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Early humans out of Africa had only base-initial numerals

Linguistics and Languages

Early humans out of Africa had only base-initial numerals

O. Her, Y. Liang, et al.

This groundbreaking research delves into how early humans in Africa might have used base-initial numerals, such as "hundred three" instead of "three hundred". The study, conducted by One-Soon Her, Yung-Ping Liang, Eugene Chan, Hung-Hsin Hsu, Anthony Chi-Pin Hsu, and Marc Allassonnière-Tang, scrutinizes data from 4099 languages, revealing fascinating insights into numeral system evolution and communication advantages within African languages.... show more
Abstract
The vast majority of languages have numerals involving multiplication. Cross-linguistically, a numeral that involves a multiplier and a numeral base can be base-final, e.g., three hundred [three × hundred] in English, or base-initial, e.g., ikie ita [hundred × three] in Ibibio (Niger-Congo). A worldwide survey of 4099 languages reveals that 39% of the languages are base-initial, 48% are base-final, 4% use both orders, and 8% are without numeral bases. As the first step towards explaining this diversity and worldwide distribution, we offer convergent evidence to support the hypothesis that the languages of early humans in Africa had base-initial numerals. From a linguistic point of view, linearization is necessary for the verbal expression of multiplicative numerals. Between the two linear orders of multiplication, we demonstrate that the base-initial order has an initial advantage in communicative efficiency. We also offer typological evidence from the dominant head-initial word order in present-day numeral systems and nominal phrases in African languages. Finally, results from a phylogenetic analysis based on a global tree of human languages show that the base-initial order is more stable diachronically and more likely to be at the root of the reconstructed tree of languages in Africa between 100 and 150 thousand years ago. The dominant base-final order in non-African languages of modernity is thus likely to be a development after the Out-of-Africa exodus between 60 and 80 thousand years ago.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Feb 12, 2024
Authors
One-Soon Her, Yung-Ping Liang, Eugene Chan, Hung-Hsin Hsu, Anthony Chi-Pin Hsu, Marc Allassonnière-Tang
Tags
numeral systems
base-initial numerals
language distribution
African languages
phylogenetic analysis
communicative advantages
Out-of-Africa migration
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