Babel and the Ancient Single Language of the Human Race
Copyright 1999 by G. R. Morton
This may be freely distributed so long as no changes are made and no charges are required.
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Early Church Fathers were not YECs--John Tobin's Essay
Genesis 1:11, Why the Bible teaches evolution
Many Christians and non-christians alike have
questioned the reality of the Tower of Babel or ignored it altogether. Indeed, other than in young-earth literature it is difficult to find a
reference to this event. Andrew White, in A History of the Warfare between Science and Theology in Christendom, attacks the
very idea of the story. Davis Young omits it in his book, The Biblical
Flood. Bernard Ramm in The Christian View of Science and Scripture
makes only the slightest reference to it. Obviously, this story causes some concern or embarrassment among Christian apologists who steer
far from it.
However, since this event is in the Bible one
must face the question of whether it is a real event or if it is merely an allegory. During the past decade some evidence has been developed which does
support one aspect of the story--the contention that the entire human race once spoke the same language. Merrit Ruhlen (not a
creationist) points out much of this data in his book, Merritt Ruhlen, The Origin of Language, (New York: John Wiley and Sons,
1994). These are from some posts I made to the ASA listserv and TheologyWeb:
Within the past decade some linguists have found evidence of a former unity among languages. Not all linguists accept this data,
but Joseph Greenberg (one of the foremost linguists of this century who produced the classification of African languages now in use) and Merritt
Ruhlen have argued for much wider connections among the languages.
First, I would also point people to my article Morton, G. R. (2002) "Language at the Dawn of Humanity," Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, 54(2002):3:193-194. This discusses some work presented at the 2001 meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics, There are two click languages Sandawe and Hadza, which are spoken by two groups which were believed to be related, although for years linguists had noted that the languages themselves seem very very distant in spite of sharing the same characteristic of having click sounds included in the language. Alec Knight, Joanna Mountain and colleagues analyzed the Y chromosomes of the two groups and found that these two groups were genetically the most distant pair of populations on earth. In other words, their last common ancestor was as long ago as 100,000 years. The abstract says: **end of abstract** Linguistics
One of the ways such connections are found is in the same sound being used
in different languages and language families (cognates). The words
that appear most stable across language family boundaries are those
which are very essential or personal or relational. The data listed below, while not proving the Tower of Babel story does support the original
contention that mankind did speak one language which is one of
the claims of the Bible.
I will discuss only two words, water and finger(aqwa and tik), but there are lots of other words that unite the world's languages.
sound meaning
(the capital V represents a vowel whose original pronunciation is
Ruhlen states:
"Another striking resemblance
among the world's language families is a word whose original meaning was probably 'finger' (though it has
evolved to 'one' and 'hand'[='fingers'] in many languages), and whose original
Linguistic symbols and evolution of sounds
? sounds like tt's in bottle when pronouced like by a cockney in
London. I need to point out the sound changes that linguists have found
d->z
Linguists look at sounds and how they change and then compare cognates
from different languages looking for a pattern. This is illustrated by
the following data regarding African languages:
Language sound
meaning
Ruhlen states,
"In 1972 the American linguist Edgar Gregersen presented substantial evidence connecting two of Greenberg's four African families,
Nilo-Saharan and Niger-Kordofanian. One of the pieces of
evidence he offered was Niger-Kordofanian forms that appeared cognate with
the Nilo-Saharan forms just cited." ~Merritt Ruhlen, The Origin of
Language, (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1994), p. 115-116
Tik, Finger/One
Niger-Kordofanian family
Afro-Asiatic family of North Africa
Eurasiatic family
Uralic branch
Turkic branch
Eskimo-Aleut
Dene-Caucasian
Yeniseian branch
Na-Dene branch
Austric family
Daic branch
Amerind languages
South America Amerind family
Ruhlen presents a lot of data on three of the words which
indicate a former connection. The word I am going to relate is water.
The same sound is found over the world representing either water, or activities in and on water, including drinking, lakes, rivers, creeks etc.
Aq'wa 'water'
Everyone has used the root 'aqua' as in 'aquamarine' and aquarium
in Spanish the term is agua. In Latin aqua means water. There appears
to be a root akwa or aqua which appears over and over in language family
after language family with this sound associated with water, river/drink
etc. I must emphasize that the table below is phonetic not proper spelling. The phonetic sounds are as follows x=ks or qs, the symbols ? ,
) etc are my best representations of the phonetic symbols used in Ruhlen's
book. There is a difference between a single ) and a () pair, the pair represents the sound quality of the consonant.
Ruhlen postulates that the original word for water was aqwa.
Some languages lost the first part and the word became qwa or kua and
some lost the last part and the word became aq or ak. Some languages
added parts. K's changed to g's or x's according to normal rules of linguistic change. One could postulate that the word water came from a variation
on the Ainu word for water Wakka, which then became watta or something
like that. Anyway, here is some of the evidence for an originally single language among humans. Not all of the words make the case to this
non-linguist, but there is enough similarity to make me take notice
of what Ruhlen is saying.
Afro-Asiatic family
Khoisan family of southern Africa
Nilo-Saharan Family
Fur
k)I
rain
Indo European Family
Eurasiatic Family
Ainu
Wakka
water
Dene-Caucasian Family
Indo Pacific family
Amerind--native American
Penutian branch
Hokan branch
Central Amerind branch
South America Amerind
Andean branc Amerind
Macro-Tucanoan brach
Equatorial branch
Macro-Carib branch
Macro-Panoan branch
Lule
uk
drink
Macro-Ge branch
~Merritt Ruhlen, The Origin of Language, (New York: John Wiley and
Sons,
I would add the word from the Sino-Tibetan
language, Mandarin, Kou ke which means thirst.
One other late edition here is that research reported July, 2004 noted
that the word papa occurred in 700 out of 1000 languages which the authors
studied. These 700 languages were from all different language
families. In Mandarin, Baba means father. see http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99996188
So, I would say, that there very well may be linguistic evidence
of a common root for these words throughout the world's language. This
is consistent with the Biblical assertion that humanity once spoke
a common language. That being said, the thing wrong with young-earth views
of this is that they place Babel far too late in history.
Y chromosome and mtDNA variation in linguistically diverse peoples of Tanzania: Ancient roots and ancient clicks. A. Knight1, P.A. Underhill2, H.M. Mortensen1, A.A. Lin2, D. Louis1, M. Ruhlen1, J.L. Mountain1. 1) Department of Anthropological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA; 2) Department of Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
"We analyzed genetic variation in 122 "unrelated" individuals from the vicinity of Lake Eyasi in north-central Tanzania, to recover aspects of population history and human evolution. Representatives of the four linguistic phyla of Africa were studied, including 50 Hadzabe (or Hadza) foragers. We present a Y chromosome phylogeny derived from unique event polymorphisms (UEPs). We also present Y chromosome microsatellite variation within UEP-defined clades, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragment polymorphisms, and nucleotide sequences of both mtDNA control region hypervariable segments. When compared to other African population data, our results reveal elements of prehistory relevant to the evolution of anatomically modern humans, including migration, gene flow, and language. We were able to distinguish recent gene flow from ancient demographic signatures. Hadzabe are strongly differentiated from other groups, have high genetic diversity, and exhibit comparatively great genetic distance from the !Kung of southern Africa, suggesting great antiquity for click (Khoisan) languages.
What they concluded was that these two groups of people shared a common genetic and linguistic history 100,000 years ago but went their separate ways in both areas. The data seems to indicate that one of the earliest human languages belongs to the click family (Khoisan family).
Now that data demonstrates the likelihood of language at least 100,000 years ago, not the 60 kyr of Hugh Ross's view. And the anatomical data seems to indicate that mankind was speaking
at least 3 times longer. Theology and apologetics simply must deal with this issue.
But are there other connections?
These include (Ruhlen p. 105)
papa father
mama mother
kaka brother/uncle
ku who
ma what (ma is used in Mandarin as
a question indicator)
pal two
akwa water
tik finger
kanV arm
boko arm
bunku knee
sum hair
putV vulva
cuna nose smell
KamV squeeze
parV fly
unknown)
form was something like tik. I first became aware of the widespread nature of this root at a public lecture that Greenberg gave at
Stanford in 1977, in which he mentioned three roots that were widely distributed around the world: tik 'finger,' pal 'two' (which we will look at
in the following section), and par 'to fly.' As you no doubt noticed in
your examination of Table 10, no less than eight of the twelve families
show traces of tik 'finger,one,' namely, Nilo-Saharan (B), Niger-Kordofanian (C), Afro-Asiatic (D), Eurasiatic (G), Dene-Caucasian (H), Austric
(I), Indo-Pacific (J) and Amerind (L)." ~Merritt Ruhlen, The Origin
of Language, (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1994), p. 115
g->k
k->g
p->f->h
k->x->h
k->?
d->z
t->d
t->th->s
i->y
u->w
Fur
tek
one
Maba
tek (tuk)
one
Nera
dekk-u
one
Dinka
tok
one
Berta
diikoni
one
Mangetu t'e
one
Kwama
seek-o
one t changed to s
Bari
to
one
Jur
tok
one
Twampa de?
one
Komo
de
one
Fulup qsik~sex
finger (~ separates variant pronunciations)
Nalu
te
finger
Gur
dike
one
Gwa
dogbo
one
Fon
dokpa
one
Ewe
deka
one
Tonga
tiho
finger
Chopi
t'ho
finger
Ki-Bira zika
finger
Ba-Kiokwa zigu
finger
Oromo
toko
one
West Gurage tegu
only one
Yaaku
tegei
hand
Saho
ti
one
Bilin
tu
one
Tsamai dokko
one
Nefusa tukod
finger
Hausa
tak
only one
Gisiga tekoy
one
Gidder te-teka
one
Logone tku
first
Indoeuropean branch
Indoeuropean root deik
Latin
dig-itus
finger
Latin
indeks
forefinger
English toe
toe
Old English tahe
toe
Latin
Decem
10
Votyak odik
one
Zyrian otik
one
Chuvash tek
only, just
Uighur tek
only merely
Chagatai tek
only, single
Turkish tek
only
Turkish teken
one by one
Korean tayki
one, thing
Old Korean tek
10
Ainu
tek
hand
Ainu
atiki
five
Japanese te
hand
Chuckchi-
Kamchatkan itygin
paw-foot
Upik
tik-iq
index finger
Inupiaq tik-iq
index finger
Inupiaq Tikkuagpaa
he points to it
Attu
tik-laq
middle finger
Attu
atgu
finger
Attu
tagataq
one
Rai
tik(-pu)
one
Nung
thi
one
Tibetan (g-)tsig
one
Ket
tek
finger
Punpokol tok
finger
Kott
tog-an
finger
Haida
ta
with the fingers
Tlingit t-eeq
finger
Tlingit Tek
one
Eyak
tikhi
one
Sarsi
tlik
one
Kutchin (i-)Tag
one
Hupa
ta?
One
Navajo ta?
One
Austroasiatic branch
Kharia ti?
Hand
Riang
ti?
Hand
Wa
tai?
Hand
Khmer
tai
hand
Vietnamese tay
hand
Li
dlian
finger
Northern Li tlean,then
finger
Loi
then,cian
finger
Tasmanian motook
forefinger
SE tasmanian togue
hand
Boven Mbian tek
fingernail
Digul
tuk
fingernail
North American Amerind Family
Nootka taka
only
Mohawk tsi?er
Finger
Sierra Miwok tika?
Index finger
Wintun tiq-eles
ten
Nisenan tok-
hand
Mixe
to?k, tuk
one
Sayula tu?k
one
Tzeltal tukal
alone
Quiche tik'ex
carry in the hand
Karok
tik
finger,hand
Achumawi wa-tuci
finger
Washo
tsek
finger
Yana
'tgi-
alone
East Pomo bi'yatsukai
finger
Arraarra teeh'k
hand
Pehtsik tiki-vash
hand
Akwa'ala asit-dek
one
Nahua
tiikia?a
one
Pima bajo cic
one
Tarahumara sika
hand
Mazatec cika?a
alone
Mangue tike
one
Chibcha ytiquyn
finger
Chibcha Acik
by ones
Borunca etsik
one
Guatuso dooki
one
Shiriana ithak
hand
Ulua
tinka-mak
finger
Paez
teec
one
Cahuapana itekla
finger,hand
Jebero itokla
finger,hand
Qawashqar takso
one
Siona
tekua
one
Siona
teg-li
five
Canichana eutixle
finger
Yupua
di(x)ka
arm
Uasona dikaga
arm
Upano
tikitik
one
Aguaruna tikij
one
Murato tici
hand
Uru
ti
one
Chipaya zek
one
Itene
taka
one
Guamo
dixi
finger
Katembri tika
toe
Yuracare tece
thumb
Kukura tikua
finger
Accaqwai tigina
one
Ocaina dikabu
arm
Mataco otejji
one
Tagnani etegueno
finger
Sensi
(nawis)-tikoe
one(finger)
Cavinena eme-toko
hand
Botocudo (po-)cik
one(finger)
Botocudo jik
alone
~Merritt Ruhlen, The Origin of Language, (New York: John Wiley
and Sons,
1994), p.115-119
I would add the example from the
Sino-Tibetan family, Mandarin in which under the rule that d->z, the word for
point is zhichu and the word for first is diyi.
language sound
meaning
Janjero akka
water
Kaffa
aco
water
Mocha
ac'o
water
Gofa
hacca
water
Shinasha ac'c'o
water
Badditu wat'e
water
Agaw
aq
water
biln
?aq
water
Xamir
aq(w) a drops of water
Quara
axu
water
Avia
axu
water
Damot
ago
water
Hadiyya wo?o
water
Tamboaro waha
water
Sidamo waho
water
Iraqw
aha
drink
!O !Kung kau
rain
!Kung
k''a
drink
!Kung
kau
rain
!Naron k''a
drink
|Kam-ka !ke k''wa
drink
|Kam-ka !kekau
rain
||Ng!Ke k''a
drink
||Ng!Ke kau
to rain
Batwa
k''a
drink
|Auni
k''a
drink
Masarwa k''a
drink
|Nu||en k''a
drink
Nyimang kwe
water
So
kwe?
Water
Ik
cue
water
Mangbetu equo
water
Berta
k)I
rain, cloud
Kwama
uuku
water
Anej
agu-d
cloud
Latin
ak(w)a
water
Hittite eku
water
Luwian aku
water
Palaic ahu
drink
Italian akkwa
drink
Provencal aiga
water
Catalan aigwa
water
Spanish agwa
water
Portuguese aqwa
water
Rumanian ape
water
Sardinian abba
water
Germanic ahwa
river old Germanic manuscripts-modern German lost root
Tocharian yok
drink
Ainu
ku
drink
Japanese aka
bilge water
Chechen aq
suckle
Burushaski hagum
wet
Newari kwo
river
Khaling ku
water
Kachin k(h)u
water
Awyu
okho
water/river
syiagha okho
water
Yareba ogo
water
Yonggom oq
water
Ninggirum ok
water
Yurok
-'k(w)
suffix indicating movement on water
Quileute kwaya
water
Kwakwala yax
thin liquid
Bella Bella yug(w)a
rain
Snohomish q(w)a?
water
Squamish q(w)u
water
Squamish q(rw)et
wet
Nbisqualli ko
water
Nbisqualli okokwa
drink
Lkungen kwa
water
Lkungen q(w)aq(w)a?
water
Twana
q)?
water
Twana
yeq(rw)
wash
Shuswap kwo
water
Caddo
koko
water
Caddo
yoyakka
drink
Wichita kik'a
drink
Nass
ak(j)-s
water
Twsimshian aks
drink
Tsimshian yaks
wash
Takema ug(w)
drink
Siuslaw inq'aa
river
Nez Perce k'u
drink
Molale ?uquns
water
Klamath joq'
wash
N. Sahaptin -tkwa
go in water
Wintun wak'ai
creek
Wintun yuqa?
Wash
Rumsien uk
drink
Yokuts ?ukun
drink
Lake Miwok kiik
water
Saclan kiko
water
Miwok
kiky
water
Zuni
k'a
water
Zuni
k'I
become wet
Yuki
uk'
water
Chitmacha ?ak-
water
Atakapa ak
water
Chickasaw oka?
Water
Hitchiti uki
water
Tetontepec uu?k
drink
Zoque
?uhk
drink
Yucatec uk'
be thirsty
Yucatec yok-ha
river
Kekchi u?ka
drink
Chimariko aqa
water
Kashaya ?ahq(h)a
water
Kashaya q'o
drink
North Pomo ?ahk(h)a
water
North Pomo k'o
drink
SE Pomo xa
water
S. Pomo ?ahk(h)a
water
East Pomo xak(h)
wet
Shasta ?atta
water
Washo
asa
water
Karok
?as
water
Esselen asa(-nax)
water
Chumash aho
water
Seri
?ax
water
Seri
Kiihk
wet
Yuma
axa?
Water
Mohave aha
water
Yavapai ?aha?
water
Diegueno ?axa
water
Quinigua kwa
water
Tonkawa ?ax
water
Comecrudo ax
water
Tequistlatec l-axa?
Water
Otomi
nk'a
wet
Cuicatec ku?u
drink
Tewa
pokwin
lake
Tewa
kwan
rain
Chibchan-Paezan branch
Shiriana koa
drink
Chimila uk
drink
Binticua agan
drink
Allentiac aka
water
Iquito aqua
water
Quechua yaku
water
Quechua hoq'o
get wet
Aymara oqo
swallow
Mapudungu ko
water
Genneken iagup
water
Yamana aku
lake
Cubeo
oko
water
Bahukiwa oko
water
Bahukiwa uku-mi
he is drinking
Bahukiwa okobo
rain
Tucano axko
water
Erulia oxko
water rain
Barasano oko
water
Wanana ko
water
Yahuna okoa
rain
Auake
okoa
water river
Esmeralda kebi-axa
let's drink
Ayore
oxi?
Drink
Kabishana aku
water
Amniape aku
water
Wayoro uru
water
Mekens iki
water
Guarani aki
wet
Guarani I?u
drink
Kamayura ?akim
wet
Kamayura I?u
drink
Quitemo ako
water
Uaraicu waka
wash
Terena oko
rain
Chipaya ax
wash
Guana
uko
rain
Apurina iaka
wet
Amarakaeri iyako
lake
Witoto hoko
wash
Yagua
Xa
water
Taulipang ai?ku
wet
Macusi u-wuku
my drink
Macusi Aiku
wet
Waiwai woku
drink
Guachi euak
water
Caduveo yakip(a)
drink
Suhin
I-yoke
drink
Mayoruna waka
water
Mayoruna oakanu
drink
Culino Yaku
water
Culino waka
river
Amahuaco wakum
water
Amahuaco aiyaki
drink
Nocoman wakoja
river
Huarayo hakua
wash
Cavinena igi
drink
Bororo ku
drink
Koraveka ako
drink
Fulnio waka
lake
Caraja axu
lake
Kamakan kwa
drink
Palmas goi
water
Apucarana (n)goyo
water
Delbergia ng)yo
water
Apinage inko
water river
Crengez ko
water
Cayapo ngo
water
Cayapo ikon
drink
Chavante ko
water
Cherente ko
water
Chicriaba ku
water
Aponegicran waiko
drink
Suya
ikone
drink
1994), p. 107-115