Law of language

Scientists have uncovered what might be called the law of language evolution: the more a word is used, the less likely it is to change over time. Like genes, words undergo ruthless survival-of-the- fittest pressure and those which are less central to daily life are subject to mutation, according to their study. Their research applies mathematical precision to four very different Indo-European languages—but if it holds for other languages as well, it would be a milestone in understanding one of humanity's defining attributes.

Much like the evolutionary theory of Darwin, who was himself intrigued by the concept of a linguistic family tree, the new findings show how individuals can unwittingly influence changes in the “species” of their shared mother tongue.The paper, published in the British journal Nature, reveals an ironclad link between the word's frequency of use, its stability of form and meaning over time —and this applies across a spectrum of languages. Researchers led by Mark Pagel of the University of Reading, southern England, looked at how 200 basic words diverged over thousands of years among English Russian, Greek and Spanish. 

Much as in evolutionary biology, the entire family of 87 Indo-European languages spoken today are thought to share a common origin reaching back some 10,000 years. Very commonly used words—the number “two” or “water”, for example remain recognisably related across this vast linguistic spectrum, they found. — AFP





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