

The Story of Human Language
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Episodes
S1 E1 - What Is Language?
March 19, 202528minProfessor John McWhorter introduces the course by exploring two questions: What distinguishes the language ability of humans from the signaling system of animals, and when did humans first acquire language?Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E2 - When Language Began
March 19, 202530minWe look at evidence that language is an innate ability of the human brain, an idea linked to Noam Chomsky. But many linguists and psychologists see language as one facet of cognition rather than as a separate ability.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E3 - How Language Changes: Sound Change
March 19, 202530minThe first of five lectures on language change examines how sounds evolve, exemplified by the Great Vowel Shift in English and the complex tone system in Chinese.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E4 - How Language Changes: Building New Material
March 19, 202530minLanguage change is not just sound erosion and morphing, but the building of new words and constructions. This lecture shows how such developments lead to novel grammatical features.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E5 - How Language Changes: Meaning and Order
March 19, 202531minThe meaning of a word changes over time. Silly first meant "blessed" and acquired its current sense through a series of gradual steps. Word order also changes: In Old English, the verb usually came at the end of a sentence.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E6 - How Language Changes: Many Directions
March 19, 202530minThe first language has evolved into 6,000 because language change takes place in many directions. Latin split in this way into the Romance languages as changes proceeded differently in each area where the Romans brought Latin.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E7 - How Language Changes: Modern English
March 19, 202530minAs recently as Shakespeare, English words had meanings different enough to interfere with our understanding of his language today. Even by the 1800s, Jane Austen's work is full of sentences that would now be considered errors.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E8 - Language Families: Indo-European
March 19, 202530minThe first of four lectures on language families introduces Indo-European, which probably began in the southern steppes of Russia around 4000 BCE and then spread westward to most of Europe and eastward to Iran and India.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E9 - Language Families: Tracing Indo-European
March 19, 202530minLinguists have reconstructed the proto-language of the Indo-Europeans by comparing the modern languages. Applying this process, we learn the Proto-Indo-European word for sister-in-law that was spoken 6,000 years ago.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E10 - Language Families: Diversity of Structures
March 19, 202530minSemitic languages assign basic meanings to three-consonant sequences and create words by altering the vowels around them. In Sino-Tibetan languages, a sentence tends to leave more to context than we often imagine possible.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E11 - Language Families: Clues to the Past
March 19, 202530minThe distribution of language families shows how humans have spread through migration. We trace the Austronesian language family to its origins on Formosa. Similar work sheds light on the history of Africa and North America.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E12 - The Case against the World’s First Language
March 19, 202531minA few linguists have claimed to reconstruct words from the world's first language, but this work is extremely controversial. Professor McWhorter presents the case against this theory, called the "Proto-World" hypothesis.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E13 - The Case for the World’s First Language
March 19, 202530minDespite the hostility of most linguists to the Proto-World hypothesis, there is increasing evidence that many of the world's language families do trace to "mega-ancestors," even if evidence for a Proto-World remains lacking.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E14 - Dialects: Subspecies of Species
March 19, 202530minThe first of five lectures on dialects probes the nature of these "languages within languages." Dialects are variations on a common theme, rather than bastardizations of a "legitimate" standard variety.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E15 - Dialects: Where Do You Draw the Line?
March 19, 202530minDialects of one language can be called languages simply because they are spoken in different countries, such as Swedish, Norwegian and Danish. The reverse is also true: The Chinese "dialects" are distinctly different languages.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E16 - Dialects: Two Tongues in One Mouth
March 19, 202530minDiglossia is the sociological division of labor in many societies between two languages, with a "high" one used in formal contexts and a "low" one used in casual ones—as in High German and Swiss German in Switzerland.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E17 - Dialects: The Standard as Token of the Past
March 19, 202530minWhen a dialect of a language is used widely in writing and literacy is high, the normal pace of change is artificially slowed, as people come to see "the language" as on the page and inviolable. This helps create diglossia.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E18 - Dialects: Spoken Style, Written Style
March 19, 202531minWe often see the written style of language as how it really "is" or "should be." But in fact, writing allows uses of language that are impossible when a language is only a spoken one.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E19 - Dialects: The Fallacy of Blackboard Grammar
March 19, 202530minUnderstanding language change and how languages differ helps us see that what is often labeled "wrong" about people's speech is, in fact, a misanalysis.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E20 - Language Mixture: Words
March 19, 202530minThe first language's 6,000 branches have not only diverged into dialects, but they have been constantly mixing with one another on all levels. The first of three lectures on language mixture looks at how this process applies to words.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E21 - Language Mixture: Grammar
March 19, 202529minSee how languages also mix their grammars. For example, Yiddish is a dialect of German, but it has many grammatical features from Slavic languages like Polish. There are no languages without some signs of grammar mixture.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E22 - Language Mixture: Language Areas
March 19, 202530minWhen unrelated or distantly related languages are spoken in the same area for long periods, they tend to become more grammatically similar because of widespread bilingualism.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E23 - Language Develops beyond the Call of Duty
March 19, 202531minA great deal of a language's grammar is a kind of overgrowth, marking nuances that many or most languages do without. Even the gender marking of European languages is a frill, absent in thousands of other languages.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E24 - Language Interrupted
March 19, 202530minGenerally, a language spoken by a small, isolated group will be much more complicated than English. Languages are "streamlined" in this way when history leads them to be learned more as second languages than as first ones.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buyS1 E25 - A New Perspective on the Story of English
March 19, 202530minWe trace English back to its earliest discernible roots in Proto-Indo-European and follow its fascinating development, including an ancient encounter with a language possibly related to Arabic and Hebrew.Free trial of The Great Courses Signature Collection or buy
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