This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2024) |
A corpus language is a language that has no living speakers but for which numerous records produced by its native speakers survive.[1] Examples of corpus languages are Ancient Greek, Latin, the Egyptian language, Old English and Elamite.
Some corpus languages, such as Ancient Greek and Latin, left very large corpora and therefore can be fully reconstructed, even though some details of pronunciation may be unclear. Such languages can be used even today, as is the case with Sanskrit and Latin. Others have such limited corpora that some important words—e.g., some pronouns—are lacking in the corpora. Examples of these are Ugaritic and Gothic. Languages attested only by a few words, often names, and a few phrases (called Trümmersprachen in German linguistics, literally "rubble languages") can be reconstructed only in a very limited way, and often their genetic relationship to other languages remains unclear. Examples are the Lombardic language and Dadanitic, a Semitic language that may be close to classical Arabic.
Corpus languages are studied using the methods of corpus linguistics, but corpus linguistics can also be used (and is commonly used) for the study of the writings and other records of living languages.
Not all extinct languages are corpus languages, since there are many extinct languages in which few or no writings or other records survive.
References
edit- ^ Langslow, D.R. 2002 "Approaching bilingualism in corpus languages" in James Noel Adams, Mark Janse, Simon Swain (edd.) Bilingualism in Ancient Society: Language Contact and the Written Text Oxford: OUP.
See also
edit