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{{short description|none}} {{Distinguish|Historical linguistics}} {{Linguistics}} [[Linguistics]] is the [[Science|scientific]] study of [[language]],<ref>{{Cite book|title=On Language and Linguistics|last=Halliday|first=Michael A.K.|author2=Jonathan Webster|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|year=2006|isbn=978-0-8264-8824-4|page=vii|author-link=Michael Halliday}}</ref> involving analysis of language [[Theoretical linguistics|form]], language [[Semantics|meaning]], and language in [[Context (language use)|context]].<ref name="Martinet">{{cite book|title=Elements of General Linguistics|last=Martinet|first=André|publisher=Faber|year=1960|series=Studies in General Linguistics, vol. i.|location=London|page=15|translator=Elisabeth Palmer Rubbert|author-link=André Martinet}}</ref> Language use was first systematically documented in [[Mesopotamia]], with extant [[lexical lists]] of the 3rd to the 2nd Millennia BCE, offering glossaries on [[Sumerian language|Sumerian]] [[cuneiform]] usage and meaning, and phonetical vocabularies of foreign languages.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Smith|first1=Sidney|last2=Gadd|first2=C. J.|last3=Peet|first3=T. Eric|date=1925|title=A Cuneiform Vocabulary of Egyptian Words|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3854146|journal=The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology|volume=11|issue=3/4|pages=230–240|doi=10.2307/3854146|jstor=3854146 |issn=0307-5133}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Sumerian Lexicon|url=https://www.sumerian.org/sumerlex.htm|access-date=2022-01-24|website=www.sumerian.org}}</ref> Later, [[Sanskrit]] would be systematically analysed, and its rules described, by [[Pāṇini]] ([[Floruit|fl.]] 6-4th century BCE), in the Indus Valley.<ref name="Bod">{{Cite book|title=A new history of the humanities: the search for principles and patterns from Antiquity to the present|last=Bod|first=Rens|author-link=Rens Bod|isbn=9780191757471|edition=1st|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|date=2013|oclc=868068245}}</ref><ref name="FPencyclo">[[#FPencyclo|François & Ponsonnet (2013)]].</ref> Beginning around the 4th century BCE, [[Warring States period]] China also developed its own grammatical traditions.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=William S-Y. |first1=Wang |title=LANGUAGE IN CHINA: A CHAPTER IN THE HISTORY OF LINGUISTICS / 汉语语言学发展的历史回顾 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23757139 |journal=Journal of Chinese Linguistics |access-date=February 2, 2024 |date=1989|volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=183–222 |jstor=23757139 }}</ref>{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} [[Aristotle]] laid the foundation of Western linguistics as part of the study of [[rhetoric]] in his [[Poetics (Aristotle)|''Poetics'']] {{circa|335 BC}}.<ref name="Swiggers&Wouters_2001">{{cite book |last1=Swiggers |first1=Pierre|last2=Wouters |first2=Alfons|editor-last1= Haspelmath|editor-first1=Martin |title=Language Typology and Language Universals, Vol. 1 |publisher=De Gruyter|date=2001 |pages=181–192 |chapter= Philosophie du langage et linguistique dans l'Antiquité classique |isbn= 978-3-11-019403-6 }}</ref> Traditions of [[Arabic grammar]] and [[Hebrew grammar]] developed during the Middle Ages in a religious context like Pānini's Sanskrit grammar. Modern approaches began to develop in the 18th century, eventually being regarded in the 19th century as belonging to the disciplines of [[psychology]] or [[biology]], with such views establishing the foundation of mainstream Anglo-American linguistics,<ref name="Joseph_2002">{{cite book |last=Joseph |first=John E. |year=2002| title=From Whitney to Chomsky: Essays in the History of American Linguistics |publisher=John Benjamins |isbn=9789027275370 }}</ref> although in England [[philology|philological]] approaches such as that of [[Henry Sweet]] tended to predominate. This was contested in the early 20th century by [[Ferdinand de Saussure]], who established linguistics as an autonomous discipline within [[social sciences]].<ref name="FPencyclo" /> Following Saussure's concept, general linguistics consists of the study of language as a [[semiotics|semiotic]] system, which includes the subfields of [[phonology]], [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]], [[syntax]], and [[semantics]]. Each of these subfields can be approached either [[Synchronic analysis|synchronically]] or [[Diachrony and synchrony|diachronicially]]. Today, linguistics encompasses a large number of scientific approaches and has developed still more subfields, including [[applied linguistics]], [[psycholinguistics]], [[neurolinguistics]], [[sociolinguistics]], and [[computational linguistics]]. ==Antiquity== Across cultures, the early history of linguistics is associated with a need to disambiguate discourse, especially for ritual texts or arguments. This often led to explorations of sound-meaning mappings, and the debate over conventional versus naturalistic origins for these symbols. Finally, this led to the processes by which larger structures are formed from units. === Babylonia === The earliest linguistic texts – written in [[Cuneiform script|cuneiform]] on clay tablets – date almost four thousand years before the present.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Linguistics: An Introduction|last=McGregor|first=William B.|author-link=William B. McGregor|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic|year=2015|isbn=978-0567583529|pages=15–16}}</ref> In the early centuries of the second millennium BCE, in southern [[Mesopotamia]], there arose a grammatical tradition that lasted more than 2,500 years. The linguistic texts from the earliest parts of the tradition were lists of [[noun]]s in [[Sumerian language|Sumerian]] (a [[language isolate]], that is, a language with no known genetic relatives), the language of religious and legal texts at the time. Sumerian was being replaced in everyday speech by a very different (and unrelated) language, [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]]; it remained however as a language of prestige and continued to be used in religious and legal contexts. It therefore had to be taught as a foreign language, and to facilitate this, information about Sumerian was recorded in writing by Akkadian-speaking scribes. Over the centuries, the lists became standardised, and the Sumerian words were provided with Akkadian translations. Ultimately texts emerged that gave Akkadian equivalents for not just single words, but for entire paradigms of varying forms for words: one text, for instance, has 227 different forms of the verb ''ĝar'' "to place". ===India=== {{main|Vyakarana|Tolkāppiyam}} Linguistics in [[Vedic civilization|ancient India]] derives its impetus from the need to correctly recite and interpret the [[Vedas|Vedic]] texts. Already in the oldest Indian text, the [[Rigveda]], {{IAST|''[[vāk]]''}} ("speech") is deified. By 1200 BCE,<ref>Staal, J. F., ''The Fidelity of Oral Tradition and the Origins of Science''. North-Holland Publishing Company, 1986. p. 27 </ref> the oral performance of these texts becomes standardized, and treatises on ritual recitation suggest splitting up the [[Sanskrit]] compounds into words, [[word stem|stem]]s, and phonetic units, providing an impetus for [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]] and [[phonetics]]. Some of the earliest activities in the [[descriptive linguistics|description of language]] have been attributed to the [[India]]n grammarian [[Pāṇini]] (6th century BCE),<ref>{{Cite book|title=A New History of the Humanities: The Search for Principles and Patterns from Antiquity to the Present|last=Bod|first=Rens|author-link=Rens Bod|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0199665211|year=2014|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KaOcAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA14}}</ref><ref>Sanskrit Literature The Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 2 (1909), p. 263.</ref><ref name="FPencyclo" /> who wrote a rule-based description of the [[Sanskrit|Sanskrit language]] in his ''[[Aṣṭādhyāyī]]''.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Ashtadhyayi of Panini (2 Vols.) |author=S.C. Vasu (Tr.) |publisher=Vedic Books |year=1996 |isbn=9788120804098|url=http://www.vedicbooks.net/ashtadhyayi-panini-vols-p-2313.html}}</ref> Over the next few centuries, clarity was reached in the organization of sound units, and the [[stop consonant]]s were organized in a 5x5 square ({{Circa|800 BCE}}, [[Pratisakhya]]s), eventually leading to a systematic alphabet, [[Brāhmī script|Brāhmī]], by the 3rd century BCE.<ref>{{Cite web|date=|title=Brāhmī Alphabet|url=https://www.omniglot.com/writing/brahmi.htm|website=Omniglot|access-date=September 28, 2023}}</ref>{{Better source needed|date=September 2023}} In semantics, the early Sanskrit grammarian [[Śākaṭāyana]] (before {{Circa|500 BCE}}) proposes that verbs represent ontologically prior categories, and that all nouns are etymologically derived from actions. The [[etymologist]] [[Yāska]] (c. 5th century BCE) posits that meaning inheres in the sentence, and that word meanings are derived based on sentential usage. He also provides four categories of words—[[noun]]s, [[verb]]s, pre-verbs, and particles/invariants—and a test for nouns both concrete and abstract: words which can be indicated by the pronoun ''that''.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} Pāṇini (c. 6th century BCE) opposes the Yāska view that sentences are primary, and proposes a grammar for composing [[semantics]] from [[morpheme|morphemic]] roots. Transcending the ritual text to consider living language, Pāṇini specifies a comprehensive set of about 4,000 aphoristic rules (''[[sutra]]s'') that: # Map the semantics of verb argument structures into [[thematic relation|thematic role]]s # Provide morphosyntactic rules for creating verb forms and nominal forms whose seven cases are called ''karaka'' (similar to [[grammatical case|case]]) that generate the [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]] # Take these morphological structures and consider [[phonology|phonological]] processes (e.g., root or stem modification) by which the final phonological form is obtained In addition, the Pāṇinian school also provides a list of 2000 verb [[Root (linguistics)|roots]] which form the objects on which these rules are applied, a list of sounds (the so-called ''Shiva-sutras''), and a list of 260 words not derivable by the rules. The extremely succinct specification of these rules and their complex interactions led to considerable commentary and extrapolation over the following centuries. The phonological structure includes defining a notion of sound universals similar to the modern [[phoneme]], the systematization of [[consonant]]s based on oral cavity constriction, and [[vowel]]s based on height and duration. However, it is the ambition of mapping these from [[morpheme]] to semantics that is truly remarkable in modern terms. Grammarians following Pāṇini include [[Katyayana|Kātyāyana]] (c. 3rd century BCE), who wrote aphorisms on Pāṇini (the ''Varttika'') and advanced [[Indian mathematics|mathematics]]; [[Patañjali]] (2nd century BCE), known for his commentary on selected topics in Pāṇini's grammar (the ''Mahabhasya'') and on Kātyāyana's [[aphorisms]], as well as, according to some, the author of the ''[[Yoga Sutras of Patanjali|Yoga Sutras]]'', and ''[[Pingala]]'', with his mathematical approach to [[Prosody (linguistics)|prosody]]. Several debates ranged over centuries, for example, on whether word-meaning mappings were conventional (''[[Vaisheshika]]-[[Nyaya]]'') or eternal (''Kātyāyana-Patañjali-[[Mīmāṃsā]]''). The ''[[Nyaya Sutras]]'' specified three types of meaning: the individual (''this cow''), the [[Universal (metaphysics)|type universal]] (''cowhood''), and the image (''draw the cow''). That the sound of a word also forms a class (sound-universal) was observed by [[Bhartṛhari]] (c. 500 CE), who also posits that language-universals are the units of thought, close to the [[nominalism|nominalist]] or even the [[linguistic determinism]] position. Bhartṛhari also considers the sentence to be ontologically primary (word meanings are learned given their sentential use). Of the six canonical texts or ''[[Vedanga]]s'' that formed the core syllabus in [[Brahmin]]ic education from the 1st century CE until the 18th century, four dealt with language: *''[[Shiksha]]'' (''{{IAST|śikṣā}}''): [[phonetics]] and [[phonology]] ([[sandhi]]), Gārgeya and commentators *''[[Chandas]]'' (''{{IAST|chandas}}''): [[prosody (poetry)|prosody]] or [[Meter (poetry)|meter]], Pingala and commentators *''[[Vyakarana]]'' (''{{IAST|vyākaraṇa}}''): [[grammar]], Pāṇini and commentators *''[[Nirukta]]'' (''{{IAST|nirukta}}''): [[etymology]], Yāska and commentators [[Bhartrihari]] around 500 CE introduced a philosophy of meaning with his ''[[sphoṭa]]'' doctrine.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} Pāṇini's rule-based method of linguistic analysis and description has remained relatively unknown to Western linguistics until more recently. [[Franz Bopp]] used Pāṇini's work as a linguistic source for his 1807 Sanskrit grammar but disregarded his methodology.<ref>The science of language, Chapter 16, in [[Gavin D. Flood]], ed. ''The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism'' [[Blackwell Publishing]], 2003, 599 pages {{ISBN|0-631-21535-2}}, {{ISBN|978-0-631-21535-6}}. p. 357-358</ref> Pāṇini's system also differs from modern [[formal linguistics]] in that, since Sanskrit is a free word-order language, it did not provide [[syntax|syntactic]] rules.<ref name="Kiparsky_2009">{{cite book |last=Kiparsky |first=Paul|author-link=Paul Kiparsky |editor-last1=Huet |editor-first1=G. |editor-last2=Kulkarni |editor-first2=A. |editor-last3=Scharf |editor-first3=P. |title=Sanskrit Computational Linguistics, ISCLS 2007, ISCLS 2008. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 5402 |publisher=Springer |date=2015 |pages=33–94 |chapter= On the Architecture of Pāṇini's Grammar |volume=5402 |doi=10.1007/978-3-642-00155-0_2|isbn= 978-3-642-00155-0 }}</ref> Formal linguistics, as first proposed by [[Louis Hjelmslev]] in 1943,<ref name="Seuren_1998">{{cite book |last=Seuren|first=Pieter A. M.|author-link=Pieter Seuren|title=Western linguistics: An historical introduction |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |isbn=0-631-20891-7 |pages=160–167 |date=1998}}</ref> is nonetheless based on the same concept that the expression of [[semantics|meaning]] is organised on different layers of linguistic form (including phonology and morphology).<ref name="Hjelmslev_1969">{{cite book |last=Hjelmslev |first=Louis |title=Prolegomena to a Theory of Language |publisher=University of Wisconsin Press |date=1969 |orig-year=First published 1943 |isbn= 0299024709 |author-link=Louis Hjelmslev}}</ref> The Pali Grammar of Kacchayana, dated to the early centuries CE, describes the language of the Buddhist canon.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} ===Greece=== The Greeks developed an [[alphabet]] using symbols from the [[Phoenician alphabet|Phoenicians]], adding signs for vowels and for extra consonants appropriate to their idiom (see Robins, 1997). In the [[Phoenician alphabet|Phoenicians]] and in earlier Greek writing systems, such as [[Linear B]], graphemes indicated syllables, that is sound combinations of a consonant and a vowel. The addition of vowels by the Greeks was a major breakthrough as it facilitated the writing of Greek by representing both vowels and consonants with distinct graphemes. As a result of the introduction of writing, poetry such as the [[Homeric poems]] became written and several editions were created and commented on, forming the basis of [[philology]] and criticism. Along with written speech, the Greeks commenced studying grammatical and philosophical issues. A philosophical discussion about the nature and origins of language can be found as early as the works of Plato. A subject of concern was whether language was man-made, a social artifact, or supernatural in origin. [[Plato]] in his [[Cratylus (dialogue)|''Cratylus'']] presents the [[Naturalism (philosophy)|naturalistic]] view, that word meanings emerge from a natural process, independent of the language user. His arguments are partly based on examples of compounding, where the meaning of the whole is usually related to the constituents, although by the end he admits a small role for convention. The [[sophists]] and [[Socrates]] introduced dialectics as a new text genre. The Platonic dialogs contain definitions of the meters of the poems and tragedy, the form and the structure of those texts (see the ''Republic'' and ''Phaidros'', ''Ion'', etc.).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://plato-dialogues.org/works.htm|title=Plato and his dialogues: a list of Plato's works|first=Bernard F.|last=SUZANNE|website=plato-dialogues.org}}</ref> [[Aristotle]] supports the conventional origins of meaning. He defined the logic of speech and of the argument. Furthermore, Aristotle's works on [[rhetoric]] and [[poetics]] became of the utmost importance for the understanding of tragedy, poetry, public discussions etc. as text genres. Aristotle's work on logic interrelates with his special interest in language, and his work on this area was fundamentally important for the development of the study of language (''logos'' in Greek means both "language" and "logic reasoning"). In [[Categories (Aristotle)|''Categories'']], Aristotle defines what is meant by "synonymous" or univocal words, what is meant by "homonymous" or equivocal words, and what is meant by "paronymous" or denominative words. He divides forms of speech as being: * Either simple, without composition or structure, such as "man," "horse," "fights," etc. * Or having composition and structure, such as "a man fights," "the horse runs," etc. Next, he distinguishes between a subject of predication, namely that of which anything is affirmed or denied, and a subject of inhesion. A thing is said to be inherent in a subject, when, though it is not a part of the subject, it cannot possibly exist without the subject, e.g., shape in a thing having a shape. The categories are not abstract platonic entities but are found in speech, these are substance, quantity, quality, relation, place, time, position, state, action and affection. In ''[[de Interpretatione]]'', Aristotle analyzes categoric propositions, and draws a series of basic conclusions on the routine issues of classifying and defining basic linguistic forms, such as simple terms and propositions, nouns and verbs, negation, the quantity of simple propositions (primitive roots of the quantifiers in modern symbolic logic), investigations on the excluded middle (which to Aristotle isn't applicable to future tense propositions — the Problem of future contingents), and on modal propositions. The [[Stoics]] made linguistics an important part of their system of the cosmos and the human. They played an important role in defining the linguistic sign-terms adopted later on by [[Ferdinand de Saussure]] like "significant" and "signifié".<ref>{{cite book|url=https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2018/entries/stoicism/|title=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy|first=Dirk|last=Baltzly|chapter=Stoicism |editor-first=Edward N.|editor-last=Zalta|date=5 June 2018|publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University|via=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}}</ref> The Stoics studied phonetics, grammar and etymology as separate levels of study. In [[phonetics]] and [[phonology]] the [[articulators]] were defined. The [[syllable]] became an important structure for the understanding of speech organization. One of the most important contributions of the Stoics in language study was the gradual definition of the terminology and theory echoed in modern linguistics. Alexandrian [[Alexandrine grammarians|grammarians]] also studied speech sounds and [[prosody (linguistics)|prosody]]; they defined [[parts of speech]] with notions such as "noun", "verb", etc. There was also a discussion about the role of analogy in language, in this discussion the grammatici in Alexandria supported the view that language and especially morphology is based on analogy or paradigm, whereas the grammatic in schools in Asia Minor consider that language is not based on analogical bases but rather on exceptions. Alexandrians, like their predecessors, were very interested in meter and its role in [[poetry]]. The metrical "[[Foot (prosody)|feet]]" in the Greek was based on the length of time taken to pronounce each syllable, with syllables categorized according to their weight as either "long" syllables or "short" syllables (also known as "heavy" and "light" syllables, respectively, to distinguish them from long and short vowels). The foot is often compared to a musical measure and the long and short syllables to whole notes and half notes. The basic unit in Greek and Latin prosody is a [[mora (linguistics)|mora]], which is defined as a single short [[syllable]]. A long syllable is equivalent to two moras. A long syllable contains either a long [[vowel]], a [[diphthong]], or a short vowel followed by two or more consonants. Various rules of elision sometimes prevent a grammatical syllable from making a full syllable, and certain other lengthening and shortening rules (such as [[correption]]) can create long or short syllables in contexts where one would expect the opposite. The most important Classical meter as defined by the Alexandrian grammarians was the dactylic hexameter, the meter of Homeric poetry. This form uses verses of six feet. The first four feet are normally dactyls, but can be spondees. The fifth foot is almost always a dactyl. The sixth foot is either a spondee or a trochee. The initial syllable of either foot is called the ictus, the basic "beat" of the verse. There is usually a [[caesura]] after the ictus of the third foot. The text [[Art of Grammar|''Tékhnē grammatiké'']] (c. 100 BCE, Gk. ''gramma'' meant letter, and this title means "Art of letters"), possibly written by [[Dionysius Thrax]] (170 – 90 BCE), is considered the earliest grammar book in the Greek tradition.<ref name="Bod"/> It lists eight parts of speech and lays out the broad details of Greek morphology including the [[declension|case]] structures. This text was intended as a pedagogic guide (as was Panini), and also covers punctuation and some aspects of prosody. Other grammars by [[Charisius]] (mainly a compilation of Thrax, as well as lost texts by [[Remmius Palaemon]] and others) and [[Diomedes]] (focusing more on prosody) were popular in [[Ancient Rome|Rome]] as pedagogic material for teaching Greek to native [[Latin]]-speakers. One of the most prominent scholars of Alexandria and of the antiquity was [[Apollonius Dyscolus]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://schmidhauser.us/apollonius/|title = Apollonius Dyscolus}}</ref> Apollonius wrote more than thirty treatises on questions of syntax, semantics, morphology, prosody, orthography, dialectology, and more. Happily, four of these are preserved—we still have a ''Syntax'' in four books, and three one-book monographs on pronouns, adverbs, and connectives, respectively. [[Lexicography]] become an important domain of study as many grammarians compiled dictionaries, thesauri and lists of special words "λέξεις" that were old, or dialectical or special (such as medical words or botanic words) at that period. In the early medieval times we find more categories of dictionaries like the dictionary of [[Suida]] (considered the first encyclopedic dictionary), etymological dictionaries etc. At that period, the Greek language functioned as a ''lingua franca'', a language spoken throughout the known world (for the Greeks and Romans) of that time and, as a result, modern linguistics struggles to overcome this. With the Greeks a tradition commenced in the study of language. The terminology invented by Greek and Latin grammarians in the ancient world and medieval period continue as a part of our everyday language. Think, for example, of notions such as the word, the syllable, the verb, the subject etc. ===Rome=== {{further|Grammarian (Greco-Roman world)}} In the 4th century, [[Aelius Donatus]] compiled the Latin grammar ''Ars Grammatica'' that was to be the defining school text through the Middle Ages. A smaller version, ''Ars Minor'', covered only the eight parts of speech; eventually when books came to be printed in the 15th century, this was one of the [[Johannes Gutenberg#Printed books|first books]] to be printed. Schoolboys subjected to all this education gave us the current meaning of "grammar" (attested in [[English language|English]] since 1176). ===China=== Similar to the Indian tradition, Chinese philology ({{zhi|c=小學|p=xiǎoxué|l=elementary studies}}) emerged as an aid to understanding the [[Chinese classics]] {{circa|the 3rd century BCE}}, during the [[Western Han dynasty]]. Philology came to be divided into three branches: exegesis ({{zhi|c=訓詁|p=xùngǔ}}), grammatology ({{zhi|c=文字|p=wénzì}}) and phonology ({{zhi|c=音韻|p=yīnyùn}}).<ref>{{Cite book |last=McDonald |first=Edward |title=Grammar West to East |publisher=Springer |year=2019 |isbn=978-981-13-7597-2 |pages=87–88}}</ref> The field reached its golden age in the 17th century, during the [[Qing dynasty]]. The ''[[Erya]]'' ({{circa|3rd century BCE}}), comparable to the Indian ''[[Nighantu]]'', is regarded as the first linguistic work in China. ''[[Shuowen Jiezi]]'' ({{circa|100 CE}}), the first [[Chinese dictionary]], classifies [[Chinese characters]] by [[radical (Chinese character)|radical]]s, a practice that would be followed by most subsequent [[lexicographer]]s. Two more pioneering works produced during the Han dynasty are ''[[Fangyan (book)|Fangyan]]'', the first Chinese work concerning [[dialect]]s, and ''[[Shiming]]'', devoted to etymology. As in ancient Greece, early Chinese thinkers were concerned with the relationship between names and reality. [[Confucius]] ({{circa|551|479 BCE}}) famously emphasized the moral commitment implicit in a name, (''zhengming'') stating that the moral collapse of the pre-[[Qin dynasty|Qin]] was a result of the failure to rectify behaviour to meet the moral commitment inherent in names: "Good government consists in the ruler being a ruler, the minister being a minister, the father being a father, and the son being a son... If names be not correct, language is not in accordance with the truth of things." (''[[Analects]]'' 12.11, 13.3). <!-- the second part is perhaps not very relevant? That translation is Legge, and the first part is from the Confucius article in the Stanford Ency of Philo. --> However, what is the reality implied by a name? The later [[Mohists]] or the group known as [[School of Names]], consider that a name ({{zhi|c=名|p=míng}} may refer to three kinds of actuality ({{zhi|c=實|p=shí}}): type universals (horse), individual (John), and unrestricted (thing). They adopt a [[philosophical realism|realist]] position on the name-reality connection{{snd}}universals arise because "the world itself fixes the patterns of similarity and difference by which things should be divided into kinds".<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia |year=2020 |title=Mohist Canons |encyclopedia=Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mohist-canons/ |last=Fraser |first=Chris}}</ref> The philosophical tradition features a well known conundrum "[[When a White Horse is Not a Horse|a white horse is not a horse]]" by [[Gongsun Longzi]] (4th century BCE), which resembles those of the [[sophists]]; Gongsun questions if in [[copula (linguistics)|copula]] statements (''X is Y''), are ''X'' and ''Y'' identical or is ''X'' a subclass of ''Y''. [[Xunzi (philosopher)|Xunzi]] ({{circa|310|after 238 BCE}}) revisits the principle of ''zhengming'', but instead of rectifying behaviour to suit the names, his emphasis is on rectifying language to correctly reflect reality. This is consistent with a more "conventional" view of word origins. The study of phonology in China began late, and was influenced by the Indian tradition, after [[Buddhism]] had become popular in China. The [[rime dictionary]] is a type of dictionary arranged by [[tone (linguistics)|tone]] and [[syllable rime|rime]], in which the pronunciations of characters are indicated by ''[[fanqie]]'' spellings. [[Rime table]]s were later produced to aid the understanding of ''fanqie''. Philological studies flourished during the Qing dynasty, with [[Duan Yucai]] and [[Wang Niansun]] as the towering figures. The last great philologist of the era was [[Zhang Binglin]], who also helped lay the foundation of modern Chinese linguistics. The Western [[comparative method]] was brought into China by [[Bernard Karlgren]], the first scholar to reconstruct [[Middle Chinese]] and [[Old Chinese]] with Latin alphabet (not [[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]]). Important modern Chinese linguists include [[Yuen Ren Chao]], [[Luo Changpei]], [[Li Fanggui]] and [[Wang Li (linguist)|Wang Li]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kuzuoğlu |first=Uluğ |title=Codes of Modernity: Chinese Scripts in the Global Information Age |publisher=Columbia University Press |year=2024 |isbn=978-0-231-20939-7 |location=New York |pages=198, 220}}</ref> Ancient commentators on the classics focused their attention on lexical content and the function of linking words rather than syntax; the first modern Chinese grammar was produced by [[Ma Jianzhong]] (late 19th century), based on a Western model.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Vogelsang |first=Kai |title=Introduction to Classical Chinese |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2021 |isbn=978-0-19-883497-7 |pages=xviii–xix}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Dong |first=Hongyuan |title=A History of the Chinese Language |publisher=Routledge |year=2014 |isbn=978-0-415-66039-6 |publication-place=London |page=85}}</ref> ==Middle Ages== ===Arabic grammar=== {{main|Islamic grammatical tradition}} Owing to the rapid expansion of [[Islam]] in the 8th century, many people learned [[Arabic language|Arabic]] as a [[lingua franca]]. For this reason, the earliest grammatical treatises on Arabic are often written by non-native speakers. The earliest grammarian who is known to us is [[Abi Ishaq|{{Transliteration|ar|DIN|ʿAbd Allāh ibn Abī Isḥāq al-Ḥaḍramī}}]] (died 735-736 CE, 117 [[Islamic calendar|AH]]).<ref>Monique Bernards, "Pioneers of Arabic Linguistic Studies." Taken from ''In the Shadow of Arabic: The Centrality of Language to Arabic Culture'', pg. 213. Ed. [[Bilal Orfali]]. [[Leiden]]: [[Brill Publishers]], 2011. {{ISBN|9789004215375}}</ref> The efforts of three generations of grammarians culminated in the book of the [[Persian people|Persian]] linguist [[Sibawayh|{{Transliteration|ar|DIN|Sibāwayhi}}]] (c. 760–793). Sibawayh made a detailed and professional description of Arabic in 760 in his monumental work, ''Al-kitab fi al-nahw'' (الكتاب في النحو, ''The Book on Grammar''). In his book he distinguished [[phonetics]] from [[phonology]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Talmon |first1=Rafael | year=1982 |title="NAḤWIYYŪN" IN SĪBAWAYHI'S "KITĀB" |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43530401 |journal=Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik |issue=8 |pages=12–38 |publisher=Harrassowitz Verlag |jstor=43530401 |access-date=September 28, 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=THE KITAB OF SIBAWAYH - THE ULTIMATE REFERENCE |url=https://www.sifatusafwa.com/en/grammar-an-nahw/the-kitab-of-sibawayh-the-ultimate-reference.html |website=Sifatu Safwa |access-date=September 28, 2023}}</ref> ===European vernaculars=== The [[Irish language|Irish]] ''[[Sanas Cormaic]]'' 'Cormac's Glossary' (10th century) is Europe's first etymological and [[encyclopedic dictionary]] in any non-Classical language. The [[Auraicept na n-Éces]], compiled over the course of several centuries — possibly starting as early as in the 8th century — is a treatise on that same [[Old Irish|language]] and the first instance of a philosophical defence of a spoken European vernacular over Latin. A milestone in the early history of Germanic linguistics, the [[First Grammatical Treatise]] (12th century) offers a wealth of information on [[Old Norse]] lexicon, grammar and phonology. In the 13th century, the [[Modistae]] or "speculative grammarians" introduced the notion of [[universal grammar]]. In the treatise ''[[De vulgari eloquentia]]'' ("On the Eloquence of Vernacular"), dating to 1303-1305, the Italian poet [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]] presented a [[theory of language]] and discussed the origin of languages after the confusion of tongues following the events of the [[Tower of Babel]]. By recognizing the instrinsically human nature of language, Dante first recognized that — like customs and traditions — languages are bound to evolve over time and to differentiate in space giving birth to dialects.<ref name="ReferenceA">[[Dante|Dante Alighieri]], [[De Vulgari Eloquentia]], 1, IX</ref> He argued that the wave of human populations migrating westward to Europe after the confusion of tongues were already differentiated into three linguistic families: the [[Greek language|Greek]] family, one that can be defined as [[Slavic languages|Slavo]]-[[Germanic languages|Germanic]], and the one that is today known as [[Romance languages|Romance]] family.<ref>[[Dante|Dante Alighieri]], [[De Vulgari Eloquentia]], 1, VIII</ref> Each of these families independently underwent differentiation into several branching languages. The Romance family, in particular, appeared to Dante as split into three closely related languages, namely [[Old French]] ("langue d'oïl"), [[Old Occitan]] ("langue d'oc") and [[Italian language|Italian]] ("lingua del sì").<ref name="ReferenceA"/> The writer then focused on the additional subdivision of Italian into 14 dialectal varieties, whence it could be possible to extract a noble and elevated vulgar language not inferior in dignity to Latin.<ref>[[Dante|Dante Alighieri]], [[De Vulgari Eloquentia]], 1, X</ref><ref>[[Dante|Dante Alighieri]], [[De Vulgari Eloquentia]], 1, XVI</ref> The [[Renaissance]] and [[Baroque]] period saw an intensified interest in linguistics,<ref name="FPencyclo" /> notably for the purpose of [[Bible translations]] by the [[Jesuits]], and also related to philosophical speculation on [[philosophical language]]s and the [[origin of language]]. In the 1600s, Joannes Goropius Becanus was the oldest representative of Dutch linguistics. He was the first person to publish a fragment of Gothic, mainly The lord's prayer. Franciscus Juniuns, Lambert ten Kate from Amsterdam and George Hickes from England are considered to be the founding fathers of [[Germanic linguistics]].<ref>Noordegraaf, J., Versteegh, K., & Konrad, K. E. (1992). The history of linguistics in the low countries. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.</ref> ==Modern linguistics== {{further|Philology}} Modern linguistics did not begin until the late 18th century, and the Romantic or animist theses of [[Johann Gottfried Herder]] and [[Johann Christoph Adelung]] remained influential well into the 19th century. In the history of American linguistics, there were hundreds of Indigenous languages that were never recorded. Many of the languages were spoken, not written, and so they are now inaccessible. Under these circumstances, linguists such as [[Franz Boas]] tried to prescribe sound methodical principles for the analysis of unfamiliar languages. Boas was an influential linguist and was followed by [[Edward Sapir]] and [[Leonard Bloomfield]].<ref>Britannica. (2021). Greek and Roman antiquity. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/science/linguistics/Greek-and-Roman-antiquity</ref> ===Historical linguistics<!--'Romantic linguistics' redirects here-->=== {{further|Historical linguistics|Indo-European studies}} During the 18th century [[conjectural history]], based on a mix of [[linguistics]] and [[anthropology]], on the topic of both the origin and progress of language and society was fashionable. These thinkers contributed to the construction of academic paradigms in which some languages were labelled "primitive" relative to the [[English language]]. [[Hugh Blair]] wrote that for [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]], certain motions and actions were found to convey meaning as much as what was said verbally.<ref name="quod.lib.umich.edu">Hugh Blair. (1783). Lectures on rhetoric and belles lettres. Retrieved from https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/ecco/004786433.0001.001/1:9?rgn=div1;view=fulltext</ref> Around the same time, [[James Burnett, Lord Monboddo|James Burnett]] authored a 6 volume treatise that delved more deeply into the matter of "savage languages". Other writers theorized that Native American languages were "nothing but the natural and instinctive cries of the animal" without grammatical structure. The thinkers within this paradigm connected themselves with the Greeks and Romans, viewed as the only civilized persons of the ancient world, a view articulated by Thomas Sheridan who compiled an important 18th century pronunciation dictionary: "It was to the care taken in the cultivation of their languages, that Greece and Rome, owed that splendor, which eclipsed all the other nations of the world".<ref>{{cite journal |title=The Creation of a Classical Language in the Eighteenth Century: Standardizing English, Cultural Imperialism, and the Future of the Literary Canon |journal=Texas Studies in Literature and Language |last=Beach |first=Adam R. |volume=43 |issue=2 |date=2001|pages=117–141 |doi=10.1353/tsl.2001.0007 |s2cid=161970745 }}</ref> In the 18th century [[James Burnett, Lord Monboddo]] analyzed numerous languages and deduced logical elements of the evolution of human languages. His thinking was interleaved with his precursive concepts of [[biological evolution]]. Some of his early concepts have been validated and are considered correct today. In his ''The Sanscrit Language'' (1786), [[William Jones (philologist)|Sir William Jones]] proposed that Sanskrit and [[Persian language|Persian]] had resemblances to [[Classical Greek]], [[Latin]], [[Gothic language|Gothic]], and [[Celtic languages]]. From this idea sprung the field of [[comparative linguistics]] and [[historical linguistics]]. Through the 19th century, European [[linguistics]] centered on the comparative history of the [[Indo-European language]]s, with a concern for finding their common roots and tracing their development. In the 1820s, [[Wilhelm von Humboldt]] observed that human language was a rule-governed system, anticipating a theme that was to become central in the formal work on syntax and semantics of language in the 20th century. Of this observation he said that it allowed language to make "infinite use of finite means" (''Über den Dualis'', 1827). Humboldt's work is associated with the movement of '''Romantic linguistics'''<!--boldface per WP:R#PLA-->,<ref>Philip A. Luelsdorff, Jarmila Panevová, Petr Sgall (eds.), ''Praguiana, 1945–1990'', John Benjamins Publishing, 1994, p. 150: "Humboldt himself (Humboldt was one of the leading spirits of romantic linguistics; he died in 1834) emphasized that speaking was permanent creation."</ref> which was inspired by ''[[Naturphilosophie]]'' and [[Romantic science]].<ref name="Esterhammer">Angela Esterhammer (ed.), ''Romantic Poetry'', Volume 7, John Benjamins Publishing, 2002, p. 491.</ref> Other notable representatives of the movement include [[Friedrich Schlegel]] and [[Franz Bopp]].<ref name="Esterhammer"/> It was only in the late 19th century that the [[Neogrammarian]] approach of [[Karl Brugmann]] and others introduced a rigid notion of [[sound law]]. Historical linguistics also led to the emergence of the [[semantics]] and some forms of [[pragmatics]] (Nerlich, 1992; Nerlich and Clarke, 1996). Historical linguistics continues today and linguistics have succeeded in grouping approximately 5000 languages of the world into a number of common ancestors.<ref name="linguisticsociety.org">[[Frederick Newmeyer|Newmeyer, F.]] (2014). The History of Modern Linguistics. Retrieved from https://www.linguisticsociety.org/resource/history-modern-linguistics</ref> ===Structuralism=== {{main|Structuralism}} In Europe there was a development of structural linguistics, initiated by [[Ferdinand de Saussure]], a Swiss professor of Indo-European and general linguistics, whose lectures on general linguistics, published posthumously by his students, set the direction of European linguistic analysis from the 1920s on; his approach has been widely adopted in other fields under the broad term "[[Structuralism]]". By the 20th century, the attention shifted from language change to the structure, which is governed by rules and principles. This structure turned more into grammar and by the 1920s structural linguistic, was developing into sophisticated methods of grammatical analysis.<ref name="linguisticsociety.org"/> ===Descriptive linguistics=== {{main|Descriptive linguistics}} During the second World War, North American linguists [[Leonard Bloomfield]], William Mandeville Austin<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.academia.edu/6144987|title=History of Linguistics: William Mandeville AUSTIN|first=Pierre-François|last=Puech|website=academia.edu}}</ref> and several of his students and colleagues developed teaching materials for a variety of languages whose knowledge was needed for the war effort. This work led to an increasing prominence of the field of linguistics, which became a recognized discipline in most American universities only after the war. In 1965, [[William Stokoe]], [[Carl G. Croneberg]], and [[Dorothy C. Casterline]] linguists from [[Gallaudet University]] published an analysis which proved that [[American Sign Language]] fits the criteria for a [[natural language]].<ref>[[William C. Stokoe]], [[Dorothy Casterline|Dorothy C. Casterline]], [[Carl Croneberg|Carl G. Croneberg]] (1965) ''A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles.'' Washington, DC: Gallaudet College Press.</ref> ===Generative linguistics=== {{main|Generative linguistics}} Generative linguistics focuses on modeling the subconscious rules governing language. It started with [[Noam Chomsky|Noam Chomsky’s]] Transformational Grammar and has evolved into various theories like Government and Binding and the [[Minimalist program|Minimalist Program]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Newmeyer|first=Frederick|year=1986|title=Linguistic Theory in America|publisher=Academic Press|pages=17–18|isbn=0-12-517152-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=generative grammar |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/generative-grammar |website=Britannica |access-date=August 22, 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Freidin |first1=Robert |title=The Minimalist Program Noam Chomsky |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/415885 |website=Jstor |access-date=August 22, 2024 |date=September 1997|jstor=415885 }}</ref> Core principles include the distinction between competence and performance, the role of innate grammar (Universal Grammar),<ref name ="WasowHandbookUniversality">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Generative Grammar |encyclopedia=The Handbook of Linguistics|year=2003|last=Wasow|first=Thomas|author-link=Tom Wasow|editor-last1=Aronoff|editor-first1=Mark|editor-last2=Ress-Miller|editor-first2=Janie|publisher= Blackwell|url=https://www.blackwellpublishing.com/content/BPL_Images/Content_store/WWW_Content/9780631204978/12.pdf|doi=10.1002/9780470756409.ch12|page=299|isbn=978-0-631-20497-8 }}</ref> and the use of explicit, formal models to describe linguistic knowledge.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=McCoy|first1=R. Thomas|last2=Frank|first2=Robert|last3=Linzen|first3=Tal|year=2018 |title=Revisiting the poverty of the stimulus: hierarchical generalization without a hierarchical bias in recurrent neural networks|journal=Proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society|pages=2093–2098|arxiv=1802.09091 |url=https://tallinzen.net/media/papers/mccoy_frank_linzen_2018_cogsci.pdf}}</ref> ===Other subfields=== {{further|Linguistic turn|Linguistics Wars}} From roughly 1980 onwards, [[Pragmatics|pragmatic]], [[Systemic functional grammar|functional]], and [[Cognitive linguistics|cognitive]] approaches have steadily gained ground, both in the [[United States]] and in Europe. ==See also== *[[History of grammar]] *[[History of communication]] *[[History of women in linguistics]] ==Notes== {{reflist}} ==References== * {{cite book| author=Keith Allan| title=The Western Classical Tradition in Linguistics |location=London |publisher=Equinox|year= 2007|author-link= Keith Allan (linguist)}} * {{cite book |author1=Roy Harris |author2=Talbot J. Taylor |title=Landmarks in Linguistic Thought: The Western Tradition from Socrates to Saussure |location=London |publisher=Routledge |year=1989 |isbn=0-415-00290-7 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/westerntradition0000harr }} *{{cite book|author1=John E. Joseph |author2=Nigel Love |author3=Talbot J. Taylor |title=Landmarks in Linguistic Thought II: The Western Tradition in the Twentieth Century |location=London |publisher=Routledge |year=2001 |isbn=0-415-06396-5}} * {{cite book| editor=W. P. Lehmann | title=A Reader in Nineteenth Century Historical Indo-European Linguistics| publisher=Indiana University Press| year=1967| isbn=0-253-34840-4| url=http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/books/readT.html| url-status=dead| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080426224511/http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/lrc/books/readT.html| archive-date=2008-04-26}} * {{Cite encyclopedia| publisher = SAGE Publications, Inc.| isbn = 9781412999632| volume = 1| pages = 184–187 |editor=Jon R. McGee |editor2=Richard L. Warms | last1 = François| first1 = Alexandre |author1-link=Alexandre François (linguist)| last2 = Ponsonnet| first2 = Maïa| title = Descriptive linguistics| encyclopedia = Theory in Social and Cultural Anthropology: An Encyclopedia| date = 2013 |url=http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/Francois-Ponsonnet_Descriptive-Linguistics_Theory-Social-Cultural-Anthropology_184-187.pdf |ref=FPencyclo}} *{{cite book| author = Bimal Krishna Matilal | title = The Word and the World: India's Contribution to the Study of Language | url = https://archive.org/details/wordworldindiasc0000mati | url-access = registration |location=Delhi; New York | publisher = Oxford University Press| year = 1990| isbn=0-19-562515-3| author-link = Bimal Krishna Matilal}} * {{cite book| author=James McElvenny| title=A History of Modern Linguistics: From the beginnings to World War II |location=Edinburgh |publisher=Edinburgh University Press|year= 2024|author-link=James McElvenny}} * {{cite book| author=Frederick J. Newmeyer| title=The History of Linguistics| publisher=Linguistic Society of America| year=2005| url=http://www.lsadc.org/info/ling-fields-history.cfm| isbn=0-415-11553-1| access-date=2007-01-17| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070210154051/http://www.lsadc.org/info/ling-fields-history.cfm| archive-date=2007-02-10| url-status=dead}} * {{cite book| author=Mario Pei | title=Invitation to Linguistics | publisher=Doubleday & Company | year=1965 |isbn=0-385-06584-1 | author-link=Mario Pei}} * {{cite book| author = Robert Henry Robins| title = A Short History of Linguistics |location=London | publisher = Longman | year = 1997 | isbn=0-582-24994-5 }} *{{cite book|author=Kees Versteegh|title=Landmarks in Linguistic Thought III: The Arabic Linguistic Tradition |location=London; New York |publisher=Routledge |year=1997 |isbn=0-415-14062-5}} * Randy Allen Harris (1995) ''The Linguistics Wars'', Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|9780199839063}}. Second edition published in 2022 as ''The Linguistics Wars: Chomsky, Lakoff, and the Battle Over Deep Structure,'' Oxford University Press, {{ISBN|9780199740338}} * Brigitte Nerlich (1992). ''Semantic Theories in Europe, 1830-1930.'' Amsterdam: John Benjamins, {{ISBN|90-272-4546-0}} * Brigitte Nerlich and David D. Clarke (1996). ''Language, Action, and Context.'' Amsterdam: John Benjamins, {{ISBN|90-272-4567-3}} {{DEFAULTSORT:History Of Linguistics}} [[Category:History of linguistics| ]] [[Category:History of science by discipline|Linguistics]]
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