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There seems to really be a very minor difference between analytic and isolating languages. A lot of the time I just don't see isolating used at all but analytic used instead. Generally I also see Mandarin Chinese referred to as analytic, but once I saw it called isolating. What's the difference? Are they just synonyms?

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    I doubt there's a uniform answer to this - I think I recall reading that Mandarin is isolating but not analytic, analytic but not isolating, as well as both analytic and isolating... The non-uniformity of the use of technical terminology is why it's so important to define your terms when you write about linguistics. Commented May 31, 2017 at 15:21
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    The linked question doesn't seem to be a duplicate of this one - this one is on the difference between isolating and analytic. (jlawler's comment is helpful for clarifying matters about this question though.) Commented May 31, 2017 at 16:55

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Sapir (1921) is the more commonly cited source about this issue, and he sets up two typologies

  • Analytic/Synthetic/Polysynthetic: These refer to the degree to which different parts of a sentence are fused together to form single words.

  • Isolating/Affixal(Agglutinative+Fusional)/Symbolic: These refer to the techniques used for encoding grammatical information. From Sapir:

Those languages that always identify the word with the radical element would be set off as an “isolating” group against such as either affix modifying elements (affixing languages) or possess the power to change the significance of the radical element by internal changes (reduplication; vocalic and consonantal change; changes in quantity, stress, and pitch). The latter type might be not inaptly termed “symbolic” languages. ... We may designate the two types of affixing as “fusing” and “juxtaposing.” The juxtaposing technique we may call an “agglutinative” one, if we like.

So French is considered an analytic language because various parts of the sentences are cut up into words, but it is also considered a fusional language (not an isolating language!) because we use fusional affixes (e.g. ils chant-ent, 3pl sing-3spl) to express information. Mandarin is both isolating and analytic.

However, note that in recent years, there is less focus on putting languages into (somewhat arbitrary) macro categories like these, and instead there is more interest in looking at the typology of particular constructions, so one hears quite frequently about the analyticity and syntheticity of particular constructions.

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