So I had a little difficulty scheduling an interview for this week's post... I did, however, come up with a (slightly alternate) solution. Since the main reason for getting an interview was so that we would learn whatever we used for this post orally, I am using a different oral learning source for information for my post: mon professeur francais, Professeur Flood. In this post, I will focus on combining the elements of language preservation and acquisition and Latin by going into more detail about the ways that the Latin language has influenced the English that we speak today, especially through the French language (because really, how much cooler is it to talk about three or four languages instead of two?!).
In my last post, I had two maps that I really liked which showed the expansion of Latin-derived languages and the Latin alphabet across the globe. These maps really showed the extent to which Latin has spread. But how has it spread for us English speakers specifically?
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Showing posts with label Language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Language. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Thursday, September 29, 2011
The Super Fresh Gilgamesh (and other Sumerian musings)
Oral knowledge plays an important role in every culture. What made dealing with the Mesopotamians especially interesting for me is that, according to this researcher, it is believed that the early Mesopotamians literally invented oral knowledge and the concept of writing (which we’ll deal with in a future unit). “The words of proto-Sumerian are fundamentally different from those of proto-Indo-European. However, because the proto-Sumerians appear to be unique in having started with vowel-only words, they have a good claim not just to having invented a complete spoken symbol system, but to having originated the concept of such a system. Non-speaking populations could have invented their own systems once they had been exposed to the concept of speech (this is not to deny that multiple populations could have invented the concept of speech independently, cf., the use of clicks in Africa). A good parallel example is how the Sumerian invention of the concept of writing appears to have inspired the creation of very different forms of writing in Pre-Dynastic Egypt and the Indus civilization of Pakistan and India.” The newfound ability to verbally communicate a common language facilitated the expansion of shared knowledge.
Ancient Sumer was first settled in about 4500 to 4000 B.C. Widely considered to be the first real civilization, it’s what I learned about first in my World History course during high school (and thus saith Mr. Holmes).
Once they had developed the concept of speech, some of the very first orally transmitted subjects were creation and flood myths/legends. These stories were spread throughout the region, and many other similar stories proliferated. The Epic of Gilgamesh is a text comprised of seven cuneiform tablets, the writing system of the Sumerians. Each tablet deals with these various parts of the legend:
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Language affecting us
I happ'd across this link about language from dictionary.com. It kind of relates to what we talked about in class.
Enjoy :)
Enjoy :)
A Dead Language (?)
Latin is often seen as the epitome of language failing to endure through the ages. The phrase "dead language" in English refers primarily to Latin even though English isn't a Latinate language. Observing and analyzing the Roman Empire's preservation and acquisition of language is therefore very different from doing the same for some other languages which are still spoken today relatively similar to how they were spoken in the past, such as Hebrew or Chinese, because there is no general Latin speaking population anywhere in the world today and nobody on the entire planet will tell you that their first language is Latin. So because Latin is the poster child for "dead languages," I'm going to take a slightly different approach on my post...
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