December 01, 2003

European classification based on lexicostatistical data

Cladistics
Volume 19, Issue 2 , April 2003, Pages 120-127

Cladistic analysis of languages: Indo-European classification based on lexicostatistical data

Katerzina Rexová et al.

Abstract

The phylogeny of the Indo-European (IE) language family is reconstructed by application of the cladistic methodology to the lexicostatistical dataset collected by Dyen (about 200 meanings, 84 speech varieties, the Hittite language used as a functional outgroup). Three different methods of character coding provide trees that show: (a) the presence of four groups, viz., Balto-Slavonic clade, Romano-Germano-Celtic clade, Armenian-Greek group, and Indo-Iranian group (the two last groups possibly paraphyletic); (b) the unstable position of the Albanian language; (c) the unstable pattern of the basalmost IE differentiation; but (d) the probable existence of the Balto-Slavonic–Indo-Iranian ("satem") and the Romano-Germano-Celtic (+Albanian?) superclades. The results are compared with the phenetic approach to lexicostatistical data, the results of which are significantly less informative concerning the basal pattern. The results suggest a predominantly branching pattern of the basic vocabulary phylogeny and little borrowing of individual words. Different scenarios of IE differentiation based on archaeological and genetic information are discussed.

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Posted by Dienekes at December 1, 2003 12:22 PM | PermaLink
Comments

This pretty much fits in with the general consensus.

Posted by: Steve C at December 1, 2003 04:33 PM

Hmm.... I found other article about this theme... But I did'n remember URL, sorry... Try to search google....

Posted by: подарки at April 3, 2004 04:25 PM
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