Five Theories On The Origins of Language
Five Theories On The Origins of Language
Five Theories On The Origins of Language
Humanities › Languages
by Richard Nordquist
Updated April 09, 2017
What was the first language? How did language begin--and where and when?
Until recently, a sensible linguist would likely respond to such questions with a shrug and a
sigh. (Many still do.) As Bernard Campbell states flatly in Humankind Emerging (Allyn &
Bacon, 2005), "We simply do not know, and never will, how or when language began."
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It's hard to imagine a cultural phenomenon that's more important than the development of
language.
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And yet no human attribute offers less conclusive evidence regarding its origins. The mystery,
says Christine Kenneally in her book The First Word, lies in the nature of the spoken word:
"For all its power to wound and seduce, speech is our most ephemeral creation; it is little more
than air. It exits the body as a series of puffs and dissipates quickly into the atmosphere. . . . There
are no verbs preserved in amber, no ossified nouns, and no prehistorical shrieks forever spread-
eagled in the lava that took them by surprise."
The absence of such evidence certainly hasn't discouraged speculation about the origins of
language. Over the centuries, many theories have been put forward--and just about all of them
have been challenged, discounted, and often ridiculed. Each theory accounts for only a small
part of what we know about language.
Here, identified by their disparaging nicknames, are five of the oldest and most common
theories of how language began.
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For instance, a dog's bark is heard as au au in Brazil, ham ham in Albania, and wang, wang in
China. In addition, many onomatopoeic words are of recent origin, and not all are derived from
natural sounds.
The Danish linguist Otto Jespersen suggested that language may have developed from sounds
associated with love, play, and (especially) song.
No language contains very many interjections, and, Crystal points out, "the clicks, intakes of
breath, and other noises which are used in this way bear little relationship to the vowels and
consonants found in phonology."
As Peter Farb says in Word Play: What Happens When People Talk (Vintage, 1993), "All these
speculations have serious flaws, and none can withstand the close scrutiny of present
knowledge about the structure of language and about the evolution of our species."
But does this mean that all questions about the origin of language are unanswerable?
Not necessarily. Over the past 20 years, scholars from such diverse fields as genetics,
anthropology, and cognitive science have been engaged, as Kenneally says, in "a cross-
discipline, multidimensional treasure hunt" to find out how language began. It is, she says, "the
hardest problem in science today."
In a future article, we'll consider more recent theories about the origins and development of
language--what William James called "the most imperfect and expensive means yet discovered
for communicating a thought."
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Source
The First Word: The Search for the Origins of Language. Viking, 2007
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Theories on the Origin and Evolution What Does a Dog Say in Japanese?
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