A
linguistic universal is a statement that is true
for all
natural languages. For
example,
All languages have nouns and
verbs, or
All spoken languages have
consonants and vowels. Research in this area of
linguistics is closely tied to
linguistic typology, and intends to
reveal information about how the
human
brain processes
language. The field was
largely pioneered by the linguist
Joseph Greenberg, who from a set of some
thirty languages derived a set of basic universals, mostly dealing
with
syntax.
Terminology
Linguists distinguish between two kinds of universals:
absolute (opposite:
statistical,
often called
tendencies) and
implicational (opposite
non-implicational). Absolute universals apply to
every known language and are quite few in number; an example is
All languages have pronouns. An
implicational universal applies to languages with a particular
feature that is always accompanied by another feature, such as
If a language has trial
grammatical number, it also has dual grammatical number, while
non-implicational universals just state the existence (or
non-existence) of one particular feature.
Also in contrast to absolute universals are
tendencies, statements that may not be true for
all languages, but nevertheless are far too common to be the result
of chance. They also have implicational and non-implicational
forms. An example of the latter would be
The vast majority of
languages have nasal
consonants. However, most tendencies, like their universal
counterparts, are implicational. For example,
With
overwhelmingly greater than chance frequency, languages with normal
SOV order are postpositional. Strictly speaking, a
tendency is not a kind of universal, but exceptions to most
statements called universals can be found. For example,
Latin is an SOV language with
prepositions. Often it turns out that these
exceptional languages are undergoing a shift from one type of
language to another. In the case of Latin, its descendant
Romance languages switched to
SVO, which is a much more common order
among prepositional languages.
Universals may also be
bidirectional or
unidirectional. In a bidirectional universal two
features each imply the existence of each other. For example,
languages with postpositions usually have SOV order, and likewise
SOV languages usually have postpositions. The implication works
both ways, and thus the universal is bidirectional. By contrast, in
a unidirectional universal the implication works only one way.
Languages that place
relative
clauses before the noun they modify again usually have SOV
order, so pre-nominal relative clauses imply SOV. On the other
hand, worldwide SOV languages show little preference for
pre-nominal relative clauses, and thus SOV implies little about the
order of relative clauses. As the implication works only one way,
the proposed universal is a unidirectional one.
Linguistic universals in syntax are sometimes held up as evidence
for
universal grammar (although
epistemological arguments are more
common). Other explanations for linguistic universals have been
proposed, for example, that linguistic universals tend to be
properties of language which aid communication. If a language were
to lack one of these properties, it has been argued, it would
probably soon evolve into a language having that property.
In phonology
Some linguistic universals (or tendencies) may be phonologically
based. For example, the
raspberry
sound is never used
phonemically within
any human language, while there is no known spoken language without
an
open vowel such as or . All spoken
languages also have some
plosives.
According to
Roman Jakobson and
Linda Waugh, numerous studies have
proved that high-pitched sounds (such as , as in
poquito
(
Spanish),
kitty (
English),
maomi (
Mandarin)) frequently refer to smaller
beings or objects (hypothesized to be such because smaller
creatures can produce only high-pitched sounds).
In semantics
In the domain of
semantics, research into
linguistic universals has taken place in a number of ways. Some
linguists, starting with
Leibniz,
have pursued the search for a hypothetic irreducible semantic core
of all languages. A modern variant of this approach can be found in
the
Natural Semantic
Metalanguage of
Wierzbicka and
associates. Other lines of research suggest cross-linguistic
tendencies to use body part terms metaphorically as
adpositions, or tendencies to have
morphologically simple words for cognitively salient concepts. The
human body, being a physiological universal, provides an ideal
domain for research into semantic and lexical universals. In a
seminal study, Cecil H. Brown (1976) proposed a number of
universals in the semantics of body part terminology, including the
following: in any language, there will be distinct terms for
BODY,
HEAD,
ARM,
EYES,
NOSE, and
MOUTH;
if there is a distinct term for
FOOT, there will be
a distinct term for
HAND; similarly, if there are
terms for
INDIVIDUAL TOES, then there are terms for
INDIVIDUAL FINGERS. Subsequent research has shown
that most of these features have to be considered cross-linguistic
tendencies rather than true universals.
Several languages, for
example Tidore
and Kuuk Thaayorre, lack a general term
meaning 'body'. On the basis of such data it has been argued
that the highest level in the
partonomy of
body part terms would be the word for 'person'.
Notes and references
Notes
- Gbe languages like Ewe and Fon are examples of languages that lack true
nasal consonants (see Gbe languages#Nasality in
Gbe).
- The Sound Shape of Language, 1979.
- see for example Goddard & Wierzbicka (1994) and Goddard
(2002).
- Heine (1997)
- Rosch et al. (1976)
- Wilkins (1993), Enfield et al. 2006:17.
Bibliography
- Brown, Cecil H. (1976) "General principles of human anatomical
partonomy and speculations on the growth of partonomic
nomenclature." American Ethnologist 3, no. 3, Folk
Biology, pp. 400-424
- Comrie, Bernard (1981) Language universals and linguistic
typology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Enfield, Nick J. & Asifa Majid & Miriam van Staden
(2006) 'Cross-linguistic categorisation of the body: Introduction'
(special issue of Language Sciences).
- Ferguson, Charles A. (1968) 'Historical background of
universals research'. In: Greenberg, Ferguson, & Moravcsik,
Universals of human languages, pp. 7–31.
- Goddard, Cliff and Wierzbicka, Anna (eds.). 1994. Semantic
and Lexical Universals - Theory and Empirical Findings.
Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
- Goddard, Cliff (2002) ' The search for the shared semantic core of all
languages'. In Goddard & Wierzbicka (eds.) Meaning and
Universal Grammar - Theory and Empirical Findings volume 1,
pp. 5-40, Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
- Greenberg, Joseph H. (ed.) (1963) Universals of
Languages. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
- Greenberg, Joseph H. (ed.) (1978a) Universals of Human
Language Vol. 4: Syntax. Stanford, California:
Stanford University Press.
- Greenberg, Joseph H. (ed.) (1978b) Universals of Human
Language Vol. 3: Word Structure. Stanford,
California: Stanford University Press.
- Heine, Bernd (1997) Cognitive Foundations of Grammar.
New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Song, Jae Jung (2001) Linguistic Typology: Morphology and
Syntax. Harlow, UK: Pearson Education (Longman).
- Rosch, E. & Mervis, C.B. & Gray, W.D. & Johnson,
D.M. & Boyes-Braem, P. (1976) 'Basic Objects In Natural
Categories', Cognitive Psychology 8-3, 382-439.
- Wilkins, David P. (1993) ‘From part to person: natural
tendencies of semantic change and the search for cognates’,
Working paper No. 23, Cognitive Anthropology
Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for
Psycholinguistics.
See also
External links