

Language Families of the World
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Obowiązują warunki
Odcinki
S1 O1 - Why Are There So Many Languages?
31 stycznia 201930 minThere are over 7,000 languages in the world and many linguists believe they likely all developed from a single source language in the distant past. Get an introduction to the concept of language families, understand how languages change over time, and discover what linguistics can teach us about our own history.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O2 - The First Family Discovered: Indo-European
31 stycznia 201928 minWhile the Indo-European family of languages was not the first group to be identified as related, it is the family that has received much of the research and classification that became the basis of modern linguistics. Uncover what defines Indo-European languages, which include Latin, English, French, Armenian, Latvian, Sanskrit, and many more.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O3 - Indo-European Languages in Europe
31 stycznia 201929 minBegin a deep dive into the earliest roots of Indo-European languages with a look at Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, Greek, Albanian, and Celtic languages. See how Indo-European languages contradict common notions about how language works and uncover some of the mysteries that are yet to be solved.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O4 - Indo-European Languages in Asia
31 stycznia 201928 minOne-fifth to one-sixth of the world speaks one of the Indo-European languages of India. Trace back to the branching of the Indo-European tree, when the European languages split from the Indo-Aryan varieties like Sanskrit that would become Hindi and others. Explore many variations that evolved and see why it can be so difficult to differentiate between a language and a dialect.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O5 - The Click Languages
31 stycznia 201924 minShift from Indo-European to some of the most endangered languages in the world: the “click” languages, formally known as Khoisan. Spoken in southern Africa, these endangered languages share a distinctive profile, and yet likely did not all come from a single family. Explore where they may have begun and how they work.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O6 - Niger-Congo: The Biggest Family in Africa I
31 stycznia 201929 minThe Niger-Congo family consists of anywhere from 1,000 to 1,500 different languages. While they are part of the same family, they do not adhere to an identified pattern like Indo-European. What links this immense family together? What is the essence of the Niger-Congo? What can these languages tell us about migration patterns? Explore these questions and more.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O7 - Niger-Congo: The Biggest Family in Africa II
31 stycznia 201930 minLook closer at some of the unique aspects of the Niger-Congo family, including the use of tone, and see how different languages can spring from the same original materials. Since the work of classifying languages is ongoing, you may be surprised to see how many can develop in proximity and share words but be part of different groups altogether.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O8 - Languages of the Fertile Crescent and Beyond I
31 stycznia 201930 minFollow the migration of peoples from Africa to the Middle East by looking at the language family that developed in the Fertile Crescent: Afro-Asiatic. This first look at this family focuses on the widely known Semitic branch, which includes Arabic and Hebrew. Examine what defines this group of languages and uncover the roots of the first alphabets.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O9 - Languages of the Fertile Crescent and Beyond II
31 stycznia 201928 minMove beyond the Semitic languages to look at other subfamilies of Afro-Asiatic, including what some call the “Berber” subfamily and several other subfamilies spoken south of the Sahara, and see what they can teach us about the nature of language. Close with a look at Somali oral poetry and its complex use of alliteration.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O10 - Nilo-Saharan: Africa’s Hardest Languages?
31 stycznia 201926 minAfro-Asiatic languages are prevalent in the north of the African continent, and Niger-Congo in the south, with a narrow band of a third family running between: Nilo-Saharan. The Nilo-Saharan languages are immensely different from each other, so how do linguists know they are related? Examine the unique features of this family.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O11 - Is the Indo-European Family Alone in Europe?
31 stycznia 201927 minMeet the other family of languages in Europe: Uralic, which includes Estonian, Finnish, and Hungarian. Eccentric and tidy at the same time, this family stretches across the north of Europe and into Russia and parts of Asia. See why Turkish was once thought to be part of this family and how Uralic languages differ from Indo-European and others.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O12 - How to Identify a Language Family
31 stycznia 201929 minHow do linguists establish connections between languages and determine their common roots when it is nearly impossible to see a language change in real time? Take a look at the languages of Polynesia to see how changes can be followed backwards to reveal connections between different languages, then turn to the Indo-European and Uralic families.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O13 - What Is a Caucasian Language?
31 stycznia 201926 minNamed for the Caucasus mountains where they originate, the Caucasian languages are actually three different families: Northwestern, Northeastern, and a Southern one that includes Georgian. Explore these grammatically complex languages to better understand how they work and how so many different varieties can spring from a relatively small area.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O14 - Indian Languages That Aren’t Indo-European
31 stycznia 201927 minThe “Big Four” languages (and many others) of southern India are not part of the Indo-European family but rather the Dravidian. Look at what the distribution of Dravidian languages says about where they come from and how they got where they are now (including some languages on the brink of extinction) and explore some of their unique features.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O15 - Languages of the Silk Road and Beyond
31 stycznia 201928 minThe languages called Altaic are spoken across Asia, from Turkey through Mongolia and to northeastern regions of Asia. Understand why there is some debate among linguists as to whether they comprise one family or are made of three separate ones as you look at how these languages function, including nuances like a mood known as “evidentiality.”Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O16 - Japanese and Korean: Alike yet Unrelated
31 stycznia 201929 minAre Japanese and Korean part of the Altaic family? They share some features of the other Altaic languages, yet some linguists believe they are separate. Take a brief foray through the fascinating Japanese writing system as you look deeper into the language. Then, turn to Korean, comparing and contrasting it with Japanese and other Asian languages.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O17 - The Languages We Call Chinese
31 stycznia 201929 minExplore the Asian languages beyond Japanese and Korean, looking into several families along the way. See why Mandarin and Cantonese, though both considered Chinese, are a classic example of two different languages being mistaken for dialects, thanks in part to a shared writing system and cultural proximity.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O18 - Chinese’s Family Circle: Sino-Tibetan
31 stycznia 201928 minChinese is one branch of the Sino-Tibetan family and the other branch, Tibeto-Burman, consists of around 400 languages spoken in southern China, northeastern India, and Burma. Look at features of languages from both branches and see what linguists can assume about the proto-language from which they may have sprung.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O19 - Southeast Asian Languages: The Sinosphere
31 stycznia 201925 minHow can languages that have very different origins still seem to be structurally related? To find out, look at the concept of a Sprachbrund and understand why contact is just as influential as origin when it comes to resemblances between otherwise unrelated languages (in this case, the influence of Chinese on other Asian languages).Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O20 - Languages of the South Seas I
31 stycznia 201926 minJourney to the South Seas to begin an investigation into Austronesian, one of the world’s largest and most widespread language families. See what connects Austronesian languages to other families, as well as how they differ from European languages, and trace the way Austronesian languages have spread across far-flung locations.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O21 - Languages of the South Seas II
31 stycznia 201927 minThe languages of Polynesia are estimated to be some of the newest languages in the world, emerging only in the last millennium. Look back to the earliest cultures of the Polynesian islands to see how the languages likely originated and were disseminated, branching into separate sub-groups like Oceanic and the three that are all spoken on the small island of Formosa.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O22 - Siberia and Beyond: Language Isolates
31 stycznia 201927 minHow do some languages end up isolated amidst other unrelated families? Look at pockets of language in Siberia, Spain, and Japan that are not related to those that surround them and better understand what the nature of language (and human migration and settlement patterns) can tell us about these unique places.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O23 - Creole Languages
31 stycznia 201933 minSince all languages come from one original language, technically no one language is older than another. However, when two languages are forced into proximity, often a makeshift fusion of the two can emerge as a new language, known as a creole. Learn how a hierarchical, stopgap form of communication can become a true language.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O24 - Why Are There So Many Languages in New Guinea?
31 stycznia 201929 minTurn your attention to one of the most linguistically rich places on Earth: the island of New Guinea, and discover why, thanks to its history and isolating terrain, it is home to hundreds of languages in a relatively small area. See how pronouns allow linguists to find connections between these languages, and explore some of their unusual traits.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakupS1 O25 - The Languages of Australia I
31 stycznia 201925 minOnce the home of over 250 languages, Australia now only has about a dozen languages that will be passed to sizable generations of children. Take a look at some of the over two dozen language families in Australia and better understand how both separation from a common ancestor and proximity to a different language will cause a language to change in different ways.Bezpłatny okres próbny kanału The Great Courses Signature Collection lub zakup