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Humans couldn't pronounce 'f' and 'v' sounds before farming developed

By Alison George

14 March 2019

Students prepare a stew over an open fire at the stone age park near Albersdorf, Germany. Students of the University of Hamburg took on the roles of people from the stone age as part of one of their classes

“f” and “v” are relatively recent sounds

dpa picture alliance archive/Alamy

Human speech contains more than 2000 different sounds, from the ubiquitous 鈥渕鈥 and 鈥渁鈥 to the rare clicks of some southern African languages. But why are certain sounds more common than others? A ground-breaking, five-year investigation shows that diet-related changes in human bite led to new speech sounds that are now found in half the world鈥檚 languages.

More than 30 years ago, the linguist Charles Hockett noted that speech sounds called labiodentals, such as 鈥渇鈥 and 鈥渧鈥, were more common in the languages of societies that ate softer foods. Now a team of researchers led by Dami谩n Blasi at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, has pinpointed how and why this trend arose.

They found that the upper and lower incisors of ancient human adults were aligned, making it hard to produce labiodentals, which are formed by touching the lower lip to the upper teeth. Later, our jaws changed to an overbite structure, making it easier to produce such sounds.

The team showed that this change in bite correlated with the development of agriculture in the Neolithic period. Food became easier to chew at this point, which led to changes in human jaws and teeth: for instance, because it takes less pressure to chew softer, farmed foods, the .

Analyses of a language database also confirmed that there was a global change in the sound of world languages after the Neolithic era, with the use of 鈥渇鈥 and 鈥渧鈥 increasing dramatically in recent millennia. These sounds are still not found in the languages of many hunter-gatherer people today.

This research overturns the prevailing view that all human speech sounds were present when Homo sapiens evolved around 300,000聽years ago. 鈥淭he set of speech sounds we use has not necessarily remained stable since the emergence of our species, but rather the immense diversity of speech sounds that we find today is the product of a complex interplay of factors involving biological change and cultural evolution,鈥 said team member Steven Moran, a linguist at the University of Zurich, at a briefing about this study.

This new approach to studying language evolution is a game changer, says Sean Roberts at the University of Bristol, UK. 鈥淔or the first time, we can look at patterns in global data and spot new relationships between the way we speak and the way we live,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an exciting time to be a linguist.鈥

Science

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