Re: Evolution of Romance (was: **Answer to Pete**)
From: | Benct Philip Jonsson <bpj@...> |
Date: | Tuesday, February 12, 2008, 4:58 |
ROGER MILLS skrev:
> This is OT w.r.t. this thread, but--
>
> Over the last several weeks, there has been an interesting
> and rather astounding thread on Spanish "Ideolengua"
> (yahoo groups) regarding a recent (?) book by one Yves
> Cortez, Le français ne vient pas du latin. (And by
> implication, neither do the other Romance languages). Have
> any of you been following it, or has anyone else heard of
> this book?
>
> His theory, as I understand it without having seen the
> book (only the Prologue has been quoted), seems to be,
> that the bulk of the Roman population spoke not a
> colloquialized form of what we call Classical Latin, but a
> separate IE language _closely related to_ Classical Latin
> but which was already headed toward being a more analytic
> language. He calls this "Ancient Italian", and it, not CL,
> is the source of the Romance languages.
>
> The amazing thing is that some of the respondents are
> taking this seriously !!! and are immune to all arguments
> to the contrary.
>
> Well, slap my ass and call me Cato-- has M. Cortez never
> heard of Proto-Romance? It would almost be worthwhile, and
> certainly amusing, to actually get the book, to see how he
> dismisses almost 200 years of scholarly research.........
>
>
>
It seems to me that Cortez has simply misunderstood the
nature of the relation between CL and VL. In fact "a
separate IE language _closely related to_ Classical Latin
but which was already headed toward being a more analytic
language" is, given the shadiness of the language/dialect
distinction a fitting description of VL: the both descended
from Old Latin but diverged around 200 BCE at the latest. So
if Scots and English are two closely related languages both
descended from Old English a similar description fits CL--
VL. VL was emphatically not a daughter of CL, but a sister
-- to the extent that CL was not a conlang derived from a
mix of OL and VL!
/BP 8^)>
--
Benct Philip Jonsson -- melroch atte melroch dotte se
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"C'est en vain que nos Josués littéraires crient
à la langue de s'arrêter; les langues ni le soleil
ne s'arrêtent plus. Le jour où elles se *fixent*,
c'est qu'elles meurent." (Victor Hugo)