Language Families of the World

Language Families of the World « Series from 2019

Series from 2019

Broadcast info
Genres: Special Interest

Professor John McWhorter of Columbia University explores the linguistic trails left by generations of humans that lead back to the beginnings of language.

Utilizing historical theories and cutting-edge research, these 34 episodes will introduce you to major language families and their offspring, including languages that are no longer spoken but provide vital links to the past.

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Why Are There So Many Languages?

There are over 7,000 languages in the world and many linguists believe they likely all developed from a single source language in the distant past. Get an introduction to the concept of language families, understand how languages change over time, and discover what linguistics can teach us about our own history.

The First Family Discovered: Indo-European

While the Indo-European family of languages was not the first group to be identified as related, it is the family that has received much of the research and classification that became the basis of modern linguistics. Uncover what defines Indo-European languages, which include Latin, English, French, Armenian, Latvian, Sanskrit, and many more.

Indo-European Languages in Europe

Begin a deep dive into the earliest roots of Indo-European languages with a look at Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, Greek, Albanian, and Celtic languages. See how Indo-European languages contradict common notions about how language works and uncover some of the mysteries that are yet to be solved.

Indo-European Languages in Asia

One-fifth to one-sixth of the world speaks one of the Indo-European languages of India. Trace back to the branching of the Indo-European tree, when the European languages split from the Indo-Aryan varieties like Sanskrit that would become Hindi and others. Explore many variations that evolved and see why it can be so difficult to differentiate between a language and a dialect.

The Click Languages

Shift from Indo-European to some of the most endangered languages in the world: the “click” languages, formally known as Khoisan. Spoken in southern Africa, these endangered languages share a distinctive profile, and yet likely did not all come from a single family. Explore where they may have begun and how they work.

Niger-Congo: The Biggest Family in Africa I

The Niger-Congo family consists of anywhere from 1,000 to 1,500 different languages. While they are part of the same family, they do not adhere to an identified pattern like Indo-European. What links this immense family together? What is the essence of the Niger-Congo? What can these languages tell us about migration patterns? Explore these questions and more.

Niger-Congo: The Biggest Family in Africa II

Languages of the Fertile Crescent and Beyond I

Languages of the Fertile Crescent and Beyond II

Nilo-Saharan: Africa’s Hardest Languages?

Is the Indo-European Family Alone in Europe?

How to Identify a Language Family

What Is a Caucasian Language?

Indian Languages That Aren’t Indo-European

Languages of the Silk Road and Beyond

Japanese and Korean: Alike yet Unrelated

The Languages We Call Chinese

Chinese’s Family Circle: Sino-Tibetan

Southeast Asian Languages: The Sinosphere

Languages of the South Seas I

Languages of the South Seas II

Siberia and Beyond: Language Isolates

Creole Languages

Why Are There So Many Languages in New Guinea?

The Languages of Australia I