Search Results
November 20, 2014 @ 12:27 pm
· Filed under Language and culture
A visitor from another galaxy, or perhaps just from another century, would notice that civilized people these days are obsessed with the rate of vocabulary display as a symbol of social status. The latest symptom of this obsession is Matt Daniels, "The Largest Vocabulary in Hip Hop", May 2014: Literary elites love to rep Shakespeare’s vocabulary: across […]
Permalink
September 7, 2013 @ 6:26 am
· Filed under Language and the media
Jason Merchant sent me a link to this animation of Keith Chen's ideas about tense marking and future-orientation in financial and health behaviors:
Permalink
June 14, 2013 @ 8:19 am
· Filed under Language and culture
Caleb Everett, "Evidence for Direct Geographic Influences on Linguistic Sounds: The Case of Ejectives", PLoS ONE, 2013: We examined the geographic coordinates and elevations of 567 language locations represented in a worldwide phonetic database. Languages with phonemic ejective consonants were found to occur closer to inhabitable regions of high elevation, when contrasted to languages without […]
Permalink
February 25, 2013 @ 7:43 am
· Filed under Semantics
William James, The Principles of Psychology, 1890: [A]ny number of impressions, from any number of sensory sources, falling simultaneously on a mind WHICH HAS NOT YET EXPERIENCED THEM SEPARATELY, will fuse into a single undivided object for that mind. The law is that all things fuse that can fuse, and nothing separates except what must. […]
Permalink
January 30, 2013 @ 4:43 pm
· Filed under Ignorance of linguistics, Language and culture, Language exotification, Words words words
I recently wrote on Lingua Franca about my astonishment over Piotr Cichocki and Marcin Kilarski. In their paper "On 'Eskimo Words for Snow': The Life Cycle of a Linguistic Misconception" (Historiographia Linguistica 37, 2010, Pages 341-377), they mistook my 1989 humorous opinion column "The Great Eskimo Vocabulary Hoax" for a research paper, and bitterly attacked […]
Permalink
January 15, 2013 @ 8:28 am
· Filed under Language exotification, Linguistics in the news, Silliness, Snowclones
You just can't keep a bad idea down. And you just can't lift the level of bad science journalism up. David Robson of New Scientist, in a piece published in that pop science rag a couple of weeks ago (issue of 22/29 December 2012, p. 72; behind a pay wall) and now also published in the […]
Permalink
September 23, 2012 @ 11:51 am
· Filed under Language and politics, Rhetoric
A commenter on this post, "'All Japanese must be killed'", stated that he thought that the sentiments expressed were "a little extreme". How seriously should we take what appear to be calls for genocide against the Japanese people?
Permalink
September 16, 2012 @ 7:38 am
· Filed under Psychology of language
Doonesbury for Sept. 12: I'm probably the only Doonesbury reader who saw this strip in terms of variation in future time reference.
Permalink
June 16, 2012 @ 1:42 pm
· Filed under Language and culture, Multilingualism
I spent much of the past couple of weeks back in my childhood city of Montreal. It was an eventful time. Thousands of student demonstrators marched past the restaurant where I was having dinner, banging on pots and pans. The partial remains of a dismembered Chinese student were found not far from where my brother […]
Permalink
February 22, 2012 @ 2:29 pm
· Filed under Language and culture, Psychology of language, Sociolinguistics
Keith Chen's recent proposal that the grammar of tense marking in a language has a causal effect on future-oriented financial and health behaviors is too intriguing to resist talking about. In fact, it reminds me of the words of a prominent linguist who once announced during his talk: "The explanation in question is almost certain […]
Permalink
December 12, 2011 @ 10:44 am
· Filed under Language and culture, Language and the media, Lost in translation, Silliness, Snowclones
"As Eskimos do with snow," wrote Emma Brockes yesterday in a New York Times review of Alan Hollinghurst's new novel (and the hairs rose on the back of my neck as I saw those words), "the English see gradations of social inadequacy invisible to the rest of the world; Mr. Hollinghurst separates them with a […]
Permalink
December 7, 2011 @ 7:56 am
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
Permalink
October 6, 2011 @ 2:49 pm
· Filed under Ignorance of linguistics, Language and culture, Words words words
Non-linguists frequently ask me whether I am avidly watching "Fry's Planet Word", the new five-part BBC television series on language written and presented by Stephen Fry. (A bit of googling will probably find it for those outside the UK who can't access the BBC iPlayer; there are various illicit copies around, including some on YouTube.) […]
Permalink