Language is Alive

Language is simply alive, like an organism. We all tell each other this, in fact, when we speak of living languages, and I think we mean something more than an abstract metaphor. We mean alive. Words are the cells of language, moving the great body, on legs. Language grows and evolves, leaving fossils behind. The individual words are like different species of animals. Mutations occur. Words fuse, and then mate. Hybrid words and wild varieties or compound words are the progeny. Some mixed words are dominated by one parent while the other is recessive. The way a word is used this year is its phenotype, but it has deeply immutable meanings, often hidden, which is its genotype.... The separate languages of the Indo-European family were at one time, perhaps five thousand years ago, maybe much longer, a single language. The separation of the speakers by migrations had effects on language comparable to the speciation observed by Darwin on various islands of the Galapagos. Languages became different species, retaining enough resemblance to an original ancestor so that the family resemblance can still be seen.

Notes:

It evolves, leaves fossils, speciates, etc.

Folksonomies: evolution language

Taxonomies:
/technology and computing/electronic components (0.500020)
/science/mathematics/arithmetic (0.499636)
/education/language learning (0.448197)

Keywords:
different species (0.954260 (positive:0.240134)), language (0.842209 (positive:0.363963)), words (0.759389 (negative:-0.044468)), abstract metaphor (0.711230 (negative:-0.339486)), family resemblance (0.688170 (positive:0.617432)), great body (0.672621 (positive:0.503765)), original ancestor (0.648785 (positive:0.617432)), wild varieties (0.648537 (neutral:0.000000)), various islands (0.635799 (neutral:0.000000)), compound words (0.626881 (neutral:0.000000)), individual words (0.624324 (positive:0.240134)), Indo-European family (0.623709 (neutral:0.000000)), mixed words (0.619031 (negative:-0.284602)), Hybrid words (0.617523 (neutral:0.000000)), separate languages (0.601552 (neutral:0.000000)), single language (0.587125 (neutral:0.000000)), fossils (0.450374 (neutral:0.000000)), Alive (0.364460 (positive:0.381752)), genotype (0.329206 (neutral:0.000000)), organism (0.326519 (neutral:0.000000)), phenotype (0.323010 (neutral:0.000000)), speciation (0.318673 (neutral:0.000000)), Mutations (0.313765 (negative:-0.366322)), mate (0.313126 (neutral:0.000000)), migrations (0.311179 (neutral:0.000000)), legs (0.311125 (neutral:0.000000)), Galapagos (0.306652 (neutral:0.000000)), progeny (0.301142 (neutral:0.000000)), speciates (0.300595 (neutral:0.000000)), meanings (0.294328 (neutral:0.000000))

Entities:
Darwin:OperatingSystem (0.748529 (neutral:0.000000)), five thousand years:Quantity (0.748529 (neutral:0.000000))

Concepts:
Evolution (0.985517): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Word (0.681873): dbpedia | freebase
Gene (0.666936): dbpedia | freebase
DNA (0.633886): website | dbpedia | freebase | yago
Species (0.629935): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
German language (0.568841): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc | yago
Biology (0.549522): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Linguistics (0.537093): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc

 The Lives of a Cell
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Thomas , Lewis (2008-06-26), The Lives of a Cell, Retrieved on 2012-06-11
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  •