Speculation on the "characteristics" of Proto-World is limited to
linguistic typology, i.e. the identification of universal features shared by all human languages, such as
grammar (in the sense of "fixed or preferred sequences of linguistic elements"), and
recursion, but beyond this, nothing is known of it.
Christopher Ehret hypothesized that Proto-Human had a very complex consonant system, including
clicks. A few linguists, such as
Merritt Ruhlen, have suggested the application of
mass comparison and
internal reconstruction (cf. Babaev 2008). Several linguists have attempted to reconstruct the language, while many others reject this as
fringe science.
Vocabulary Ruhlen tentatively traces several words back to the ancestral language, based on the occurrence of similar sound-and-meaning forms in languages across the globe. Bengtson and Ruhlen identify 27 "global etymologies". Based on these correspondences, Ruhlen By contrast,
Talmy Givón hypothesizes that Proto-Human had
SOV (subject-object-verb), based on the observation that many old languages (e.g.,
Sanskrit and
Latin) had dominant SOV, but the proportion of SVO has increased over time. On such a basis, it is suggested that human languages are shifting globally from the original SOV to the modern SVO. Givón bases his theory on the empirical claim that word-order change mostly results in SVO and never in SOV. Exploring Givón's idea in their 2011 paper,
Murray Gell-Mann and
Merritt Ruhlen stated that shifts to SOV are also attested. However, when these are excluded, the data indeed supported Givón's claim. The authors justified the exclusion by pointing out that the shift to SOV is unexceptionally a matter of borrowing the order from a neighboring language. Moreover, they argued that, since many languages have already changed to SVO, a new trend towards VSO and VOS ordering has arisen.
Harald Hammarström reanalysed the data. In contrast to such claims, he found that a shift to SOV is in every case the most common type, suggesting that there is, rather, an unchanged universal tendency towards SOV regardless of the way that languages change and that the relative increase of SVO is a historical effect of European colonialism. == Criticism ==