Glottochronology (from Attic Greek 'tongue, language' and 'time') is the part of lexicostatistics which involves comparative linguistics and deals with the chronological relationship between languages.
Glottochronology (from Attic Greek 'tongue, language' and 'time') is the part of lexicostatistics which involves comparative linguistics and deals with the chronological relationship between languages.
The idea was developed by Morris Swadesh in the 1950s in his article on Salish internal relationships. He developed the idea under two assumptions: there indeed exists a relatively stable basic vocabulary (referred to as Swadesh lists) in all languages of the world; and, any replacements happen in a way analogous to radioactive decay in a constant percentage per time elapsed. Using mathematics and statistics, Swadesh developed an equation to determine when languages separated and give an approximate time of when the separation occurred. His methods aimed to aid linguistic anthropologists by giving them a definitive way to determine a separation date between two languages. The formula provides an approximate number of centuries since two languages were supposed to have separated from a singular common ancestor. His methods also purported to provide information on when ancient languages may have existed.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).