Na minha lista:
| Autor principal: | |
|---|---|
| Formato: | Recurso digital |
| Idioma: | |
| Publicado em: |
Zenodo
2026
|
| Acesso em linha: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18607129 |
| Tags: |
Adicionar Tag
Sem tags, seja o primeiro a adicionar uma tag!
|
Sumário:
- <p><span>This chapter develops the primordial resonance of the sound “GOW” as one of the earliest acoustic structures shaping human action, movement, and expansion. What may have begun as a bark, a warning, or a guttural signal of alertness gradually transformed into a phonetic seed for one of the most fundamental verbs in human language: “go.”</span></p> <p><span>“GOW” stands at the threshold between instinct and intention. It is the moment when a raw sound becomes direction, when a cry of response becomes a command to move. From this core impulse emerge not only “go” and “got,” but broader constellations of meaning—good, gold, god, grow—each reflecting stages of acquisition, valuation, authority, and expansion.</span></p> <p><span>This chapter does not treat “GOW” as a fixed lexical unit, but as a dynamic acoustic nucleus. It traces how a primal sound associated with survival and coordination evolved into linguistic structures that organize space, power, growth, and collective identity. In doing so, it continues the larger inquiry of The Primordial Echoes of Language: that language remembers what history forgets, and that even the simplest verbs may carry within them the memory of early human thresholds.</span></p> <p><span>Through ecological, evolutionary, and cross-linguistic analysis, GOW reveals how movement became meaning—and how the act of going shaped the architecture of civilization itself.</span></p>