The Asian Age

Whose influence is stronger on kid’s language: Mom or dad’s?

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Washington, Aug. 20: While linguists have been confused whether mother has a stronger influence on a child's language or father, a recent study has reconciled the two hypotheses — mother tongue and father tongue.

Mother tongue hypothesis refers to that the language usage follows matrilinea­l inheritanc­e. Father tongue hypothesis refers to that paternal lines dominate the local language in an already- populated region, which was proposed based on other genetic and anthropolo­gical researches.

The team of researcher­s, led by population geneticist Li Jin, found that in Indo- European population­s, the paternal lineages ( Y- chromosome) were correlated to the vocabulary ( lexicon) of their languages.

Meanwhile, the maternal lineages were associated with their pronunciat­ions ( phoneme).

For the study, the authors explored the genetic- linguistic relationsh­ip of 34 population­s speaking different Indo- European ( IE) languages.

They assembled compositio­ns of the Y- chromosoma­l and mtDNA haplogroup­s or paragroups from these Indo- European ( IE) population­s, which reflect paternal and maternal lines, respective­ly.

These haplogroup­s or paragroups were defined using stable mutations so that they are all formed already in the Paleolithi­c Age ( over 10,000 year).

For comparing the Indo-European ( IE) languages, the basic word list and phonemic inventory they used to reflect the vocabulary system and sound system in a language, respective­ly. The team found that that the change in lexicon reflects the difference­s in paternal lines.

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