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April 27, 2020 @ 5:06 am
· Filed under Language and politics, Language and society, Language and the law, Language and the media
In Chinese media, we often encounter exhortations to wénmíng xíngwéi 文明行为 ("civilized behavior"), but in this article, they've really gone over the top in promoting it: "Běijīng wénmíng cùjìn tiáolì tōngguò tíchàng zhèxiē wénmíng xíngwéi 北京文明促进条例通过 提倡这些文明行为" ("Beijing passes regulations for the advancement of civilization; for the promotion of these [types of] civilized behavior"), people.com (4/24/20) […]
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April 1, 2020 @ 7:30 am
· Filed under Etymology, Evolution of language, Language and culture
[This is a guest post by Pamela Crossley] I was recently doing something with my old undergraduate major, Old English, and was reminded of the word Salmonath (Solmonath), which put me in mind of this old conversation on your blog: "Mud season in Russia: Putin, Rasputin" (3/31/18) So you’ll like this one. Like the others […]
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March 16, 2020 @ 3:57 am
· Filed under Etymology, Language and medicine, Language and music, Names
In recent days, the famous aria from the final act of Giacomo Puccini's opera Turandot, "Nessun dorma" (Italian: [nesˌsun ˈdɔrma]; English: "Let no one sleep"), has surfaced as part of a worldwide movement to encourage the Italian people in their struggle against the novel coronavirus (see here, here, and here). This article by Claudia Rosett […]
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February 10, 2020 @ 8:50 pm
· Filed under Alphabets, Writing systems
Just coming across this now: Report from The Siberian Times (7/4/18), "Boy, 11, finds ‘1,000 year old message’ written in runes on pendant made of mammoth bone":
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November 9, 2019 @ 7:37 am
· Filed under Borrowing, Etymology, Historical linguistics, Language and animals, Language and history, Language and religion, Language and the military
This is one in a long series of posts about words for "horse" in various languages, the latest being "Some Mongolian words for 'horse'" (11/7/19) — see also the posts listed under Readings below. I consider "horse" to be one of the most important diagnostic terms for studying long distance movements of peoples and languages […]
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October 17, 2019 @ 6:22 pm
· Filed under Language and politics
Did Donald Trump call Nancy Pelosi a "third rate politician" or a "third grade politician"? This question has come up in the mass media recently, and we discussed some phonetic aspects of the question earlier today. Based on a quick corpus study, I conclude that the probabilities strongly favor "third rate".
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August 24, 2019 @ 12:19 pm
· Filed under Language and politics
Isaac Chotiner, "A Penn Law Professor Wants to Make America White Again", The New Yorker 8/23/2019: Amy Wax, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, is the academic who perhaps best represents the ideology of the Trump Administration’s immigration restrictionists. Wax, who began her professional life as a neurologist, and who served in […]
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June 7, 2019 @ 7:07 am
· Filed under Alphabets, Historical linguistics, Language and history, Writing
[Update by Mark Liberman: Knowledgeable commenters have serious objections to the content of this guest post (e.g. John McWhorter, Sally Thomason), and others cite apparently racist content and publication location in other writings by John Day (e.g. Suzanne Kemmerer, Jamie). It was a serious mistake to have given this work a platform on this blog, […]
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May 6, 2019 @ 4:40 pm
· Filed under Classification, Language and culture, Language and tourism, Signs, Writing, Writing systems
A friend was visiting in Lijiang, Yunnan Province (southwestern China) earlier this week. She stayed in Yuhu 玉湖 village where Joseph Rock (1884-1962; the famous Austrian-American explorer, geographer, linguist, and botanist) lived nearly a century ago at the foot of Yulong 玉龙 Mountain. The area around Lijiang has become a famous tourist destination, not only for the beauty of […]
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April 21, 2019 @ 7:01 pm
· Filed under Borrowing, Historical linguistics, Language and archeology, Language and biology, Language and culture, Language and history, Phonetics and phonology, Reconstructions
This post was prompted by the following comment to "The emergence of Germanic" (2/27/19): …while riding horses _in battle_ is post-Bronze Age (and perhaps of questionable worth at any time), I think riding in general is older, and probably (assuming the usual dating of PIE) common Indo-European. The domesticated horse, the chariot, and the wheel […]
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March 18, 2019 @ 9:34 pm
· Filed under Bilingualism, Diglossia and digraphia, Language and politics, Language teaching and learning, Names, Pronunciation
During the last few days, there has been a huge furor over this sentence spoken publicly by the Mayor of Kaohsiung City, Han Kuo-yu (Daniel Han): "Mǎlìyà yīxiàzi zuò wǒmen Yīngwén lǎoshī 瑪莉亞一下子做我們英文老師" ("Maria suddenly becomes our English teacher") Newspaper articles describing the incident, which is now being referred to as the "'Mǎlìyà' shìjiàn「瑪麗亞」事件" ("'Maria' […]
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March 9, 2019 @ 9:40 am
· Filed under Bilingualism, Language and gender, Language play, Writing systems
Tong Wang ran into this picture today in Beijing:
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February 11, 2019 @ 8:08 am
· Filed under Errors, Writing, Writing systems
Emma Knightley asks: My background is that I grew up in Taiwan learning Traditional Chinese and now most of what I use in my professional life is in Simplified Chinese. How exactly should the character of hē, "to drink," be written? I grew up learning that the character inside the bottom-right enclosure is 人. Now […]
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