Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103, Leipzig, Germany.
Catalan Institute for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA), Barcelona, 08010, Spain.
Sci Rep. 2024 Mar 27;14(1):7259. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-51542-5.
Languages vary in how they signal "who does what to whom". Three main strategies to indicate the participant roles of "who" and "whom" are case, verbal indexing, and rigid word order. Languages that disambiguate these roles with case tend to have either verb-final or flexible word order. Most previous studies that found these patterns used limited language samples and overlooked the causal mechanisms that could jointly explain the association between all three features. Here we analyze grammatical data from a Grambank sample of 1705 languages with phylogenetic causal graph methods. Our results corroborate the claims that verb-final word order generally gives rise to case and, strikingly, establish that case tends to lead to the development of flexible word order. The combination of novel statistical methods and the Grambank database provides a model for the rigorous testing of causal claims about the factors that shape patterns of linguistic diversity.
语言在表示“谁对谁做了什么”方面存在差异。有三种主要策略可以用来表示“谁”和“ whom”的参与者角色,分别是格、动词索引和严格的词序。用格来区分这些角色的语言往往具有动词后置或灵活的词序。大多数之前发现这些模式的研究使用了有限的语言样本,并且忽略了可能共同解释这三个特征之间关联的因果机制。在这里,我们使用系统发育因果图方法分析了 Grambank 样本中 1705 种语言的语法数据。我们的结果证实了动词后置词序通常会产生格的说法,并且令人惊讶的是,还确立了格往往会导致词序变得灵活的说法。新颖的统计方法和 Grambank 数据库的结合为严格检验塑造语言多样性模式的因素的因果主张提供了一个模型。