Preferred sound groups of vocal iconicity reflect evolutionary mechanisms of sound stability and first language acquisition: evidence from Eurasia

Author:

Dellert Johannes1,Erben Johansson Niklas2,Frid Johan3,Carling Gerd2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Seminar für Sprachwissenschaft, Universität Tübingen, Wilhelmstraße 19, 72074 Tübingen, Germany

2. Center for Languages and Literature, Lund University, Helgonabacken 12, 223 62 Lund, Sweden

3. Lund University Humanities Lab, Lund University, Box 201, 221 00 Lund, Sweden

Abstract

In speech, the connection between sounds and word meanings is mostly arbitrary. However, among basic concepts of the vocabulary, several words can be shown to exhibit some degree of form–meaning resemblance, a feature labelled vocal iconicity. Vocal iconicity plays a role in first language acquisition and was likely prominent also in pre-historic language. However, an unsolved question is how vocal iconicity survives sound evolution, which is assumed to be inevitable and ‘blind’ to the meaning of words. We analyse the evolution of sound groups on 1016 basic vocabulary concepts in 107 Eurasian languages, building on automated homologue clustering and sound sequence alignment to infer relative stability of sound groups over time. We correlate this result with the occurrence of sound groups in iconic vocabulary, measured on a cross-linguistic dataset of 344 concepts across single-language samples from 245 families. We find that the sound stability of the Eurasian set correlates with iconic occurrence in the global set. Further, we find that sound stability and iconic occurrence of consonants are connected to acquisition order in the first language, indicating that children acquiring language play a role in maintaining vocal iconicity over time. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Reconstructing prehistoric languages'.

Funder

Stiftelsen Marcus och Amalia Wallenbergs Minnesfond

H2020 European Research Council

Vetenskapsrådet

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference51 articles.

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3. Garrett A, Johnson K. 2013 Phonetic bias in sound change. In Origins of sound change: approaches to phonologization. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

4. Jakobson R. 1941 Kindersprache, Aphasie und allgemeine Lautgesetze. Uppsala, Sweden: Almqvist & Wiksell.

5. Mailhammer R, Restle D, Vennemann T. 2015 Preference laws in phonological change. In The Oxford handbook of historical phonology (eds P Honeybone, J Salmons), pp. 450-466. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

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