The Great Vowel Shift, or why English vowel spellings confuse the world

Why is there such a mismatch between the sounds represented by the vowel letters in English versus virtually every other language that uses the Latin alphabet? For instance, “oo” makes the /uː/ sound that rightfully belongs to the letter U. “ee” and “ea” make the /i:/ sound that is normally written I, and “a” can either be the expected /ɑ/ or the unusual /eɪ/. 

Contrast this with a language like Spanish, where the symbols A E I O U represent the sounds “ah” “eh” “ee” “oh” “oo,” with the letters and their values inherited from Latin. Other European languages have more complex vowel inventories, but at least the most fundamental values of the vowel letters — sometimes called the “continental” values — tend to be preserved.

Why don’t we spell “eye” ai, “food” fuud, or “treaty” triti? The explanation depends on something called the Great Vowel Shift. Continue reading The Great Vowel Shift, or why English vowel spellings confuse the world

Did Homo erectus have language? According to Daniel Everett, they invented it

Review of the book How Language Began: The Story of Humanity’s Greatest Invention:

In grad school, I remember hearing about Daniel Everett as a controversial and somewhat heterodox figure in the world of linguistics, but until now I had never read any of his work.

Everett’s controversial claim is that a lot of the structural and especially syntactic features of human languages that are commonly thought to be universal, and without which language would be unimaginable, are actually not universal and not fundamental at all.

He bases this claim on his observations of the languages spoken in the Brazilian Amazon, especially Pirahã. Continue reading Did Homo erectus have language? According to Daniel Everett, they invented it