds of topics which

    you think are relevant to this MOOC. And as a matter of fact, Marten has already prepared one question

    for us.

    [Marten] So, the question that I'm at this point most interested in finding an answer to, is based on

    something that our informant said. What I'd like to know, is there a linguistic way to really distinguish

    between what a language is, and what a dialect is?

    [Marc] People feel very passionate about this, so some of our informants have also felt very passionate

    about this question of whether what they speak is a language or a dialect. And I'm sure that also among

    you there will be many who have this particular question. And the only thing I can say now that this is a

    question which is difficult to answer from a scientific point of view, and that's also because it's partly

    also a political question. It's also, just who decides, who has the power to decide about these issues? But

    in order to really study this question, I invite you to go to our reading material on our course page. You'll

    find a lot of interesting things there which we ask you to read. And that will also give at least a partial

    answer to Marten's question. So, go to our forum to discuss things there.

    Well, I hope you already found the time to do the exercise with our informants and got to know all of

    them. But let me remind you that we also have a weekly quiz. And if you do the weekly quiz, you will be

    maximally prepared for the next module. In this next module, we will stop being so completely

    introductory, and we will really move into the language. We will really start studying the language. And

    we will start from the smallest building blocks of language. What are those smallest building blocks?

    They are the sounds of human language.

    Required Readings

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    Anderson, Stephen R. "How Many Languages are there in the World? Linguistic Society of AmericaBrochure Series, 2010http://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/how-many-languages.pdf

    Jackendoff, Ray. "How did Language begin?" Linguistic Society ofAmerica.http://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/LanguageBegin.pdf

    Dasgupta, Shreya. "Can any animals talk and use language like humans?" BBC Online, 16 Februari2015. http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150216-can-any-animals-talk-like-humans

    "Language Status" Lewis, M. Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig (eds.). Ethnologue:Languages of the World, Seventeenth edition. Dallas, Texas: SIL International. Online version,2014.http://www.ethnologue.com/about/language-status

    "The Waggle Dance of the Honeybee." Georgia Tech College of Computing,2011.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDGPgXtK-U

    Background readings

    Michael Tomasello (2010). Origins of Human Communication. Massachusetts: MIT Press. Click herefor more information.

    Steven Pinker (1994). The Language Instinct: How the mind creates language. New York: HarperPerennial Modern Classics.Click here for more information.

    Victoria A. Fromkin, Robert Rodman, Nina Hyams (2013). An Introduction to Language." 10th ed.Wadsworth: Cengage Learning.Click here for more information.

    Noam Chomsky (2006). The Architecture of Language. Oxford India Paperbacks.Click here for moreinformation.

    Guy Deutscher (2006). The Unfolding of Language: An Evolutionary Tour of Mankinds GreatestInvention. Holt Paperbacks.Click here for more information.

    Joel Davis (1994). "Mother Tongue: How Humans Create Language. Birch Lane Press."Click here formore information.

    Resources

    LanguageLog. Blogposts on news, new articles and observations by several renowned linguists, amongwhich Mark Liberman and Geoffrey Pullum.Click here to read.

    Babel. Language Magazine featuring everything from Chinglish to Shakespeare.Click here for moreinformation.

    Bergmann, A., Hall, K.C., & Ross, S.M. (Eds.). (2011). "Language files: Materials for an introduction tolanguage and linguistics". 11th ed. Columbus, OH: Department of Linguistics, The Ohio StateUniversity.Click here for more information

    Linguistic Society of America. This organisation publishes the number one scholarly journal forlinguistics, appropriately calledLanguage.However, they have also published a plethora of freepamphlets on a wide variety of l inguistic topics, written by pre-eminent scholars. Some of these we areallowed to use in this MOOC (for which we are very grateful), and there are many more on theirwebsite.Click here for more information.

    These transcripts were produced by a course student without compensation. The intellectual property

    belongs to Leiden University. Errors are the responsibility of the transcriber.

    http://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/how-many-languages.pdfhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/how-many-languages.pdfhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/how-many-languages.pdfhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/LanguageBegin.pdfhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/LanguageBegin.pdfhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/files/LanguageBegin.pdfhttp://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150216-can-any-animals-talk-like-humanshttp://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150216-can-any-animals-talk-like-humanshttp://www.ethnologue.com/about/language-statushttp://www.ethnologue.com/about/language-statushttp://www.ethnologue.com/about/language-statushttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDGPgXtK-Uhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDGPgXtK-Uhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFDGPgXtK-Uhttp://www.amazon.com/Origins-Human-Communication-Nicod-Lectures/dp/0262515202/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359404&sr=8-1&keywords=Origins+of+human+communicationhttp://www.amazon.com/Origins-Human-Communication-Nicod-Lectures/dp/0262515202/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359404&sr=8-1&keywords=Origins+of+human+communicationhttp://www.amazon.com/Origins-Human-Communication-Nicod-Lectures/dp/0262515202/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359404&sr=8-1&keywords=Origins+of+human+communicationhttp://www.amazon.com/Origins-Human-Communication-Nicod-Lectures/dp/0262515202/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359404&sr=8-1&keywords=Origins+of+human+communicationhttp://www.amazon.com/Language-Instinct-Mind-Creates-P-S/dp/0061336467/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359481&sr=8-1&keywords=The+language+instincthttp://www.amazon.com/Language-Instinct-Mind-Creates-P-S/dp/0061336467/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359481&sr=8-1&keywords=The+language+instincthttp://www.amazon.com/Language-Instinct-Mind-Creates-P-S/dp/0061336467/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359481&sr=8-1&keywords=The+language+instincthttp://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Language-Victoria-Fromkin/dp/1133310680/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359514&sr=8-1&keywords=An+introduction+to+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Language-Victoria-Fromkin/dp/1133310680/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359514&sr=8-1&keywords=An+introduction+to+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Language-Victoria-Fromkin/dp/1133310680/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359514&sr=8-1&keywords=An+introduction+to+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Architecture-Language-Noam-Chomsky/dp/019564834X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359556&sr=8-1&keywords=The+architecture+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Architecture-Language-Noam-Chomsky/dp/019564834X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359556&sr=8-1&keywords=The+architecture+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Architecture-Language-Noam-Chomsky/dp/019564834X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359556&sr=8-1&keywords=The+architecture+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Architecture-Language-Noam-Chomsky/dp/019564834X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359556&sr=8-1&keywords=The+architecture+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Unfolding-Language-Evolutionary-Mankinds-Invention/dp/0805080120/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359570&sr=8-1&keywords=The+unfolding+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Unfolding-Language-Evolutionary-Mankinds-Invention/dp/0805080120/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359570&sr=8-1&keywords=The+unfolding+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Unfolding-Language-Evolutionary-Mankinds-Invention/dp/0805080120/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359570&sr=8-1&keywords=The+unfolding+of+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Mother-Tongue-Humans-Create-Language/dp/1559722061/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359598&sr=8-3&keywords=How+humans+create+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Mother-Tongue-Humans-Create-Language/dp/1559722061/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359598&sr=8-3&keywords=How+humans+create+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Mother-Tongue-Humans-Create-Language/dp/1559722061/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359598&sr=8-3&keywords=How+humans+create+languagehttp://www.amazon.com/Mother-Tongue-Humans-Create-Language/dp/1559722061/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1427359598&sr=8-3&keywords=How+humans+create+languagehttp://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/http://www.babelzine.com/http://www.babelzine.com/http://www.babelzine.com/http://www.babelzine.com/https://ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?books/book%20pages/language%20files%2011.htmhttps://ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?books/book%20pages/language%20files%2011.htmhttps://ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?books/book%20pages/language%20files%2011.htmhttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/news/2015/03/20/origins-indo-european-languages-new-phonological-analysis-section-are-highlightshttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/news/2015/03/20/origins-indo-european-languages-new-phonological-analysis-section-are-highlightshttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/news/2015/03/20/origins-indo-european-languages-new-phonological-analysis-section-are-highlightshttp://www.linguisticsociety.org/http://www.linguisticsociety.org/http://www.linguisticsociety.org/http://www.linguisticsociety.org/http://www.linguisticsociety.org/news/2015/03/20/origins-indo-euro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