Lexicostatistics
Lexicostatistics is a quantitative method in historical linguistics that gauges how closely two or more languages are genealogically related by measuring the percentage of cognates they share within a fixed list of basic, culture-neutral vocabulary — classically Morris Swadesh's 100- or 200-word list. By converting word comparisons into similarity percentages, it produces a matrix of pairwise scores from which subgroupings within a language family can be inferred. It is the statistical core that underlies glottochronology, but on its own it makes no claim about absolute dates — it speaks only to degree of relatedness.
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出典
- Swadesh, M. (1952). Lexico-statistic dating of prehistoric ethnic contacts. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 96(4), 452–463. link ↗
- Campbell, L. (2013). Historical Linguistics: An Introduction (3rd ed.). Edinburgh University Press. ISBN: 9780748675593
このページの引用方法
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Lexicostatistics. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ja/linguistics/lexicostatistics
どの手法を選ぶ?
この手法を最も近い類縁の手法と並べ、両者を見比べてください — ライブラリは本を机の上に並べるだけ。選ぶのはあなたです。
- 比較言語学的方法言語学↔ 比較
- Comparative Method (Historical Linguistics)言語学↔ 比較
- Glottochronology (Lexical Dating)言語学↔ 比較
- Phylogenetic Linguistics言語学↔ 比較