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Would it be even possible to lose cases?

  Tags: Grammar
 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
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MarcusOdim
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Brazil
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 Message 1 of 35
10 October 2011 at 6:05pm | IP Logged 
Would it be even possible for a modern language possessing grammatical cases to lose all
of it's cases? ex: Polish

Around 1000 AC or 1500AC would be OK, the school system su****, there were no movies, not
everybody could read, but nowadays I find it impossible, do you have a different
perspective?
Polish becoming absolutely analytical :S

Edited by Fasulye on 10 October 2011 at 6:09pm

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Марк
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Russian Federation
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 Message 2 of 35
10 October 2011 at 7:14pm | IP Logged 
Probably, it can. All the languages are changing, despite total literacy.
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Kartof
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 Message 3 of 35
10 October 2011 at 7:41pm | IP Logged 
Look at Bulgarian, exactly that happened. If Polish became absolutely analytical, it would be similar to Bulgarian.
Actually, cases were preserved because of a lack of cultural interaction. Cases were lost in Bulgarian because
interaction with so many neighboring languages and peoples caused the declensional endings to become confused
with one another as new words were added and grammatical ideas from neighboring languages were adapted to
Bulgarian. As a result, the cases were dumped in favor of a stricter word order and prepositions.
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nimchimpsky
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 Message 4 of 35
10 October 2011 at 10:52pm | IP Logged 
Are there any examples of analytical languages that began using cases?
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Cabaire
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Germany
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 Message 5 of 35
10 October 2011 at 11:30pm | IP Logged 
I think, in Conemara Irish the genitive is weakening as the last of the five cases the languages originally had. But the written language and the other dialects have still at least three cases (plus some remnants of the dative).

Edited by Cabaire on 10 October 2011 at 11:31pm

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Chung
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 Message 6 of 35
10 October 2011 at 11:55pm | IP Logged 
nimchimpsky wrote:
Are there any examples of analytical languages that began using cases?


This isn't a perfect example, but an example of an isolating structure becoming synthetic could be in the development of certain postpositions in Old Hungarian which have become suffixes in modern Hungarian.

Old Hungarian: feheuuaru rea meneh hohu utu rea
Literal English: To Fehérvár going onto the military road

Modern Hungarian: Fehérvárra menő hadútra
More idiomatic English: Onto the military road leading to Fehérvár

The old postposition rea has become the current suffix for the sublative case (-ra/-re). Note also how the ancestor of modern "hadút" is "hohu utu" (i.e. 'military road' combined as one word 'militaryroad')

I haven't been able to find an example of a predominantly isolating or analytic language becoming a predominantly synthetic (fusional, agglutinative, polysynthetic) one. Even Hungarian and its ancestors have been treated as predominantly agglutinative (i.e. a sub-type of a synthetic language).
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Марк
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 Message 7 of 35
11 October 2011 at 6:41pm | IP Logged 
Cabaire wrote:
I think, in Conemara Irish the genitive is weakening as the last of the
five cases the languages originally had. But the written language and the other dialects
have still at least three cases (plus some remnants of the dative).

How do they say? Teach Bhrian? Timpeall na tír? Chun obair? Sú úll? Tá me ag ithe ull?
Could you give some proofs of this process?
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Cainntear
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 Message 8 of 35
11 October 2011 at 7:10pm | IP Logged 
Kartof wrote:
Actually, cases were preserved because of a lack of cultural interaction. Cases were lost in Bulgarian because
interaction with so many neighboring languages and peoples...

This is exactly it. It's not too far fetched to suggest that English might lose some of its remaining inflection through the massive number of learners -- it's very common for learners to drop the -s from verbs in the third person singular.

Will TV and the press prevent this? Well, there's already plenty of non-native-English press, the big question is whether we're going to see non-native-English cinema in the years to come.

I think the thing that protects Polish most is the fact the strength of English as a lingua franca -- everyone who trades across borders is increasingly relying on English, so there's not the same amount of non-native interference with the language.


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