The book covers many (all?) areas of language; from biological to cultural; from philology (the study of languages) to phonology (the study of sounds that make up a language); from writing to dialect. It’s a great book. It’s also a textbook. Which I was surprised to find to my liking. Though I shouldn’t’ve been; ‘tis not the first time I’ve read, and enjoyed, a textbook having to do with words and languages.
He goes over the evolution of the Proto-indo-European (PIE...mmmmm, pie) languages, which I’m familiar with, but also goes over African and Asian and Native American languages, which I’m not. It also touches about the development of writing, which was fascinating. Here’s the high-level evolution of writing and alphabets:
Pre-Alphabetic
3500 BCE = Summarian Cuneiform
2100 BCE = Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphics
1400 BCE = Minoan Linear B
Start of Alphabets (need to write vowels to be considered one)
1200 BCE = Phoenician Alphabet
1200 BCE = Chinese Oracle Bones
1000 BCE = Roman Alphabet (adapted the Greek Alphabet which had adapted the Phoenician)
900 BCE = Cyrillic Alphabet (also from Greek)
900 CE (not a typo) = Japan created Katakana and Hiragna scripts out of the Chinese one they’d been using up till then to represent their sounds, which they called Kanji. Crazy part? All three can be used in writing at the same time.
Now for some random highlights:
Before Bill Jones, in 1786, Dutchman Marcus Zuerius, in 1647, and Frenchman Gaston-Laurend Coeurdoux, in 1767, both hypothesized the existence of PIE. (55)
There are 500 languages in Nigeria (58)
Humans could have separated before they developed speech. If so, going bath further than PIE won’t yield a single mother tongue. (61)
Many areas of Russia speak a form of Turkish, which may have originated in northern Mongolia. (86)
Papua New Guinea is 179,000 sq miles and has 8 million people. It has 830 languages. That’s the number of people that live in NYC. (109)
The Japanese call their land nihon. Ni means sun and hon means origin. Hence Land of the Rising Sun. (forgot to get page #)
Because the Inuit (though he used Eskimo in the book) language is agglutinal, it adds suffixes to a root word to give additional info about the state of the word you’re describing, people thought they had buckets of words for snow when they don’t. This is called The Great Eskimo Vocabulary Hoax. (120)
The Russian Cyrillic alphabet is named after St. Cyril who brought Christianity to the Slavs. (145)