SYNTHETIC LANGUAGE


A 'synthetic language', in linguistic typology, is a language with a high morpheme-per-word ratio. This linguistic classification is largely independent of morpheme-usage classifications (such as fusional, agglutinative, etc.) although there is a common tendency for agglutinative languages to exhibit synthetic properties.

Contents
Synthetic and isolating languages
Specimens
Forms of synthesis
Derivational synthesis
Relational synthesis
Degrees of synthesis
Strictly isolating
Rather isolating
Rather synthetic
Very synthetic
Polysynthetic
Oligosynthesis
See also
External links

Synthetic and isolating languages


Synthetic languages are frequently contrasted with isolating languages. It is more accurate to conceive of languages as existing on a continuum, with strictly isolating (consistently one morpheme per word) at one end and highly polysynthetic (in which a single word may contain as much information as an entire English sentence) at the other extreme. Synthetic languages tend to lie around the middle of this scale.

Specimens


Synthetic languages are numerous and well-attested, the most commonly cited being Indo-European languages such as German, Spanish, Russian, Polish and Czech, as well as many languages of the Americas, including Navajo, Nahuatl, Mohawk and Quechua. It is likely that Interlingua can be considered a synthetic language.

Forms of synthesis


There are several ways in which a language can exhibit synthetic characteristics:
Derivational synthesis

In 'derivational synthesis', morphemes of different types (nouns, verbs, affixes, etc.) are joined to create new words. For example:
:German: ''Luftkissenfahrzeug'' => "air-cushion-travel-device" meaning "hovercraft"
:Greek: ''yperkholisterolaimia'' => "overmuch/high-cholesterol-blood+-ia(suffix)" meaning "hypercholesterolemia"
:Polish: ''przystanek'' => "little-stand-beside" meaning "bus stop"
:English: ''unthinkably'' => "not-think-possible-(adverb)"
:English: ''antidisestablishmentarianism'' => "against-ending-institutionalize-condition-advocate-ideology"
Relational synthesis

In 'relational synthesis', root words are joined to bound morphemes to show grammatical function:
:Spanish: ''escribiéndomelo'' => "writing-me-it" meaning "(while) writing it to me".
:Nahuatl: ''ocaltizquiya'' => "already-(she)-him-bathe-would" meaning "she would have bathed him"
:Japanese: ''miseraregatai'' => "see-causative-passive-difficult" meaning "it's difficult to be shown (this)"
:Finnish: ''juoksentelisinkohan'' => "run-erratic motion-conditional-I-question-casual" meaning "I wonder if I should run around (aimlessly)"
:Finnish: ''hiutaleannos'' => "flake-ration"; ''hiuta+le'' has the components ''hiutua'' meaning "to thin" and ''-le'' meaning "a small thing produced by the action", and ''ann+os'' is derived from ''antaa'' meaning "to give" and ''-os'' meaning "a mass transferred or made by the action".
:Turkish: ''Afyonkarahisarlilastiramayabileceklerimizdenmissiniz'' => meaning "apparently you may be amongst the ones that we will not be able to make a Afyonkarahisar citizen."

Degrees of synthesis


In order to demonstrate the "continuum" nature of the isolating-synthetic-polysynthetic classification, some examples are shown below:
Strictly isolating

Rather isolating

English: "He travelled by hovercraft on the sea." Largely isolating, but ''travelled'' and ''hovercraft'' each have two morphemes per word, the former being an example of relational synthesis (inflection), and the latter of derivational synthesis (derivation).
Rather synthetic

Japanese: ''Watashitachi ni totte, kono naku kodomo no shashin wa miseraregatai mono desu'' means strictly literally, "In our case, these pictures of children crying are things that are difficult to be shown," approximately ''We cannot bear being shown these pictures of children crying'' in more idiomatic English. In the example, virtually every word has more than one morpheme and some have up to five (the particles ''ni'', ''no'', ''wa'' are enclitic case markers, i.e., they are phonologically part of the previous word).
Very synthetic

Finnish: ''Käyttäytyessään tottelemattomasti oppilas saa jälki-istuntoa'' means "Should he/she behave in an insubordinate manner, the student will get detention." Structurally: behaviour(present/future tense)(of his/hers) insubordinate(in the manner/style) studying(he/she who (should be)) gets detention(some). Practically every word is derived and/or inflected, and one word can be considered polysynthetic. This is, however, very formal language - almost like judicial text - and usually replaced by more analytic structure: ''Kun oppilas käyttäytyy tottelemattomasti, hän saa jälki-istuntoa.''
Polysynthetic

Mohawk: ''Washakotya'tawitsherahetkvhta'se'' means "He ruined her dress" (strictly, "He made the thing that one puts on one's body ugly for her"). One word expresses the idea that would be conveyed in an entire sentence in a non-polysynthetic language.
Oligosynthesis

Oligosynthetic languages are a theoretical notion created by Benjamin Whorf with no known examples existing in natural languages. Such languages would be functionally synthetic, but make use of a very limited array of morphemes (perhaps just a few hundred). Whorf proposed that Nahuatl was oligosynthetic, but this has since been discounted by most linguists.

See also



Isolating language

Inflection

Morphology (linguistics)

Linguistic typology

Bound morpheme

External links



SIL: What is a ''morphological process''?

SIL: What is ''derivation''?

SIL: Comparison of inflection and derivation

Lexicon of Linguistics: Inflection, Derivation

Lexicon of Linguistics: Base, Stem, Root

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