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Mutually intelligible languages

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In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a property exhibited by two or more distinct languages when speakers of one or more of the languages can readily understand at least one or more of the other language(s) without intentional study or extraordinary effort. Mutual intelligibility can be asymmetric between the languages, with speakers of one understanding more of the other than speakers of the other understand of the first. It exists in differing degrees among many related or geographically proximate languages of the world, often in the context of a dialect continuum.

Intelligibility

For individuals to achieve moderate proficiency or understanding in a language (called L2) other than their mother tongue or first language (L1) typically requires considerable time and effort through study and/or practical application. However, for those many groups of languages displaying mutual intelligibility, namely, those, usually genetically related languages, similar to each other in grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, or other features, speakers of one language usually find it relatively easy to achieve some degree of understanding in the related language(s). Languages mutually intelligible but not genetically related may be creoles and parent languages, or geographically adjacent variants of two unrelated languages.

However, intelligibility among languages can vary between individuals or groups within a language population, according to their knowledge of various registers and vocabulary in their own language, their interest in or familiarity with other cultures, psycho-cognitive traits, and other factors.

Asymmetry

Asymmetries often exist in the natural mutual intelligibility between languages. For example, in the case of speakers of Spanish and Portuguese, Spanish-speakers almost universally report substantially greater difficulty in attempting to understand Portuguese (especially in spoken form) than is true of Portuguese-speakers attempting to understand Spanish.

Or to take another example: Icelandic speakers understand Swedish language much more easily than the other way round, because Icelandic has preserved several archaic features of Scandinavian languages that the other ones have lost.

Mutually intelligible languages or variants of one language?

According to some definitions, two or more languages that demonstrate a sufficiently high degree of mutual intelligibility should properly not be considered two distinct languages but, in fact, multiple variants of the same language. Conversely, it is sometimes the case that different varieties of what is considered the same language—according to popular belief, governmental stance, or historical convention—are not, in fact, mutually intelligible in practice. (For more on this, see Dialect, and Dialect continuum—as well as Diasystem and Diglossia for two closely related but distinct language forms.)

Selected list of mutually intelligible languages

Written and spoken forms

Indo-European

Austronesian

Dravidian

Tai-Kadai

Turkic

Oghuz Turkic

Finno-Ugric

Bantu

Afro-Asiatic

Spoken form only

Written form only

Sign languages

Selected list of related languages not mutually intelligible

Selected list of mutually intelligible languages now extinct

See also

 


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