zompist wrote:Not a Lexipedia reader, I guess.
I guess not. Let me google that and see what I missed
zompist wrote:Kind of a provincial way to put it. Statistically, less familiar languages will always have exotic features-- no matter which languages are familiar. If there are 5000 languages, only 50 of which are well known, then any feature not found in those 50 languages will be exotic. (Plus of course the well-known languages influence each other; the less-well-known ones influence only their neighbors.)
Well, that's not exactly what I mean. And I mentioned about the scientific research about this property. So don't blame me

Let me try to give a short overview of what was written (as I remember it) - if there are very many speakers of a certain language and it is spread over the large area (as any major natural language) it tends to lose its complexity and settle on "average" level of complexity for grammar. Especially if it is influenced by other languages.
BUT, if some relatively small tribe (like not more than several thousands speakers) is isolated from the rest of the world and not influenced by other languages it tends to develop some very complex concepts in its grammar. That's what I read.
But either way, that's not what I wanted to discuss as this is quite a broad topic. I was more interested in geographical directions in languages as was described in the article
