on tocharian exceptionality to the centum/satem isogloss

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On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum-satem Isogloss Richard Littauer MSc Saarland University | MA University of Edinburgh rlittauer.com | @richlitt http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tocharians

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Page 1: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum-satem Isogloss

Richard LittauerMSc Saarland University | MA University of Edinburgh

rlittauer.com | @richlitthttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tocharians

Page 2: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Tocharian

What is it?

Page 3: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Tocharian

http://webscript.princeton.edu/~lingclub/challenge/tocharian.php

Page 4: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Tocharian

http://001yourtranslationservice.com/translations/jobs/Tocharian.html

Page 5: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

http:

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AN+L

ANG

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Page 6: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

Proto-Indoeuropean

*kʷ *gʷ *gʷʰ (labiovelars)*k *g *gʰ ("plain velars")*ḱ *ǵ *ǵʰ ("palatovelars”)

Page 7: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

Proto-Indoeuropean

*kʷ *gʷ *gʷʰ (labiovelars)*k *g *gʰ ("plain velars")*ḱ *ǵ *ǵʰ ("palatovelars”)

Centum group

kʷ gʷ gʷʰ

k g gʰ

Page 8: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

Proto-Indoeuropean

*kʷ *gʷ *gʷʰ (labiovelars)*k *g *gʰ ("plain velars")*ḱ *ǵ *ǵʰ ("palatovelars”)

Satem group

kʷ gʷ gʷʰk g gʰs z

Centum group

kʷ gʷ gʷʰ

k g gʰ

Page 9: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centum-satem_isogloss

Page 10: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centum-satem_isogloss

Page 11: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Centum-Satem

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centum-satem_isogloss

Page 12: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Outline

• Overall language complexity

• Possible language contact

• Changes in language use

Page 13: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

All languages are equal.

Page 14: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

All languages are equal.

All languages are equally complex in different ways.

Page 15: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

All languages are equal.

All languages are equally complex in different ways.

Language complexity differs across the board, but stays the same.

Page 16: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

All languages are equal.

All languages are equally complex in different ways.

Language complexity differs across the board, but stays the same.

Page 17: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

Overall complexity of a language may change over time.

Language Complexity as an Evolving Variable, Sampson 2009.

Page 18: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

Kupwar, India:

• Urdu (IE)• Marathi (IE) • Kanneda (Dravidian)

Minimal lexical and phonological borrowings.

Page 19: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

Kupwar, India:

• Urdu (IE)• Marathi (IE) • Kanneda (Dravidian)

Minimal lexical and phonological borrowings.

But syntactically: “the sentences can be seen as exact calques of each other.” (Myers-Scotton 2002, 176)

Page 20: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Language Complexity

Tocharian has drastic changes in the:

• syntax• morphology• lexically

This may have influenced the changes in the phonemic inventory of the language.

Page 21: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Horizontal Transfer

Could Tocharian have been influenced by non-IE languages, leading to the merge into [k]?

Page 22: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Whence the Tocharoi?

Tocharian culture is referenced much earlier than the 6th century by Ptolemy, Strabo, and Apollinorus (Sinor 1963, 151).

Two migration theories:

• Migrated from central or west Eurasia, although archaeological evidence for such a feat is non-existent.

• Migrated from the Afanasievo culture of Siberia before settling in the Tarim Basin.

Page 23: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Arguments against Turkic

Previous suggested sources for borrowings: “nomadic pastoralists speaking Ural-Altaic languages.” (Sinor 1990)

But: “the major event that led to the Turkicisation of Xinjiang was the collapse of the nomadic steppe empire of the Turkic-speaking Uighurs." (Pulleyblank 2002, 45)

Page 24: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Arguments against Turkic

• More Indic, Dravidian, and Sino-Tibetan languages in the area.

• Difficult to borrow morphology from a left-head orientated language.

• Hard to choose a contact language:• Only around 5,000 attested Tocharian words,• We don’t know enough about the area.

Page 25: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Arguments against Turkic

Tocharian continued on:

• “into the period of the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) when the Chinese first regained the Tarim basin and then lost it in the face of Tibetan and, subsequently, Turkish incursions.” (Mallor 2000, 272)

Page 26: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Other Languages

Mithridates VI of Pontus reputedly knew all twenty-two languages in his Anatolian empire.

Page 27: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Other Languages

Mithridates VI of Pontus reputedly knew all twenty-two languages in his Anatolian empire.

Bactrian Iranian, Khotanese Saka, Old Persian, Han, Tang, Shang, and Chou Old and Middle Chinese variants, Sogdian, Greek, Uighur and Kyrgiz Turkish, Ossetic, Avestan, Tai, Prakrit, Tibetan, Kuchean, Burushaski, Scythian, and Cimmerian (Pulleyblank 2002)

Page 28: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Maintaining Distinction

Ma’a:

• Has one idiosyncratic phoneme, a voiceless lateral fricative:

• “to emphasize the differentness of their other language, they sometimes introduce it into Bantu words.” (Thompson 2001)

Page 29: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Maintaining Distinction

The velar merging might then have been used as a way of keeping distinct from other sounds in the region.

In the sprachbund of Mesopotamia and central Asia, allophonic variants might have been minimalised to retain maximum distinction.

Page 30: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Change in Domain

The merge may have occurred due a change in Tocharian in general.

Page 31: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Change in Domain

The Tocharian population was never large, and may have been influenced by the ‘founder effect.’ (cf Atkinson 2011)

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Change in Domain

Research correlates phonemic inventory size with the size of the language community. (Hay and Bauer 2007)

Page 33: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Change in Domain

Tocharian already showed signs of decaying use:

Tocharian A is found almost exclusively in liturgical documents.

Page 34: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Change in Domain

It is possible that a change in the size of the community from a larger foundation, combined with decay in use and horizontal transfer, may have led to detrition of the phonemic system.

Page 35: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

Conclusion

Tocharian may not have been susceptible to a weak dialect wave, or to a possible early branching of IE.

Page 36: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

References

• Atkinson, Quentin (2011). Phonemic Diversity Supports a Serial Founder Effect Model of Language Expansion from Africa Science 332, 346.

• Hay, J., and Bauer, L. (2007). Phoneme inventory size and population size. Language 83(2): 388–400.

• Mallor, J.P., and Mair, Victor H. (2000). The Tarim Mummies. London: Thames and Hudson.• Myers-Scotton, Carol (2002). Contact Linguistics: Bilingual Encounters and Grammatical Outcomes.

Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.• Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (2002). Central Asia and Non-Chinese Peoples of Ancient China. Hampshire,

UK: Ashgate.• Renfrew, Colin (1990). Archaeology and language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN

9780521386753.• Sampson, Geoffrey, Gil, David, and Trudgill, Peter (ed.) (2009). Language Complexity as an Evolving

Variable. Volume 13 of Studies in the Evolution of Language. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.• Sinor, Denis (1963). Introduction a` l’E tude de l’Asie Centale. Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz. +• Sinor, Denis (ed.) (1990). The Cambridge History of Early Inner Asia. Cambridge, UK: SMC

Publishing Inc.• Thomason, Sarah G. (2001). Language Contact. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Page 37: On Tocharian Exceptionality to the centum/satem Isogloss

THANKS.

Questions?