what religion and where in the world?
TRANSCRIPT
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What Religion and Where in the
World?
Eastern Orthodox
Latvia
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The Mosaic of
Languages
Chapter 5
The Human
Mosaic
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Why geographers study language
Provides the single most common variable by which cultural groups are identified
Provides the main means by which learned customs and skills pass from one generation to the next
Facilitates cultural diffusion of innovations
Because languages vary spatially, they reinforce the sense of region and place
Study of language called linguistic geography and geolinguistics by geographers
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Terms used in the study of language
Language — tongues that cannot be
mutually understood
Dialects — variant forms of a language that
have not lost mutual comprehension
A speaker of English can understand the
various dialect of the language
A dialect is distinctive enough in vocabulary
and pronunciation to label its speaker
Some 6,000 languages and many more
dialects are spoken today
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Terms used in the study of language
Pidgin language — results when different linguistic groups come into contact
Serves the purposes of commerce
Has a small vocabulary derived from the various contact groups
Speakers of different languages need to communicate but don't share a common language.
Official language of Papua, New Guinea is a largely English-derived pidgin language, which includes Spanish, German, and Papuan words
Spanglish
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Terms used in the study of language
Lingua franca — a language that spreads
over a wide area where it is not the mother
tongue
A language of communication and commerce
Swahili language has this status in much of
East Africa
English is Lingua franca of international
business world-wide
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Kenya
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Kenya
Kenya has two official languages: Swahili and English. These lingua franca facilitate communication among Bantu, Nilotic, and Cushitic language speakers.
Swahili developed along the coast of East Africa where Bantu came in contact with Arabic spoken by Arab sea traders.
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Kenya
English became important during the British colonial period and is still associated with high status.
This shopping center caters to Maasai herders who speak a Nilotic language and Kikuyu farmers who speak a Bantu language.
Jambo means “hello” in Swahili.->
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On your
copy outline
with hi-liter
countries
that speak
Swahili
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On the left page of
your notebook
Colonial
Chloropleth
language map of
Africa- Color the
countries the
following colors
French- Blue
English - Red
Portuguese- Yellow
Italian- Green,
Spanish - Orange -
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The Mosaic of Languages
Linguistic Culture Regions
Linguistic Diffusion
Linguistic Ecology
Culturo-Linguistic Integration
Linguistic Landscapes
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Language characteristics used to
define linguistic culture regions
isoglosses — borders of individual
word usages or pronunciations
No two words, phrases, or
pronunciations have exactly the same
spatial distribution
Spatially isoglosses crisscross one
another
Typically cluster together in “bundles”
Bundles serve as the most satisfactory
dividing lines among dialects and
languages
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English dialects in the United States
Dialects reveal a vivid geography
American English is hardly uniform from region to region
At least three major dialects, corresponding to major culture regions, developed in the eastern United States by the time of the American Revolution
Northern
Midland
Southern
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Dialect Activity http://polyglot.lss.wisc.edu/dare/Audio.html
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English dialects in the United States
The three subcultures expanded
westward and their dialects spread
and fragmented
Retained much of their basic character
even beyond the Mississippi River
Have distinctive vocabularies and
pronunciations
Drawing dialect boundaries is often
tricky
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English dialects in the United States
Today, many regional words are becoming
old-fashioned, but new words display
regional variations
The following words are all used to
describe a controlled-access divided
highway
Freeway — a California word
Turnpike and parkway — mainly northeastern
and Midwestern words
Thruway, expressway, and interstate
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English dialects in the United States
Many African-Americans speak their own form of English — Black English
Once dismissed as inferior substandard English
Grew out of a pidgin that developed on early slave plantations
Today, spoken by about 80 percent of African-Americans
Used by ghetto dwellers who have not made their compromises with mainstream American culture
Many features separate it from standard speech, for example:
Lack of pronoun differentiation between genders
Use of undifferentiated pronouns
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English dialects in the United States
Many African-Americans speak their own form of English — Black English
Not recognized as part of the proper grammar of a separate linguistic group
Considered evidence of verbal inability or impoverishment
In the Southern dialect, African-Americans have made substantial contributions to speech
Southern dialect is becoming increasingly identified with African-Americans
Caucasians in the Southern region are shifting to Midland speech
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English dialects in the United States
American dialects suggest we are not becoming a more national culture by overwhelming regional cultures
Linguistic divergence is still under way
Dialects continue to mutate on a regional level
Local variations in grammar and pronunciation proliferate
The homogenizing influence of radio, television, and other mass media is being defied
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Pop vs Soda http://www.popvssoda.com/
QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
What Patterns can you
identify? Why do they
exist?
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London, England
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London, England
While English is spoken in many parts of the world, all English words are not mutually intelligible.
This London tube (subway) sign say that anyone performing there (eg singing or playing for money) is subject to a fine of subsection.
Are tubes, subway, and busking dialect words?
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The Mosaic of Languages
Linguistic Culture Regions
Linguistic Diffusion
Linguistic Ecology
Culturo-Linguistic Integration
Linguistic Landscapes
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Indo-European diffusion
Earliest speakers apparently lived in southern and southeastern Turkey (Anatolia) about eight or nine thousand years ago
Diffused west and north into Europe
Represented expansion of farming people at expense of hunters and gatherers
As people dispersed and lost contact, different variant forms of the language caused fragmentation of the family
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Indo-European diffusion
Later language diffusion occurred with the spread of great political empires, especially Latin, English, and Russian
Relocation and expansion diffusion were not mutually exclusive
Relocation diffusion by conquering elite implanted their language
Implanted language often gained wider acceptance by expansion diffusion
Conqueror’s language spread hierarchically Spread of Latin with Roman conquests
Spanish in Latin America
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Austronesian diffusion
Presumed hearth in the interior of Southeast Asia 5,000 years ago
Initially spread southward into the Malay Peninsula
In a process lasting several thousand years, people sailed in tiny boats across the. uncharted vast seas to New Zealand, Easter Island, Hawaii, and Madagascar
Sailing and navigation was the key to Austronesian spread, not agriculture
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Austronesian diffusion
The remarkable diffusion of the Polynesian people
Form the eastern part of the Austronesian culture region
Occupy hundreds of Pacific islands in a triangular-shaped realm
New Zealand, Easter Island, and Hawaii form the three apexes of the realm
Made a watery leap of 2,500 miles from the South Pacific to Hawaii
Used outrigger canoes
Went against prevailing winds into a new hemisphere with different navigational stars
No humans had previously found the isolated Hawaiian Islands
Sailors had no way of knowing that land existed in the area
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Austronesian diffusion
Geographers John Webb and Gerard Ward
studied the prehistoric Polynesian diffusion
Their method involved the development of a
computer model building in data on:
Winds
Ocean currents
Vessel traits and capabilities
Island visibility
Duration of voyage, etc.
Both drift and navigated voyages were considered
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Austronesian diffusion
Over one hundred thousand voyage simulations were run through the computer
Their conclusions Triangle was probably entered from the west—direction of the ancient Austronesian hearth area
“Island hopping”—migrated from one visible island to another
Core of eastern Polynesia likely reached by navigated voyages
Outer arc from Hawaii through Easter Island to New Zealand reached by intentionally navigated voyages
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Searching for the primordial tongue
Using controversial techniques, linguists seek the more elusive prehistoric tongues
Nostratic—ancestral speech of the Middle East 12,000 to 20,000 years ago
Ancestral to nine modern language families
A 500-word dictionary has been compiled
Contemporary with Nostratic were other ancient tongues including Dene-
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Searching for the primordial tongue
Dene-Caucasian reputedly gave rise to Sino-Tibetan, Basque, and one form of early Native-American called Na-Dene
Scholars are attempting to find the original linguistic hearth area from which all modern languages have derived
It is believed the original language hearth arose in Africa perhaps 250,000 years ago and diffused from there
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The Mosaic of Languages
Linguistic Culture Regions
Linguistic Diffusion
Linguistic Ecology
Culturo-Linguistic Integration
Linguistic Landscapes
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The environment and vocabulary
How the environment affects vocabulary
Spanish language derived from Castile Rich in words describing rough terrain (Table 5.3)
Distinguishes subtle differences in shape and configuration of mountains
Scottish Gaelic Describes types of rough terrain
Common attribute spoken by hill people
Romanian tongue Also from a region of rugged terrain
Words tend to be keyed to use of terrain for livestock herding
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The environment and vocabulary
English
Developed in wet coastal plains
Very poor in words describing
mountainous terrain
Abounds with words describing flowing
streams
Rural American South—river, creek,
branch, fork, prong, run, bayou, and
slough
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The environment and vocabulary
Vocabularies develop for features of
the environment that involve
livelihood
Detailed vocabularies are necessary
to communicate sophisticated
information relevant to the adaptive
strategy
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The environment provides refuge
Inhospitable environments offer protection and isolation
Provide outnumbered linguistic groups refuge from aggressive neighbors
Linguistic refuge areas Rugged bill and mountain areas
Excessively cold or dry climates
Impenetrable forests and remote islands
Extensive marshes and swamps
Unpleasant environments rarely attract conquerors
Mountains tend to isolate inhabitants of one valley from another
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Examples of linguistic refuge areas
Rugged Caucasus Mountains and nearby ranges in central Eurasia are populated by a large variety of peoples
Alps, Himalayas, and highlands of Mexico are linguistic shatter belts — areas where diverse languages are spoken
American Indian tongue Quechua clings to a refuge in the Andes Mountains of South America
In the Rocky Mountains of northern New Mexico, an archaic form of Spanish survives due to isolation that ended in the early 1900s
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Examples of linguistic refuge areas
The Dhofar, a mountain tribe in Oman, preserve Hamitic speech that otherwise has vanished from Asia
Tundra climates of the far north have sheltered certain Uralic, Altaic, and Inukitut (Eskimo) speakers
On Sea Islands, off the coast of South Carolina and Georgia, some remnant of an African language, Gullah, still are spoken
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Switzerland
Switzerland has
four recognized
national languages:
French, German,
Italian, and
Romansch.
Romansch, a
language of Latin
origin, is spoken by
only 1.1% of the
population.
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Switzerland
Nevertheless, it
has survived in the
alpine linguistic
refuge of the upper
Rhine and Inn
Rivers and was
given official
recognition in
1938.
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Switzerland
This traditional
Engadine (Inn
valley) house is
decorated by
sgraffito whereby
designs are
scratched through
a white limewash
coating to expose
the underlying grey
plaster.
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Linguistic Ecology
Today environmental isolation is no
longer the linguistic force it once was
Inhospitable lands and islands are
reachable by airplanes
Marshes and forests are being
drained and cleared by farmers
The world is interactive
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The environment guides migration
Migrants were often attracted to new lands that seemed environmentally similar to their homelands
They could pursue adaptive strategies known to them
Germanic Indo-Europeans chose familiar temperate zones in America, New Zealand, and Australia
Semitic peoples rarely spread outside arid and semiarid climates
Ancestors of modern Hungarians left grasslands of inner Eurasia for new homes in the grassy Alföld, one of the few prairie areas of Europe
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The environment guides migration
Environmental barriers and natural
routeways guided linguistic groups along
certain paths
Indo-Europeans traveled through low
mountain passes to the Indian
subcontinent, avoiding the Himalayas and
barren Deccan Plateau
In India today, the Indo-
European/Dravidian language boundary
seems to approximate an ecological
boundary
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The environment guides migration
Mountain barriers frequently serve as
linguistic borders
In part of the Alps, speakers of German
and Italian live on opposite sides of a
major ridge
Portions of mountain rim along the
northern edge of the Fertile Crescent
form the border between Semitic and
Indo-European tongues
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The environment guides migration
Linguistic borders that follow such
physical features tend to be stable
and endure for thousands of years
Language borders that cross plains
and major routes of communication
are frequently unstable — Germanic-
Slavic boundary on the North
European Plain
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Language characteristics used to
define linguistic culture regions
Overlap of languages complicates
drawing of linguistic borders
In any given area more than one
tongue may be spoken — Ecuador
Language barriers are rarely sharp
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Language characteristics used to
define linguistic culture regions
Geographers encounter a
core/periphery pattern
rather than a dividing line
Dominance of language
diminishes away from the
center of the region
Outlying zone of
bilingualism
Linguistic “islands” often
further complicate the
drawing of language
borders
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Language characteristics used to
define linguistic culture regions
Dialect terms often overlap considerably,
making it difficult to draw isoglossess
Linguistic geographers often disagree about
how many dialects are present
Disagreement also occurs on where lines
should be drawn
Boundaries are necessarily simplified and
at best generalizations
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Language families
The Indo-European language family Largest most wide-spread family
Spoken on all continents
Dominant in Europe, Russia, North and South America, Australia, and parts of southwestern Asia and India
Subfamilies—Romance, Slavic, Germanic, Indic, Celtic, and Iranic
Subfamilies are divided into individual languages
Seven Indo-European tongues are among the top 10 languages spoken in the world
By comparing vocabularies in various languages one can see the kinship
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Language families
The Afro-Asiatic family
Has two major divisions—Semitic and Hamitic
Semitic covers the area from Tigris-Euphrates valley westward through most of the north half of Africa to the Atlantic coast
Domain is large but consists of mostly sparsely populated deserts
Arabic is the most widespread Semitic language
Arabic has the most number of native speakers—about 186 million
Hebrew was a “dead” language used only in religious ceremonies
Today Hebrew is the official language of Israel
Amharic a third major Semitic tongues has 20 million speakers in the mountains of East Africa
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Language families
The Afro-Asiatic family Has two major divisions—Semitic and Hamitic
Smaller number of people speak Hamitic languages
Share North and East Africa with Semitic speakers
Spoken by the Berbers of Morocco and Algeria
Spoken by the Tuaregs of the Sahara and Cushites of
East Africa
Originated in Asia but today only spoken in Africa
Expansion of Arabic decreased the area and number of
speakers
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Other major language families
Africa south of the Sahara Desert is
dominated by the Niger-Congo family
Spoken by about 200 million people
Greater part of the Niger-Congo culture
region belongs to the Bantu subgroup
Includes Swahili—the lingua franca of
East Africa
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Other major language families
Altaic language family
Includes Turkic, Mongolic, and several other
subgroups
Homeland lies largely in deserts, tundras, and
coniferous forests of northern and central Asia
Uralic family
Finnish and Hungarian are the two most
important tongues
Both have official status in their countries
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Other major language families
Austronesian language family Most remarkable language family in terms of distribution
Speakers live mainly on tropical islands
Ranges from Madagascar, through Indonesia and the Pacific Islands, to Hawaii and Easter Island
Longitudinal span is more than half way around the world
Latitudinally, ranges from Hawaii and Taiwan in the north to New Zealand in the south
Largest single language in this family is Indonesian —5O million speakers
Most widespread language is Polynesian
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Other major language families
Sino-Tibetan language family
One of the major language families of the world
Extends throughout most of China and Southeast Asia
Han Chinese is spoken in a variety of dialects as a mother tongue by 836 million people
Han serves as the official form of speech in China
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Other major language families
Japanese/Korean language family
Another major Asian family with nearly
200 million speakers
Seems to have some kinship to both the
Altaic and Austronesian
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Other major language families
Austro-Asiatic language family
Found in Southeast Asia, Vietnam,
Cambodia, Thailand, and spoken by
some tribal people of Malaya and parts
of India
Occupies a remnant peripheral domain
Has been encroached upon by Sino-
Tibetan, Indo-European, and
Austronesian
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Other major language families
Occupy refuge areas after retreat before rival
groups
Khoisan — found in the Kalahari Desert of southwestern
Africa, characterized by clicking sounds
Dravidian — spoken by numerous darker-skinned people
of southern India and northern Sri Lanka
Others include — Papuan, Caucasic, Nilo-Saharan,
Paleosiberian, Inukitut, and a variety of Amerindian
Basque — spoken on the borderland between Spain and
France is unrelated to any other language in the world
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London, England
This display of
newspapers illustrates
the fact that London is
an international city as
well as a major
migration destination.
In South Kensington,
sizable foreign
contribute complexity
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London, England
to the linguistic
landscape.
Both Indo-
European (e.g.
French, Spanish
and Swedish) and
Afro-Asiatic (Arab)
language families
are represented
here.