Search Results
September 28, 2018 @ 7:45 am
· Filed under Language and the media
Mike Ives, "Charles Kao, Nobel Laureate Who Revolutionized Fiber Optics, Dies at 84", NYT 9/24/2018 [emphasis added]: Working in Britain in the late 1960s, Dr. Kao and a colleague played a crucial role in discovering that the fiber optic cables in use at the time were limited by impurities in their glass. They also outlined […]
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September 28, 2018 @ 6:39 am
· Filed under Language and culture, Language and gender
Madeleine Ngo, "Penn's physics department has started listing gender pronouns on its website", The Daily Pennsylvanian 9/26/2018: Penn's Physics and Astronomy Department now lists gender pronouns on its website for some of its student, faculty, and staff members in an effort to combat stigma, encourage respectful communication, and promote the department's inclusivity. The Diversity and […]
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September 26, 2018 @ 9:19 am
· Filed under Names, Spelling
Eoin Cullen wrote in: I recently learnt that although Taipei たいぺい is generally used as the Japanese reading for Taipei 台北, NHK still uses the colonial form Taihoku たいほく. Is this still true in 2018? Why would the national broadcaster persist in using an archaic term? To me, it seems it would be comparable to the […]
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September 24, 2018 @ 12:32 pm
· Filed under Syntax
Today's nomination for the Trent Reznor Prize for Tricky Embedding: It's safe to believe the people the people you believe are smart believe are smart are smart, but not safe to trust the people the people you trust trust. — Paul Graham (@paulg) September 23, 2018 Other examples here. [h/t Ben Zimmer]
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September 24, 2018 @ 12:05 pm
· Filed under Lost in translation
I found this by chance while surfing on Pinterest:
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September 24, 2018 @ 12:03 pm
· Filed under Lost in translation
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September 23, 2018 @ 12:37 pm
· Filed under Lost in translation
Adrian Bailey sent in this Yemeni restaurant menu from @wokeeth's Twitter account: My mum just sent me this pic of a Yemeni restaurant menu. Come read the translations pls. pic.twitter.com/2vSgTJmIi1 — 🎈🤫 (@wokeeth) August 24, 2018
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September 22, 2018 @ 12:51 pm
· Filed under Borrowing, Language and food
When I was in Hamburg, Germany a few months ago, I was pleasantly surprised to come upon a pastry shop that sold egg tarts warm out of the oven. They were just divine! I think they were called pastéis de nata from the term used for them in Portugal, which seems to be the homeland […]
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September 22, 2018 @ 7:37 am
· Filed under Rhetoric
Following up on Kai von Fintel's post "Nurses say yes and no" — the (mis-)interpretation of generic plurals has been a frequent topic here. "Generic comparisons", 11/7/2011, surveys some of this material, starting from a presentation by Sarah-Jane Leslie of her work in "Do all ducks lay eggs? The generic overgeneralization effect", Journal of Memory […]
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September 21, 2018 @ 12:29 pm
· Filed under Language and politics, Semantics
Question #1 on this November’s ballot in Massachusetts concerns a proposed law to limit the number of patients that can be assigned to a nurse at any one time. More than $15 million dollars have already been spent on campaigning about this question. Lawn signs on both sides of the debate abound in the state: […]
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September 21, 2018 @ 12:19 am
· Filed under Language and culture, Language and fashion, Language and literature
Thorin Engeseth sent in these two photographs of a Zara brand shirt that his wife bought yesterday:
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September 20, 2018 @ 7:18 am
· Filed under Linguistics in the comics
Today's xkcd: Mouseover title: "Cauchy-Lorentz: "Something alarmingly mathematical is happening, and you should probably pause to Google my name and check what field I originally worked in.""
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September 19, 2018 @ 9:19 am
· Filed under Psychology of language
One piece of the "Boston diagnostic aphasia examination" is a picture description task, for which a standard stimulus is the line drawing shown below on the left: For one example of how such descriptions can be used, see Naomi Nevler et al., "Automatic measurement of prosody in behavioral variant FTD", 2017. Because it's a standard […]
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