Radio Sunrise serves the West London community of mixed races- Punjabi speakers in the midst of an English suburb.
What could these two languages,
Punjabi and English, have in common? In fact, English and Punjabi, as
well as other languages of Northern India like Hindi and Gujurati are
related- something discovered by chance 200 years ago by an
English lawyer, Sir William Jones. He was a judge who went out to India
in 1783, but he had studied languages, oriental languages, before he
went, and when he got to India, he became very interested and learnt
Sanscrit, which is the language of ancient India, which was first
written about 500 A.D., and then he realised, he made this great
discovery, that Sanscit resembles in some way, has relationships with
Latin and other languages, and he gave a very famous discourse in which
he said that these were sprung from some common source.
It’s surprising that no one
spotted the resemblances earlier. Take the numbers again, for example,
the Sanscrit, on the right, bares a strong resemblance to Latin and
Greek, on the left. While one, two and three are obvious, four and five
need a closer look to spot the connection. Linguists have discovered
rules that govern how sounds in different languages are related. Look
at the words for “four”. This is one of many examples where
a word beginning with “q” in Latin say, is similar to a
Greek word beginning with “t”, or a Sanscrit word beginning
with “k”. These sound correspondences can reveal how
apparently unrelated languages are members of the same family. The
question is how can you tell that the languages that you’re
looking at reflect a single original language and therefore form a
family. The only way you can do that is by finding sistematic
similarities between these languages in every area of their grammar,
similarities in sounds, similartities in their inflexions, in the
syntax of the language, and so forth, and the similarities have to be
very precise, and they have to be interlocking for the assertion that
these languages form a family to be believable. If we look at an
English word like“tooth”, and see that in Hindi
it’s“dant”, and that by itself that doesn’t
mean that much, but you take a look at English “ten”, which
ends up in Hindi as“das”, and the same pattern emerges- you
have got an initial “t” in English and and initial
“d” in Hindi. When you find that the word “two”
though, the new word, in English, shows up in Hindo as
“do”, once agin an initial“t” in English and an
initial “d” in Hindi. You begin to think that this is not
an accident.
Linguists have now established
that a whole range of languages, stretching from Iceland to India form
one family called Indoeuropean. We can even reconstruct the earlier
ancestor of these languages- Proto Indoeuropean.