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English May Have Retained Words From an Ice Age Language

sciencehabit writes "If you've ever cringed when your parents said 'groovy,' you'll know that spoken language can have a brief shelf life. But frequently used words can persist for generations, even millennia, and similar sounds and meanings often turn up in very different languages. Now, a new statistical approach suggests that peoples from Alaska to Europe may share a linguistic forebear dating as far back as the end of the Ice Age, about 15,000 years ago. Indeed, some of the words we use today may not be so different than those spoken around campfires and receding glaciers."

3 of 323 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Words in common - Thai and English by Patch86 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Although folk etymologies are always a dangerous game. Sometimes words (especially short ones) can be the same simply by pure coincidence. This fits in with the linguistic concept of the False Cognate:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_cognate

  2. Re: Man by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ever since they disbanded the office of the Devil's Advocate in the Vatican, everybody and their circus of performing poodles has been getting sainthood granted. It's a shame: being the official Catholic Church's lawyer for Satan, there to cast doubt on the claims of sainthood was not only the coolest job I could imagine, but should have been staffed by James Randi or one of his students.

    It was traditionally staffed by Jesuits, so I suppose that's close enough.

  3. What is WRONG with you people? by chill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    120 posts and not ONE reference to "gin and tonic". Douglas Adams, we hardly knew ya.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.