Taking the "Temperature" of Languages

Taking the "Temperature" of Languages

Update: 2021-07-06
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Ricardo Bermudez-Otero and Tobias Galla discuss the mathematics describing the evolution of human languages.

The sounds and structures of the world's approximately 7,000 languages never stop changing. Just compare the English in Romeo and Juliet or the Spanish in Don Quixote to the modern forms. But historical records give an incomplete view of language evolution. Increasingly, linguists draw upon mathematical models to figure out which features of a language change often and which ones change more rarely over the course of thousands of years. A new model inspired by physics assigns a "temperature" to many sounds and grammatical structures. Features with higher temperatures are less stable, so they change more often as time goes on. The linguistic thermometer will help researchers reconstruct how our languages came to be, and how they might change in future generations.
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Taking the "Temperature" of Languages

Taking the "Temperature" of Languages

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