Linguistical Origins
Phonological Traces
Grammatical Transformations
Historical Linguistic Evidence
Theoretical Frameworks
100

What is substrate interference?

Language A exists, and Language B arrives to the same place Language A is in. This causes people in the place to slowly abandon Language A for Language B.

100

What is phonetic substrate transfer?

The way in which individual knowledge of a language sound tool can affect how a person perceives and produces language in another language.

100

What is syntactic retention?

The ability to remember and recall the grammatical structure of a sentence.

100

What is linguistic archaeology?

The study of prehistory through the comparative use of historical linguistics and archaeology.

100

What is interactional linguistics?

An interdisciplinary approach to grammar and interaction in the field of linguistics.

200

What is linguistic substrate?

A language that an intrusive language influences, which may or may not ultimately change it to become a new language

200

What is phonological retention?

The ability to hold and remember spoken sounds or words in short-term memory

200

What is linguistic reconstruction?

The practice of establishing the features of an unattested ancestor language of one or more given languages

200

Who proposed the Substratum Theory?

John Locke.

200

What is Language Contact Theory?

The study of how languages influence each other when speakers of different languages interact with each other.

300

What are proto-linguistic populations?

Groups of people who are believed to have spoken a proto-language, or the hypothetical ancestor of a language family

300

What are substrate phonetic markers?

The phonetic representations of a language or aspect of a language that influences another language, often a more dominant one.

300

What are grammatical markers?

Linguistic forms that indicate the grammatical function of a word, phrase, or sentence.

300

What is linguistic reconstruction?

The practice of using evidence from existing languages to infer the features of a proto-language?

300

What is Substratum Theory?

When speakers of different native languages adopt a new dominant language, they retain features from their original languages.

400

What is language contact?

When speakers of different languages interact and influence each other.

400

What is stratum?

A historical layer of language that influences or is influenced by another language through contact.

400

What is morphological change?

The evolution of the structure and formation of words in a language over time

400

What are migration linguistic patterns?

The observable trends and characteristics in how languages change and adapt due to the movement of people from one region to another.

400

How does substratum theory explain the influence of one language over another in multilingual settings?

Substratum theory explains that when one language displaces another due to factors like colonization or conquest, elements from the displaced language can still persist within the new dominant language.

500

What are comparative linguistics?

Comparative linguistics is a branch of historical linguistics that is concerned with comparing languages to establish their historical relatedness.

500

What is phonological adaptation?

The process by which a language assimilates a borrowed element from its original native phonology to another phonological system.



500

What is Universal Grammar Theory?

The human brain is naturally programmed to develop grammatical skills from a young age.

500

What is interdisciplinary linguistic analysis?

The study of language by drawing on theories and methods from multiple academic disciplines, such as psychology, anthropology, sociology, history, and computer science.

500
What is the example of Substratum Theory that we read about in the textbooks?

British English saw an increase in the use of 'like' as an intensifier as a result of American English use of it on TV shows like FRIENDS.

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