dead language
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A language that is no longer learned as a native language: A "dead language" is a language that has no living native speakers. It is no longer acquired naturally by children as their first language within a community. Such languages may still be studied, used for specific purposes (like religious ceremonies or academic research), or have influenced modern languages, but they are not used for everyday communication by any community.
Examples of Usage
- Noun:
- Latin is a classic example of a dead language.
- Sanskrit is considered a dead language, though it is still used in Hindu rituals.
- The study of dead languages like Ancient Greek is important for understanding historical texts.
Advanced Usage
- "To become a dead language": The process by which a language ceases to have native speakers.
- Over centuries, Coptic gradually became a dead language.
- In linguistic classification: The term is used in contrast to "extinct language" (which has no speakers at all) and "living language." A dead language may still have second-language speakers or ceremonial use.
- While it is a dead language, Ecclesiastical Latin is still used by the Roman Catholic Church.
Variants and Related Words
- Extinct language (n): A language that has no speakers at all, not even in specialized contexts. (Note: All dead languages are extinct in terms of native speakers, but not all extinct languages are studied or used like dead languages.)
- Classical language (n): A language with a rich literary tradition that is often, but not always, dead (e.g., Classical Arabic is still a living language).
- Revived language (n): A dead or nearly extinct language that has been intentionally brought back into use, such as Modern Hebrew.
Synonyms
- Obsolete language: A language no longer in current use. (This can sometimes imply the language is outdated, not just lacking native speakers.)
- Historical language: A language that belongs to a past period of history.
Related Phrases
- Language death: The process that results in a language becoming dead or extinct.
- The phenomenon of language death is accelerated by globalization.
- Language revival: The attempt to re-introduce a dead or endangered language.
- There are movements for the language revival of Cornish.
Related Idioms
- (To be) as dead as Latin: An idiom comparing something to the definitive example of a dead language, meaning it is completely obsolete or no longer in active use.
- That old programming language is now as dead as Latin.
Noun
- a language that is no longer learned as a native language