You haven’t answered the question. In your opinion, do the IE languages have a common ancestor, yes or no? (And I feel confident in saying that this is one of the very few times in linguistics where there
is a yes/no answer.)
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Wed Jul 14, 2021 9:09 am
bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Jul 14, 2021 7:43 amI’m confused about what you mean by ‘theoretical construct’. Are you suggesting that a ‘Proto-Indo-European’ language never existed and the ‘Indo-European’ languages have no common ancestor?
Not exactly. Although it's obvious IE languages share some common inheritance, I don't think it could be adequately described in terms of the genealogical tree model without incurring in an oversimplification.
OK… so in that case, how would
you describe IE, if not in terms of the tree model? (In enough detail as possible, please. It seems we have a habit of misunderstanding you when you try to summarise your ideas in a couple of sentences.)
IMHO, the IE family is the result of a series of expansion and replacement processes over a time-spam of several millenia.
So are all other language families. This doesn’t invalidate the tree model, the wave model, the comparative method or anything else we’ve been discussing. (The tree model, I should note,
is invalid, but not because of stratum influence, and in cases like IE it still seems a reasonable approximation.)