Words of Speaking and Saying in the Indo-European Languages 9781463222420

Carl Buck examines the wide range of words of speaking found in Indo-European languages.

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Words of Speaking and Saying in the Indo-European Languages
 9781463222420

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Words of Speaking and Saying in the Indo-European Languages

A n a l e c t a Gorgiana

370 Series Editor George Anton Kiraz

Analecta Gorgiana is a collection of long essays and

short

monographs which are consistently cited by modern scholars but previously difficult to find because of their original appearance in obscure publications. Carefully selected by a team of scholars based on their relevance to modern scholarship, these essays can now be fully utili2ed by scholars and proudly owned by libraries.

Words of Speaking and Saying in the Indo-European Languages

Carl Buck

l gorgias press 2009

Gorgias Press LLC, 180 Centennial Ave., Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA www.gorgiaspress.com Copyright © 2009 by Gorgias Press LLC Originally published in All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise without the prior written permission of Gorgias Press LLC. 2009

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ISBN 978-1-60724-657-2

ISSN 1935-6854

Extract from The ^American Journal of Philology 36 (1915)

Printed in the LTnited States of America

AMERICAN

JOURNAL OF PHILOLOGY VOL.

X X X V I , i.

W H O L E NO.

141.

I.—WORDS OF S P E A K I N G A N D S A Y I N G IN T H E INDO-EUROPEAN LANGUAGES. FIRST

PAPER.

In our study of semantic development no group of words can be of more pertinent interest to the philologist than those denoting articulate speech, as ' speak ', ' say ', ' word ' language and the like. If we compare the usual expressions for ' speak ' and ' say ' in the various Indo - European languages, 1 we find the greatest diversity ; and this in spite of an extensive series of root connections among words which apply in some fashion to articulate speech. Thus the root uequ (no. 1 8 ) , though occurring in nearly all the main branches of the Indo-European family, has furnished the common verb for ' speak, say ' in only two, Indo-Iranian and Greek, and here not exclusively or in the full tense system. There are several other roots, notably seq« (no. 27), uer- (no. 3 7 ) , bhâ- (no. 25 ), the application of which to articulate speech is sufficiently wide spread to make it probable that they had already developed this meaning in the parent speech, though not necessarily to the exclusion of other more original uses. In addition to this inherited variety, where the semantic development is ob1 B r é a l " L e s verbes signifiant ' parler ' " , R e v u e des études grecques X I V (1901), 1 1 3 ff., has a l r e a d y told the story of a number of these. But, apart f r o m d i f f e r i n g with him on some points touching the history of the w o r d s he has chosen f o r discussion, the f o l l o w i n g aims at a more comprehensive and systematic study of the group, covering the usual w o r d s f o r ' speak ' and ' say ' in all the I n d o - E u r o p e a n languages.

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scured by its antiquity, a very large number of words has developed the meaning 'speak, s a y ' independently, some in prehistoric times, others displacing older expressions before our eyes in the historical period. There is, of course, nothing unusual in such a change of vocabulary, but it furnishes an opportunity to observe the various sources from which the notion of ' speaking ' or ' saying ' may arise. The difference between English speak and say is so clearly felt that the two words are only rarely interchangeable. In speak (and talk) the emphasis is on the action, in say (and tell) on the content or result of the action. One " speaks slowly ", " speaks a language ", the child learns " to speak ", or, more commonly " to talk ". But one " says " something definite. 1 Speak is normally intransitive though it may take an object of the inner content as word, language, etc. Say is regularly transitive, requiring an object to complete the sense, though in a few phrases such as " he says so " this may be reflected by an adverb. Indirect quotations are introduced by say, not by speak, and direct quotations also much more commonly by say than by speak. Similar pairs of words, with substantially the same distinction as Eng. speak and say, are characteristic of most of the Indo-European languages, e. g. Lat. loquor and dico, Fr. parler and dire, Ger. spree hen (reden) and sagen, etc.2 Yet 1 In terms of "aspect", speak is "durative" or "imperfective", while say is "terminative" or "perfective". In Slavic, where aspect is not a mere logical distinction, but a highly developed feature of the verbal mechanism, our speak and say are reflected by imperfectives and perfectives respectively, except where the correspondence is complicated by the peculiar Slavic adjustment of aspect to tense. Thus OBulg. glagolati, an imperfective, regularly translates Grk. XaXw 'speak* in all tenses; while resti, rekq, a perfective, regularly translates the forms of Xéya 'say', except those of the present system, which are rendered by the present of glagolati, since the present of the perfective has future force and is used for èpa and the non-indicative forms of elwov. While, then, the imperfectives like OBulg. glagolati, Russ. govorit', Boh. mluviti, etc., are essentially verbs of 'speaking' and will be so classed below, it is to be understood that in their present system they may answer to our say as well as to speak, 2 See the tabular lists given at the end. The juxtaposition of the t w o words in Luke V. 4 : s Si èiravaaro \a\òv, elite irpòs tòv 2,1/ioiva. " When he had left speaking, he said unto Simon ", furnishes in the transla-

SPEAK"

AND "SAY"

IN INDO-EUROPEAN.

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this situation is not universal. Thus Sanskrit forms f r o m vac- and bru- with the corresponding Avestan forms (nos. 2, 1 8 ) , and similarly Atyvrj (no. 2 5 ) . T h e Celtic verb of ' s p e a k i n g ' became the verb of ' s a y i n g ' in Cornish and Breton (no. 1 1 ) . So one need not scruple to assume a similar shift of meaning where there is no such direct evidence. C f . also, above, p. 4. It is a frequently observed phenomenon that a word which is first applied to speech only in a depreciatory sense, ' chatter ' j a b b e r ' , ' p r a t e ' , etc., may lose this and become merely familiar in tone, as in Eng. chat, which is only a shortened f o r m of chatter, but is now differentiated f r o m it in f e e l i n g ; and again that a word denoting familiar speech (whether or not this rests upon an earlier depreciatory sense) may lose this special coloring and become the ordinary prosaic word f o r ' speak'. E n g . talk, though the notion of informal, familiar speech is dominant, and even a depreciatory sense evident in certain phrases, is also used without any such feeling, and colloquially it is a growing rival of speak. T h e child " learns to t a l k " , one may " t a l k F r e n c h " , and " h e talked w e l l " or " what did he talk on ? " may refer to the most dignified and formal address. But the process referred to would be complete only if talk replaced speak, or at least became its full equivalent. In some of the German dialects schwatzen is said to be used in place of reden. A complete sequence f r o m the ' c h a t t e r ' of animals to the ' c h a t t e r ' of human beings, to ' chat, talk f a m i l i a r l y ' , and finally to simple ' s p e a k ' is spread before us in the history of Grk. AaAecu (no. 1 0 ) , which after reaching the final stage was overtaken and driven f r o m

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the standard language by another verb, which had started with ' c o n s o r t with, c h a t ' , namely o/juXeo (no. 4 7 ) . T h e r e are numerous other illustrations in the material g i v e n below, e. g. under nos. 3, 4, 6 ( L a t . garrio), 8, 42, 44, of the interchange, in the same f o r m or in cognate forms, of ' s p e a k ' with ' chatter ' or ' c h a t A n d probably many others, perhaps most of those in g r o u p I, have passed through the meaning ' c h a t ' or the like as the last intermediate stage in their development. A factor of first importance in changes of vocabulary, as is well k n o w n in general and is equally evident in the g r o u p w e are studying, is the fondness f o r new and picturesque expressions, and the tendency to replace the familiar and commonplace w o r d s by such, until they in their turn lose all special coloring and are ready to be displaced by others. W e sometimes think of this as an especial attribute of slang, because here it runs riot, untrammeled by the conservative influence which operates in the literary language. A n d it is indeed not to be supposed that our ancestors in pre-literary periods w e r e ever so u n i f o r m l y opposed to using an ordinary w o r d in its ordinary sense, or so resourceful in coining new expressions, as our modern youth. 1 B u t in the long centuries b e f o r e the rise of literary languages and the consequent ( r e l a t i v e ) standardization of speech within larger areas, there w a s no such thing as s l a n g or colloquial speech, by contrast to anything else, f o r all l a n g u a g e was of this character. T h e great variety in the w o r d s f o r ' speak ' and ' s a y ' in the Indo-European languages is in large part due to changes of vocabulary w h i c h took place in their prehistoric periods, or else in periods w h e n a standard l a n g u a g e was in a decline and had relaxed its pressure. U n d e r the latter head would fall the changes which took place in the later periods of Greek, and of Latin b e f o r e the standardization of the present R o mance languages. In Latin, fabulor was the colloquial w o r d ' T h e same e x a g g e r a t i o n of a natural tendency s h o w s itself in certain styles of writing. N o t to mention the highly developed j a r g o n of baseball reporters, some of our story writers, as w a s r e m a r k e d by a correspondent in the N e w Y o r k Nation, Oct. 9, 1913, " d r e a d the sight of the g o o d old w o r d ' s a i d ' as a h y d r o p h o b i c patient dreads w a t e r " . They prefer "scorned", "denied", "greeted", "chatted", " d e f e n d e d " , " h u s k e d " ( ! ) , " d r y l y t h a n k e d " , " f a i n t l y s u r r e n d e r e d " , " f o n d l y rem e m b e r e d " (all these f o l l o w i n g direct quotations).

"SPEAK"

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for ' speak' from the time of Plautus, but loquor was so strongly intrenched in the language of literature and of cultivated speech that it was not until the standard Latin had lost its hold on the speech of the Roman world that loquor was definitely ousted by fdbulor, which was itself displaced in France and Italy. Cf. nos. 54, 55. There have been comparatively few such substitutions in the regular words foi ' speak' and ' say ' in the modern languages since they gained the position of " standard " languages with their increasingly dominant influence, never so strong as at present. But how great a diversity may exist within a narrow field, where a strong centralizing force is lacking, is shown by the situation in the Rhaetoroman dialects, where the favorite expressions for ' s p e a k ' represent, apart from mere phonetic variations, seven different words. 1 In spite of the great diversity in our group as a whole, there are some noteworthy instances of conservatism, as the agreement of all existing Germanic languages in the verb of ' s a y i n g ' , the persistence of Lat. dico in all the Romance languages, the continued use of \ey ' crackle, sputter, hiss ' and ' be full to b u r s t i n g ' (of u d d e r s ) ; while Lat. spar go and numerous other probable cognates 1 are used only of the act. A n especially close parallel is furnished by Eng. crack. This also was an imitative word denoting primarily the noise, but also the act, of cracking. In present standard English both senses still appear in the noun, while the application of the verb to noise is almost obsolete, being partly taken up by the diminutive crackle. But in the dialects the verb has developed from this side a variety of meanings, among others simply ' talk, converse, speak', e. g. Dannie could crack awa' to him in his ain mother tongue, or he could crack far glegger in a dead language than other folk could do in a living one ( W r i g h t , English Dialect Dictionary, p. 764). 2. Boh. mluviti, Skt. bru-, e t c . — O B u l g . mluva and its derivative mluviti mean ' noise, tumult, make a noise ', translating Grk. dopyfios and 6opvf3e s c h m e i c h e l n > einschmeichelnd r e d e n ' , thus r e v e r s i n g the semantic process w h i c h is clearly recorded in G e r m a n , w h e r e alone the v e r b is k n o w n f r o m an early period. 2 T h e v i e w that F r . causer in this sense w a s b o r r o w e d f r o m O H G . kösön (Diez. W t b . n o , M a c k e l , F r z . Stud. V I , 147, F a l k - T o r p . loc. cit.), is rightly r e j e c t e d by M e y e r - L ü b k e . R o m . et. W t b . 142.

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the Slavic word is itself borrowed from the Germanic (cf. Goth, doms ' j u d g e m e n t E n g . doom). The semantic development in Bulgarian has been from 'thought' to its expression, then generalized to any expression,' w o r d ' ; and this has been attended by a corresponding shift in the meaning of the verb from ' think' to ' s a y ' . 44. Pol. gadac.—The verb which in most Slavic languages means 'think, advise, j u d g e ' , etc. (e. g. Russ. gadati, Boh. hadati) is in Polish (gadac) a verb of speaking, sometimes ' chatter', but also a frequent colloquial synonym of mowic ' speak', e. g. gadac po polsku ' speak Polish 45. Mod. Grk. (dial) Kpiva.—Mod. Grk. KpeV