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Origin of language
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=== Pidgins and creoles === {{Main|Creole language|pidgin}} [[Pidgin]]s are significantly simplified languages with only rudimentary grammar and a restricted vocabulary. In their early stage, pidgins mainly consist of nouns, verbs, and adjectives with few or no articles, prepositions, conjunctions or auxiliary verbs. Often the grammar has no fixed [[word order]] and the words have no [[inflection]].<ref name="Diamond1992">{{Cite book |last=Diamond |first=Jared M. |title=The third chimpanzee : the evolution and future of the human animal |publisher=HarperCollins |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-06-018307-3 |location=New York |pages=[https://archive.org/details/thirdchimpanzee00jare_0/page/141 141–167] |chapter=Bridges to human language |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/thirdchimpanzee00jare_0/page/141}}</ref> If contact is maintained between the groups speaking the pidgin for long periods of time, the pidgins may become more complex over many generations. If the children of one generation adopt the pidgin as their native language it develops into a [[creole language]], which becomes fixed and acquires a more complex grammar, with fixed phonology, syntax, morphology, and syntactic embedding. The syntax and morphology of such languages may often have local innovations not obviously derived from any of the parent languages. Studies of creole languages around the world have suggested that they display remarkable similarities in grammar{{Citation needed|date=December 2018}} and are developed uniformly from pidgins in a single generation. These similarities are apparent even when creoles do not have any common language origins. In addition, creoles are similar, despite being developed in isolation from each other. [[Language bioprogram theory|Syntactic similarities]] include [[subject–verb–object]] word order. Even when creoles are derived from languages with a different word order they often develop the SVO word order. Creoles tend to have similar usage patterns for definite and indefinite articles, and similar movement rules for phrase structures even when the parent languages do not.<ref name="Diamond1992" />
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