(Redirected from Nostratic)
The 'Nostratic languages' are a proposed language
superfamily to which some linguists believe a large number of the
language families of Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America may belong. The hypothetical language from which these other language families are believed to descend is referred to as 'Proto-Nostratic'.
In contrast to some other proposed linguistic superfamilies, most versions of the Nostratic hypothesis rely upon an application of the
comparative method, involving systematic sound-and-meaning correspondences between the constituent families as well as systematic correspondences in their grammar. Notwithstanding this, the hypothesis is not widely accepted among linguists. Some of the methodology used to support it has been severely criticized, and most historical linguists remain undecided.
The prevailing impression of the Nostratic hypothesis was summed up by Edward Finnegan in the witticism, "there's too much there to be nothing, but not enough there to be something."
Origin of the Nostratic hypothesis
In
1903 the pioneering Danish linguist
Holger Pedersen proposed "Nostratian," a
protolanguage for the protolanguages of the
Semitic (later broadened into
Afro-Asiatic),
Indo-European,
Uralic,
Altaic, and
Eskimo-Aleut language families, and possibly some others. The name derives from the
Latin word ''nostras'', meaning 'our fellow-countryman' (plural: ''nostrates''), because about three-quarters of the world population (such as Pedersen himself) have been speaking one of these languages in the last few centuries.
While the hypothesis did not make much headway in the West, it became quite popular in what was then the
Soviet Union. Working independently at first,
Vladislav Illich-Svitych and
Aharon Dolgopolsky elaborated the first version of the modern form of the hypothesis during the 1960s. Under the slightly modified name "Nostratic" they expanded it to include additional language families. Illich-Svitych also published the first comprehensive dictionary of the hypothetical language.
Membership
Proponents of the Nostratic hypothesis have assigned various (and varying) language families to the Nostratic superfamily. However, general agreement exists on including at a minimum the Indo-European, Uralic and Altaic languages. Following Pedersen, Illich-Svitych and Dolgopolsky, many advocates of the theory have included the Afro-Asiatic languages as well, though criticisms by
Joseph Greenberg and others from the late 1980s onward suggested a reassessment of this position.
A fairly representative grouping would include:
★
Afro-Asiatic
★
Kartvelian
★
Indo-European
★
Uralic
★
Dravidian
★
Altaic
★
Eskimo-Aleut
The
Sumerian and
Etruscan languages, usually regarded as
language isolates, are thought by some to be Nostratic languages as well. (Others, however, consider one or both to be members of another postulated language superfamily called
Dené-Caucasian.) Another notional isolate, the
Elamite language, also figures in a number of Nostratic classifications: it is frequently appended to Dravidian, but may well be an independent branch.
In 1987
Joseph Greenberg proposed a similar or overlapping macrofamily which he called
Eurasiatic and which he linked, remotely, to the
Amerind languages of the Americas. It excluded some of the above-listed families, most notably Afro-Asiatic. At about this time Russian Nostraticists, notably
Sergei Starostin, constructed a revised version of Nostratic which was slightly broader than Greenberg's grouping but which similarly left out Afro-Asiatic.
Recently, however, a consensus has been emerging among the proponents of the Nostratic hypothesis. Greenberg in fact basically agreed with the Nostratic concept, though he stressed a deep internal division between its northern 'tier' (his Eurasiatic) and a southern 'tier' (principally Afro-Asiatic and Dravidian). The American Nostraticist
Allan R. Bomhard considers Eurasiatic a branch of Nostratic alongside other branches: Afro-Asiatic,
Elamo-Dravidian, and Kartvelian. Similarly,
Georgiy Starostin (2002) arrives at a tripartite overall grouping (that is, he considers Afro-Asiatic, Nostratic and Elamite to be roughly equidistant and more closely related to each other than to anything else
[1]), and Sergei Starostin's school has now re-included Afro-Asiatic in a broadly defined Nostratic while reserving the term Eurasiatic to designate the narrower subgrouping which comprises the rest of the superfamily. Recent proposals thus differ mainly on the precise placement of Kartvelian and Dravidian.
(Part of the confusion stems from the 'definition' of Nostratic: "those families that are related to Indo-European" [Pedersen as cited by Ruhlen, 2001]. Thus, which languages are Nostratic depends on which are considered to be ''discoverably'' related to Indo-European, and this is where opinions differ.)
Although Greenberg speculated that both the Amerind and the
Nilo-Saharan families or superfamilies are related to Nostratic, their actual inclusion within the latter does not have strong support even amongst Nostraticists.
It is too early to evaluate the emerging hypotheses of remoter affiliations in which Nostratic itself is incorporated into an even broader linguistic 'mega-phylum', sometimes called
Borean, which would also include at least the Dené-Caucasian and perhaps the Amerind and
Austric superfamilies.
Background: From Indo-European to Nostratic
One can best understand the concept of the Nostratic languages in the context of the discovery, methods of investigation, and application of the Indo-European family of languages. When
Sir William Jones first suggested the Indo-European hypothesis in 1786, he backed up his idea with a systematic examination of what one might term "phono-semantic sets" — words which, in different languages, had both similar sounds and meanings. Jones essentially argued that too many of these sets occurred for mere coincidence to explain their existence, laying particular emphasis on the resemblance between
morphological patterns:
declensions and
conjugations. He proposed that the languages in question must have stemmed from one language at some time in the past, and that they diverged from one another due to geographical separation and the passage of time. The idea of a "root language" thus took hold, a concept to which the evolution of the
Romance languages from
Latin offered itself as a clear parallel.
A second major concept to keep in mind involves the argument, starting with
Jacob Grimm, that languages would not evolve in a haphazard manner, but rather that they evolved according to certain rules. Using these rules, one could theoretically run the evolutionary process backwards and reconstruct the root language. Comparative linguists have done this, producing parts of the hypothetical language, named
Proto-Indo-European.
A third concept suggests that, by analysing the words in the Proto-Indo-European language, one can to some extent examine the time and place of the Proto-Indo-Europeans. Words for concepts and objects that were not familiar to these people would receive essentially random names after the time when the languages began to split; only things they knew would produce phono-semantic sets in their successor languages. Proto-Indo-European features many words related to agriculture, animal husbandry, and plains-like landscapes. From this, scholars have plausibly argued that Proto-Indo-European existed as a living language some time from
6000 BC to
4000 BC, in the plains to the north of the
Black Sea. (As a measure of the difficulty of this task, some argue that the reconstructed vocabulary of Proto-Indo-European, together with other known information about migrations, indicates a northern
Anatolian landscape, although this area notably lacks flat ground.)
Altogether, the Indo-European hypothesis has proven wildly successful, and naturally linguists have tried to apply the same general theory to a wide variety of other languages. Many languages, though not all, have been shown to be related to other languages, forming large families similar to Indo-European. These families have been only as "high-level" as the connections which have plausibly been made. On the face of it, though, it is logical that the family tree could converge further, and that some or all language families could be related to one another.
Reconstructed phonology
The
phonemes tabulated below are commonly reconstructed for the Proto-Nostratic language (Kaiser & Shevoroshkin 1988).
Allan R. Bomhard, who relies more heavily on Indo-European and less on the other Nostratic branches than the "Moscow School", reconstructs a different vowel system, with three pairs of vowels connected by
Ablaut: .
Consonants
¹ These phonemes do not occur in some or most reconstructions of Proto-Nostratic.
² [j] is of course the
voiced palatal approximant; it is included here among the postalveolars for mere space reasons.
Vowels
¹ This phoneme does not occur in all non-Bomhard reconstructions of Proto-Nostratic.
Sound correspondences
The following table is compiled from data given by Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988) and Starostin
ostr
ostret class=wikiexternal target=_blank>[2]. Because linguists working on Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Uralic, and Proto-Dravidian do not usually use the
IPA, the transcriptions used in those fields are also given. The IPA symbols are between slashes because this is a
phonemic transcription. The exact values of the phoneme "p
1" in Proto-Afro-Asiatic and Proto-Dravidian are unknown. "0" indicates disappearance without a trace. Hyphens indicate different developments at the beginning and in the interior of words; no consonants ever occurred at the ends of word roots. ''Starostin's list of affricate and fricative correspondences does not mention Afro-Asiatic or Dravidian, and Kaiser & Shevoroshkin don't mention these sounds much; hence the holes in the table.''
Note that, due to lack of research, there are at present several different mutually incompatible reconstructions of Proto-Afro-Asiatic (see
[3] for two recent ones). The one used here has been said to be based too strongly on
Proto-Semitic (Yakubovich 1998
[4]).
Similarly, the paper by Kaiser & Shevoroshkin is much older than the newest Altaic Etymological Dictionary (2003; see
Altaic languages article) and therefore assumes a somewhat different phonological system of Proto-Altaic.
| Consonants |
|---|
| Proto-Nostratic | Proto-Indo-European | Proto-Afro-Asiatic | Proto-Kartvelian | Proto-Altaic | Proto-Uralic | Proto-Dravidian | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ¹ | | "p1"-, | | | | "p1"-, | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ² | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ² | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ² | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ² | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ³ | | | | ³ | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vowels | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proto-Nostratic | Proto-Indo-European4 | Proto-Afro-Asiatic4 | Proto-Kartvelian4 | Proto-Altaic | Proto-Uralic | Proto-Dravidian | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
''To be completed and updated further.''
★ ¹ Some (such as Kaiser & Shevoroshkin, 1988) regard the inconsistency in the evolution of this phoneme as evidence that it did not exist. Compare the extreme, and mysterious, rarity of its expected derivative, /b/, in Proto-Indo-European.
★ ² Which phoneme appears in Proto-Indo-European depends on the vowel that followed it in Proto-Nostratic: a following /a/ kept the consonant plain (and changed itself into /e/ in the process); a following /æ/, /e/, or /i/ produced palatalization (and became /e/ in the process), except in the cases where /i/ became a diphthong; and a following /o/, /u/, or /y/ produced labialization (and again became /e/ in the process), except where /u/ became a diphthong.
★
3 The values of the Proto-Indo-European ''h
1, h
2, h
3'' and of the Proto-Uralic ''x'' are
controversial; the only evidence for the precise values shown here comes from the comparison with other Nostratic languages.
★
4 In Proto-Indo-European, all vowels became /e/ unless preceded by or diphthongized or affected by
Ablaut. The latter phenomenon prevents reconstruction of the vowels of most Proto-Afro-Asiatic roots; in addition, /i/ partially merged with /j/ and /u/ (at least sometimes derived from Proto-Nostratic /u/, /o/, and /y/) with /w/. Kartvelian, too, has Ablaut.
Morphological correspondences
Because grammar is less easily borrowed than words, grammar is usually considered stronger evidence for language relationships than vocabulary. The following correspondences (slightly modified to account for the reconstruction of Proto-Altaic by Starostin et al. [2003]) have been suggested by Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988); /N/ could be any nasal consonant, /V/ could be any vowel. ''The above cautionary notes on Afro-Asiatic and Dravidian apply.''
| Proto-Nostratic | Proto-Indo-European | Proto-Afro-Asiatic | Proto-Kartvelian | Proto-Altaic | Proto-Uralic | Proto-Dravidian |
|---|
| Noun affixes |
|---|
| /na/ "originally a locative particle"¹ | en /en/ "in" | -/n/ | /nu/, /n/² | -na -/na/ | -/na/ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| /Na/ or /Næ/ "animate plural" | | | -/(e)n/ | | -NV -/NV/² | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "inanimate plural"³ | 4 | -/æt/ | -/t/- | | -t -/t/ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "diminutive" | -k- -/k/- | | | -/ka/ | | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verb affixes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| /s(V)/ "causative-desiderative" | -se- -/se/- | | -/su/, -/sa/ | | | -ij |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "causative-reflexive" | | /tV/- | | -/t/-6 | -t(t)- | -t- -/t/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Particles | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| /mæ/ "prohibitive" | | /m(j)/ | | | | ma- /ma/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "intensifying and copulative" | "and"7 | /k(w)/ | /kwe/ | -/ka/ | -ka, -kä -/ka/, -/kæ/ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
★ ¹ Quote from Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988), p. 313.
★ ² Marked with a question mark in Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988).
★ ³ The Eskimo-Aleutan languages, too, have a plural marker -/t/. – Like them, Proto-Altaic did not distinguish animate and inanimate nouns.
★
4 The Proto-Indo-European animate plural marker /-s/ has been suggested to belong here.
★
5 The
Kurukh language has -/kan/.
★
6 Only in Proto-Turkic and its descendants.
★
7 As in
Latin ''senatus populusque romanus'' "the Roman senate and people".
In addition, Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988, p. 314f.) write the following about Proto-Nostratic grammar (two asterisks are used for reconstructions based on reconstructions; citation format changed):
"The verb stood at the end of the sentence (SV and SOV type). The 1st p[er]s[on] was formed by adding the 1st ps. pronoun
★
★ mi to the verb; similarly, the 2nd ps. was formed by adding
★
★ ti. There were no endings for the 3rd ps. present [''or at least none can be reconstructed''], while the 3rd ps. preterit ending was
★
★ -di (Illich-Svitych 1971, pp. 218–19). Verbs could be active and passive, causative, desiderative, and reflective; and there were special markers for most of these categories. Nouns could be animate or inanimate, and plural markers differed for each category. There were subject and object markers, locative and lative enclitic particles, etc. Pronouns distinguished direct and oblique forms, animate and inanimate categories, notions of the type 'near':'far', inclusive:exclusive […], etc. Apparently there were no prefixes. Nostratic words were either equal to roots or built by adding endings or suffixes. There are some cases of word composition […]"
A sample Nostratic etymology
As an example of the kind of
etymologies put forward by supporters of the Nostratic hypothesis, we can cite the following (from Bomhard and Kerns, ''The Nostratic Macrofamily'', p. 219).
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ bar-/
★ bər-' 'seed, grain':
★
★ A. Proto-Indo-European ''
★ b[h]ars-'' 'grain':
Latin ''far'' 'spelt, grain';
Old Icelandic ''barr'' 'barley';
Old English ''bere'' 'barley';
Old Church Slavonic ''brašъno'' 'food'. Pokorny 1959:111 ''
★ bhares-'' 'barley'; Walde 1927-1932. II:134 ''
★ bhares-''; Mann 1984-1987:66 ''
★ bhars-'' 'wheat, barley'; Watkins 1985:5-6 ''
★ bhares-'' (''
★ bhars-'') 'barley'; Gamkrelidze-Ivanov 1984.II: 872-873 ''
★ b[h]ar(s)-''.
★
★ B.
Proto-Afro-Asiatic ''
★ bar-/
★ bər-'' 'grain, cereal':
Proto-Semitic ''
★ barr-/
★ burr'' 'grain, cereal' > Hebrew ''bar'' 'grain';
Arabic ''burr'' 'wheat';
Akkadian ''burru'' 'a cereal';
Sabaean ''brr'' 'wheat';
Harsūsi ''berr'' 'corn, maize, wheat';
Mehri ''ber'' 'corn, maize, wheat'.
Cushitic:
Somali ''bur'' 'wheat'. (?) Proto-Southern Cushitic ''
★ bar-/
★ bal-'' 'grain (generic) > Iraqw ''balaŋ'' 'grain';
Burunge ''baru'' 'grain';
Alagwa ''balu'' 'grain' K'wadza ''balayiko'' 'grain'. Ehret 1980:338.
★
★ C.
Dravidian:
Tamil ''paral'' 'pebble, seed, stone of fruit';
Malayalam ''paral'' 'grit, coarse grain, gravel, cowry shell';
Kota ''parl'' 'pebble, one grain (of any grain)'; Kannaa ''paral'', ''paral'' 'pebble, stone' Koagu ''para'' 'pebble'; Tuu ''parelụ'' 'grain of sand, grit, gravel, grain of corn, etc.; castor seed';
Kolami ''Parca'' 'gravel'. Burrow-Emeneau 1984:353, no. 3959.
★
★ D.
Sumerian ''bar'' 'seed'.
''Comments''
— This exemplifies what some linguists find suspect about the Nostratic hypothesis: a single proto-form is being suggested as the ancestor of words meaning 'barley', 'wheat', 'pebbles', and 'seeds'. Were one to collect all the words from the various known Indo-European languages and dialects which have at least one of these 4 meanings, one could easily form a list that would cover any conceivable combination of two consonants and a vowel (of which there are only about 20
★ 20
★ 5=2000).
— On the other hand, proponents point to parallels in standard Indo-European etymological dictionaries in which seemingly disparate meanings can convincingly be derived from reconstructed proto-forms.
Even within English, the word 'grain' has a wide range of meanings:
# 'grain' of sand (= 'pebble, gravel, grit, etc.')
# 'grain' of salt (= small crystal of salt)
# 'grain' = 'seed' or 'fruit' of a cereal grass
# overall term for plants producing 'grain'
# 'grain' of wood (= stratification of wood fibers)
# 'small quantity', a 'minute portion', or the 'least amount possible' (as in, 'not a grain of truth in what she said'), etc.
— Yet others argue that the terms on this list are not all from equal eras. The usage of the word grain in 'a grain of truth' is far predated by the usage of the word 'grain'.
For comparison, here is a typical Indo-European etymology (from Gamkrelidze and Ivanov, p. 598):
★ PIE
★ 'peis-'/
★ 'pis-' 'thresh; mill (grain)': Ved. Skt. ''pináṣṭi'' 'threshes; grinds', ''piṣṭá-'' 'threshed, ground', Avest. ''pišant-'' 'threshing', Gk. ''ptíssō'' 'thresh, grind', Lat. ''pīnsō'' 'thresh, grind', Lith. ''paisýti'' 'thresh barley a second time, cleaning it of husks' (Būga 1958-1961:I.300), Czech ''pěchovati'' 'stamp, pound, ram down'; nominal derivatives: Skt. ''peṣṭar-'' 'one who threshes', Lat. ''pistor'' 'miller, baker', ''pīsō'' 'mortar', ''pīlum'', ''pistillum'' 'pestle', MHG ''vīsel'' 'mortar', OCS ''pĭšeno'' 'meal, flour', OPruss. ''som-pisinis'' 'bread made from coarse-ground flour'.
Further proposed cognates
The following are taken from Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988) and Bengtson (1998) (and transcribed into
IPA). ''The same cautionary notes as for the sound correspondence table apply.''
Personal pronouns
Personal pronouns are seldom borrowed between languages. Therefore the many correspondences between Nostratic pronouns are rather strong evidence for the existence of a Proto-Nostratic language. The difficulty of finding Afro-Asiatic
cognates is, however, taken by some as evidence that Nostratic has two or three branches, Afro-Asiatic and Eurasiatic (and possibly Dravidian), and that most or all of the pronouns in the following table can only be traced to Proto-Eurasiatic.
Nivkh is a living (if moribund) language with an orthography, which is given here. /V/ means that it is not clear which vowel should be reconstructed.
For space reasons,
'Etruscan' is not included, but the fact that it had '/mi/' "I" and '/mini/' "me" seems to fit the pattern reconstructed for Proto-Nostratic ideally, leading some to argue that the
Aegean or Tyrsenian languages were yet another Nostratic branch.
''There does not appear to be a reconstruction of Proto-Eskimo-Aleut, even though the existence of the
Eskimo-Aleut family is generally accepted.''
★ ¹ From Indo-European data alone, this difference between "I" and "me" seems impossible to explain. Based on comparisons to other Nostratic languages, however, some linguists (e. g. Ruhlen, 1998) interpret "I" as a compound of a Proto-Nostratic demonstrative pronoun , a Proto-Nostratic (or Proto-Eurasiatic) verb /gæ/~/ge/~/gi/ that probably meant "to be", and -/m/ – in short, "that's me" (''that'' demonstrative pronoun, ''is'' verb, and a derivative of Proto-Nostratic /minV/) or "c'est moi" (''ce'' demonstrative pronoun, ''est'' verb, and another derivative of Proto-Nostratic /minV/). As support, Ruhlen (1998) cites Chukchi and "I" and and "thou",
Itelmen ким /kim/ "I" and ма /ma/ "me", the Proto-Eskimo suffix -/m'kə't/ (see table), and several Uralic occurrences like
Kamassian /igæm/ "I am" or Hungarian ''engemet'' "me", ''tégedet'' "thee" (where -et is the accusative ending). Norquest (1998) cites many of the same forms and adds "Western Kamchadal" "I" and "thou".
★ ²
Chadic only.
★ ³ A
Cushitic verb suffix.
★
4 Genitive.
★
5 Brahui has -/ti/ as the expected verb suffix; other Dravidian languages do not seem to have a cognate.
★
6 may have been or .
★
7 Amur dialect only.
★
8 In Proto-Indo-European the derivatives of /mæ/ and /na/ are thought to have fused, the former becoming the nominative stem and the latter the oblique stem. See
Proto-Indo-European pronouns and particles for the whole declension paradigm. – Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988) report that it has been speculated that Proto-Indo-European /ne/- had "an archaic meaning of exclusivity", which is, according to them, untestable from Indo-European data alone, but "strongly corroborated" by comparison with other Nostratic languages.
★
9 Exclusive meaning only in Chadic.
★
10 Verb prefix with exclusive meaning only in
Svan.
★
11 Verb suffix.
Other words
Below are selected reconstructed etymologies from Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988) and Bengtson (1998). Reconstructed ( = unattested) forms are marked with an asterisk. /V/ means that it is not clear which vowel should be reconstructed; likewise, /E/ could have been any front vowel and /N/ any nasal consonant. Only the consonants are given of Proto-Afro-Asiatic roots (see above).
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ or
★ ' 'who'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'who', (with suffix -i-) 'what'. Ancestors of the English ''wh-'' words.
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic
★ and 'who'. The change from ejective to plain consonants in Proto-Afro-Asiatic is apparently regular in grammatical words (Kaiser & Shevoroshkin 1988; see also
★ instead of
★ above).
★
★ Proto-Altaic ?
★ . The presence of /a/ instead of /o/ is unexplained, but Kaiser & Shevoroshkin (1988) regard this alternation as common among Nostratic languages.
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ 'who'
★
★ "Yukaghir" (
Northern, Southern, or both?) кин 'who'
★
★ Proto-Chukotko-Kamchatkan
★ ,
★ 'who'
★
★ Proto-Eskimo-Aleut
★ 'who'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ,
★ , or
★ ' 'heart~chest' (Kaiser & Shevoroshkin 1988; the Proto-Eskimo form given by Bengtson [1998] may indicate that the vowel was ''or not'')
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'heart'. The occurrence of
★ instead of
★ is regular: voiceless and aspirated consonants never occur together in the same Proto-Indo-European root.
★
★ Afro-Asiatic: Proto-Chadic
★ 'chest'
★
★ Proto-Kartvelian
★ (/m/ being a prefix) 'chest~breast'
★
★ Proto-Eskimo
★ 'heart~breast'; the presence of /q/ instead of /k/ is not clear.
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'ear~hear'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'hear'. Ancestor of English ''listen'', ''loud''.
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic
★ 'hear'
★
★ Proto-Kartvelian
★ 'ear'
★
★ Proto-Altaic
★ 'ear'
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ (long vowel from fusion of ) 'hear'
★
★ Proto-Dravidian
★ 'hear' ''must figure out if it's /g/- instead''
★
★ Proto-Chukotko-Kamchatkan
★ , possibly from earlier 'ear'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'stone'
★
★ Afro-Asiatic: Proto-Chadic
★ 'stone'
★
★ Proto-Kartvelian
★ 'stone'
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ 'stone'
★
★ Proto-Dravidian
★ 'stone'
★
★ Proto-Chukotko-Kamchatkan
★ 'stone';
Kamchadal квал , ков 'stone'
★
★ Proto-Eskimo-Aleut
★ 'stone'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'water'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'water~wet'
★
★ Altaic: Proto-Tungusic
★ 'water'
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ 'water'
★
★ Proto-Dravidian
★ 'wet'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'storm'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'storm'
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic (?)
★ 'storm'
★
★ Proto-Altaic
★ 'storm'
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ 'snow storm~smoke' ''-/k/- unexplained''
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'front side'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'front side'
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic
★ 'front side'; the change from
★ to
★ is ''apparently'' regular
★
★ Proto-Altaic
★ 'front side'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'eat'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'satiated'
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic (?)
★ 'be fed'~'be abundant'
★
★ Proto-Kartvelian
★ 'become sated'
★
★ Proto-Altaic
★ 'eat'
★
★ Proto-Uralic
★ or
★ 'eat'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'grasp'
★
★ Proto-Indo-European
★ 'grasp'
★
★ Proto-Dravidian
★ 'grasp'
★ Proto-Nostratic '
★ ' 'little'
★
★ Proto-Afro-Asiatic
★ 'little'
★
★ Proto-Kartvelian
★ 'little'
★
★ Proto-Dravidian
★ 'little' ''must figure out if plosives correct''
Nostratic Urheimat
Allan Bomhard and
Colin Renfrew are in broad agreement with the earlier conclusions of Illich-Svitych and Dolgopolsky in seeking the Nostratic
urheimat within the
Mesolithic or
Epipaleolithic Middle East, the stage which directly preceded the
Neolithic and was transitional to it. Looking at the cultural assemblages of this period, two sequences in particular stand out as being possible archeological correlates of the earliest Nostratians or their immediate precursors.
The first of these is focussed on
Palestine. The
Kebaran culture of Palestine (18,000-10,500 BCE) not only introduced the microlithic assembly into the region; it also has African affinity, specifically with the Ouchtata retouch technique associated with the microlithic
Halfan culture of
Egypt (24-17,000 BCE). The Kebarans in their turn were directly ancestral to the succeeding
Natufian culture of Palestine and the
Levant (10,500-8,500 BCE) which has enormous significance for prehistorians as the clearest evidence of hunters and gatherers in actual transition to Neolithic food production. Both cultures extended their influence outside the region into Southern
Anatolia: for example in Cilicia the
Belbaşi culture (13-10,000 BCE) has Kebaran influence whilst the
Beldibi (10-8,500 BCE) shows clear Natufian influence.
The second possibility as a culture associated with the Nostratic family is the
Zarzian (12,400-8,500 BCE) culture of the
Zagros mountains, stretching northwards into
Kobistan in the
Caucasus and eastwards into
Iran. In Western Iran the
M’lefatian (10,500-9,000 BCE) culture was ancestral to the assemblages of
Ali Tappah (9,000-5,000 BCE) and
Jeitun (6,000-4,000 BCE). Even further east the
Hissar culture has been seen as the Mesolithic precursor to the
Keltiminar (5,500-3,500 BCE) culture of the
Kyrgyz Steppe.
To have spread so widely suggests some cultural advantages were possessed by these people. It has been proposed that the
broad spectrum revolution of
Andrew Sherratt, associated with microliths, the use of the bow and arrow, and the domestication of the dog, all of which are associated with these cultures, may have been the cultural "motor" that led to their expansion. Certainly cultures with these adaptations (at
Franchthi cave in the Aegean,
Lipinski Vir in the Balkans, and the
Murzak-Koba (9,100-8,000 BCE) and
Grebenki (8,500-7,000 BCE) cultures of the Ukrainian steppe, all of which had these cultural adaptations.
The search for a cultural urheimat for the Nostratic languages will of course only continue if the existence of the language family becomes firmly established.
Criticisms of the Nostratic theory
#Certain critiques have pointed out that the data from individual, established language families that is cited in Nostratic comparisons often involves a high degree of errors; Campbell (1998) demonstrates this for
Uralic data.
#The technique of comparing grammatical structures (as opposed to words) has suggested to some that the Nostratic candidates lack interrelatedness.
However, some grammatical endings and words have been reconstructed to proto-Nostratic.
Nostratic Poetry
The late
Vladislav Illich-Svitych, a notable Russian Nostraticist, decided to create
a poem using his version of Proto-Nostratic. (Compare
Schleicher's fable for similar attempts with several different reconstructions of Proto-Indo-European.) The famous poem is as follows:
| Nostratic (Illich-Svitych's spelling) | Nostratic (IPA) | Russian | English |
|---|
| 'elä weei aun kähla' | | ''Язык – это брод через реку времени,'' | ''Language is a ford through the river of time,'' |
| 'aλai palh- na wetä' | | ''он ведёт нас к жилищу умерших;'' | ''it leads us to the dwelling of the dead;'' |
| 'śa da a-eja älä' | | ''но туда не сможет дойти тот,'' | ''but he cannot arrive there,'' |
| 'ja-o pele uba wete' | | ''кто боится глубокой воды.'' | ''who fears deep water.'' |
The value of or is uncertain -- it could be or ; H could similarly be at least /h/ or /ħ/; V or is an uncertain vowel.
References
★ Bengtson, John D. (1998). "The 'Far East' of Nostratic".
''Mother Tongue Newsletter'' '31':35–38 (image files)
★ Bomhard, Allan R., and John C. Kerns (1994). ''The Nostratic Macrofamily: A Study in Distant Linguistic Relationship''. Berlin, New York, and Amsterdam: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-013900-6
★ Campbell, Lyle (1998). "Nostratic: a personal assessment". In Joseph C. Salmons and Brian D. Joseph (eds.), ''Nostratic: Sifting the Evidence.'' Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 142. John Benjamins.
★ Campbell, Lyle (2004). ''Historical Linguistics: An Introduction'' (2nd ed.). Cambridge: The MIT Press.
★ Gamk¹relidze, Thomas V., and Vjačeslav V. Ivanov (1995). ''Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans'', translated by Johanna Nichols, 2 volumes. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-014728-9
★ Greenberg, Joseph (2000, 2002), ''Indo-European and its Closest Relatives. The Eurasiatic Language Family'' (Stanford University), v.1 Grammar, v.2 Lexicon.
★ [Illich-Svitych, V. M.] В. М. Иллич-Свитыч (1971). Опыт сравнения ностратических языков (семитохамитский, картвельский, индоевропейский, уральский, дравидийский, алтайский). Введение. Сравнительный словарь (b – ). Moscow: Наука.
★ Kaiser, M., and V. Shevoroshkin (1988). "Nostratic". ''Ann. Rev. Anthropol.'' '17':309–329.
★ Norquest, Peter (1998). "Greenberg's Visit to Arizona".
''Mother Tongue Newsletter'' '31':25f. (image files)
★ Renfrew, Colin (1991). "Before Babel: Speculations on the Origins of Linguistic Diversity". ''Cambridge Archaeological Journal'' '1'(1):3-23.
★ Ruhlen, Merritt (1998). "Toutes parentes, toutes différentes". ''La Recherche'' '306':69–75. (French translation of a ''Scientific American'' article.)
★ Ruhlen, Merritt (2001). "Taxonomic Controversies in the Twentieth Century". Pages 197–214 in Jürgen Trabant and Sean Ward (eds.): ''New Essays on the Origin of Language'', Berlin, Mouton de Gruyter.
★ Starostin, Georgiy S. (1998).
"Alveolar Consonants in Proto-Dravidian: One or More?". (pdf) Pages 1–14 (?) in ''Proceedings on South Asian languages''
★ Starostin, Georgiy S. (2002).
"On the Genetic Affiliation of the Elamite Language". (pdf) ''Mother Tongue'' '7'
★ Trask, R. L. (1996). ''Historical Linguistics''. New York: Oxford University Press.
★ Yakubovich, I. (1998)
Nostratic studies in Russia
¹ Actually in Georgian.
See also
★
Borean languages
★
Elamo-Dravidian languages
★
Eurasiatic languages
★
Indo-Uralic languages
★
Proto-Pontic language
★
Proto-World language
★
Universal grammar
★
Ural-Altaic languages
★
Uralo-Siberian languages
External links
★
ostr
ostret class=wikiexternal target=_blank>Starling Database: ''Nostratic Etymologies'' section
★
''New York Times'' article
★
Mother Tongue Newsletter, issue 31 - contains a table of various linguists' versions of Nostratic. (Warning: image files.)
★
"Nostratic"
★
"Nostraticist Vladislav Markovich Illich-Svitych"
★
Sergei Starostin's proposed descent tree for "Borean" languages including Nostratic