Evolutionary pathways of complexity in gender systems

IF 2.1 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Olena Shcherbakova, Marc Allassonnière-Tang
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Abstract

Humans categorize the experience they encounter in various ways, which is mirrored, for instance, in grammatical gender systems of languages. In such systems, nouns are grouped based on whether they refer to masculine/feminine beings, (non-)humans, (in)animate entities, or objects with specific shapes. Languages differ greatly in how many gender assignment rules are incorporated in gender systems and how many word classes carry gender marking (gender agreement patterns). It has been suggested that these two dimensions are positively associated as numerous assignment rules are better sustained by numerous agreement patterns. We test this claim by analyzing the correlated evolution (Continuous method in BayesTraits) and making the causal inferences about the relationships (phylogenetic path analysis) between these 2 dimensions in 482 languages from the global Grambank database. By applying these methods to linguistic data matched to phylogenetic trees (a world tree and individual families), we evaluate whether various types of gender assignment rules (semantic, phonological, and unpredictable) are causally linked to more gender agreement patterns on the global level and in individual language families. Our results on the world language tree suggest that semantic rules are weakly positively correlated with gender agreement and that the development of agreement patterns is facilitated by different rules in individual families. For example, in Indo-European languages, more agreement patterns are caused by the presence of phonological and unpredictable rules, while in Bantu languages, the driving force of agreement patterns is the variety of semantic rules. Our study shows that the relationships between agreement and rules are family-specific and yields support to the idea that more distinct rules and/or rule types might be more robust in languages with more pervasive gender agreement.
性别系统复杂性的进化途径
人类以不同的方式对他们所遇到的经验进行分类,这反映在语言的语法性别系统中。在这些系统中,名词根据它们是指男性/女性生物、(非)人类、(无)生命实体,还是具有特定形状的物体进行分类。语言在性别系统中包含多少性别分配规则以及有多少词类带有性别标记(性别一致模式)方面存在很大差异。有人认为,这两个维度是正相关的,因为众多的约定模式能更好地维持众多的分配规则。我们通过分析全球 Grambank 数据库中 482 种语言中这两个维度之间的相关演变(BayesTraits 中的连续方法)和因果关系推断(系统发生学路径分析)来验证这一说法。通过将这些方法应用于与系统发生树(世界树和单个语系)相匹配的语言数据,我们评估了各种类型的性别分配规则(语义、语音和不可预测)是否与全球和单个语系中更多的性别一致模式存在因果关系。我们在世界语言树上的研究结果表明,语义规则与性别一致的正相关性较弱,而在个别语系中,不同的规则促进了一致模式的发展。例如,在印欧语系中,更多的协议模式是由语音规则和不可预测规则的存在造成的,而在班图语系中,协议模式的驱动力是语义规则的多样性。我们的研究表明,协议和规则之间的关系是因语系而异的,并支持了这样的观点,即在性别协议更普遍的语言中,更独特的规则和/或规则类型可能更稳健。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Language Evolution
Journal of Language Evolution Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
8
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