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Ideophones and the Evolution of Language

Ideophones and the Evolution of Language

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John Haiman
Cambridge University Press, 1/11/2018
EAN 9781107069602, ISBN10: 1107069602

Hardcover, 390 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm
Language: English

Ideophones have been recognized in modern linguistics at least since 1935, but they still lie far outside the concerns of mainstream (Western) linguistic debate, in part because they are most richly attested in relatively unstudied (often unwritten) languages. The evolution of language, on the other hand, has recently become a fashionable topic, but all speculations so far have been almost totally data-free. Without disputing the tenet that there are no primitive languages, this book argues that ideophones may be an atavistic throwback to an earlier stage of communication, where sounds and gestures were paired in what can justifiably be called a 'prelinguistic' fashion. The structure of ideophones may also provide answers to deeper questions, among them how communicative gestures may themselves have emerged from practical actions. Moreover, their current distribution and behaviour provide hints as to how they may have become conventional words in languages with conventional rules.

1. The gestural origin theory of language genesis
2. What are ideophones?
3. Lexical origins of ideophones
4. Suiting the word to the action
oral charades
5. Ideophones as a possible solution to the ritualization problem
6. Taming ideophones
from showing to telling
7. Repetition in the genesis of signs, art, and ideophones.