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6 votes
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How Cape Town’s “Gayle” has endured – and been adopted by straight people
3 votes -
Esperanto superfans won’t rest until they’ve achieved world domination
14 votes -
The Voynich Manuscript may have successfully been decoded
18 votes -
Origin of Sino-Tibetan language family revealed by new research
8 votes -
Why is English spelling so damn weird?
8 votes -
I'm working on an app for learning Chinese, anyone interested in helping me test it?
13 votes -
Lau Noah - El Jardinero | Night Owl S4 • E12 (2019)
2 votes -
Yukika (유키카) - Neon (네온) (2019)
5 votes -
10 things I learned about ancient China from studying Chinese characters
11 votes -
Behemoth, bully, thief: How the English language is taking over the planet
9 votes -
Google releases fifty-three gender fluid emoji
16 votes -
Evolution: How the theory is inspiring a new way of understanding language
5 votes -
Yowza! Scrabble adds bae, fleek, mansplain and thousands more words to dictionary
7 votes -
Movie scenes recreated with 'sexiest' New Zealand accent
7 votes -
For Japanese, family names are the worst growing pains
21 votes -
Learning my father’s language: I made a vow to teach myself Irish, the language my mother struggled to learn, so that my daughters may learn it too
6 votes -
Dictionaries recently added more than 1,500 words. Here are some new entries.
7 votes -
No Spanish allowed: Texas school museum revisits history of segregation
8 votes -
Synthetic speech generated from brain recordings
5 votes -
Guam starts new effort to save dying CHamoru language
7 votes -
New place names lift Māori culture in New Zealand’s capital
8 votes -
Clouseau - Oker (Ochre) (1995)
5 votes -
Faber - Alles Gute (All The Best) (2015)
4 votes -
Lau Noah - La Belleza | Night Owl S4 • E6 (2019)
2 votes -
The more names change, the more they sound the same
6 votes -
Muon: a modern low-level programming language
5 votes -
Linguists found the weirdest languages – and English is one of them
16 votes -
Melody's Echo Chamber - Quand Vas Tu Rentrer ? (2012)
5 votes -
Reol - 激白 (Confession) [Live at MADE IN FACTION Tokyo] (2019)
6 votes -
'We need to keep our language alive': Inside a Uyghur bookshop in Istanbul
10 votes -
Weekly Language Exchange Thread, Week 2019-W15 (experimental)
It is Wednesday, my dudes! So why not have some good old foreign-language practice? As an experiment, let's try just that. Start a thread in a language you would like to practice or teach, or...
It is Wednesday, my dudes! So why not have some good old foreign-language practice? As an
experiment, let's try just that. Start a thread in a language you would like to practice or teach,
or reply to an existing one. E.g.## German / Deutsch Hier sprechen wir Deutsch! Wie geht es Ihnen?
If you want to fix someone's grammar and also reply to them in the same message, I would recommend
using a horizontal ruler with “* * *”. E.g.:I think “sich” should be “ihm”. * * * Es tut mir Leid, dass es ihm so schlecht geht.
11 votes -
Daisuke Tobari - Untitled (2000)
4 votes -
What is the ‘-ling’ in darling? (And what is the ‘dar-’ for that matter?)
13 votes -
Should we stop using the word 'cyclist'?
6 votes -
The Anger of Achilles
6 votes -
How British Sign Language developed its own dialects
4 votes -
Aline Frazão - Manazinha (2018)
3 votes -
Learn German with an interactive fantasy adventure story
3 votes -
Oi! We’re not lazy yarners, so let’s kill the cringe and love our Aussie accent(s).
5 votes -
Human sound systems are shaped by post-Neolithic changes in bite configuration
4 votes -
Fallacy of "Just because _ doesn't mean _"
I see this a lot on the internet these days. The phrase "just because [some agreed-upon statement], it doesn't mean that [contested statement]." That's fine when used correctly, but I've seen a...
I see this a lot on the internet these days. The phrase "just because [some agreed-upon statement], it doesn't mean that [contested statement]."
That's fine when used correctly, but I've seen a lot of cases where it's used in a questionable way and people just jump on board with the phrase anyway.
I saw it again today in a conversation about video games, and one game in particular that everybody loves to hate. Someone said "I enjoy this game though," and someone else said "Just because you enjoy a game doesn't mean it's good."
Now, the impulse is to agree with the second statement because agreeing that there might be hidden subtlety in a matter is almost always safe, and nearly everyone involved in the conversation upvoted/reacted positively to that statement.
But the statement was really used to say "your opinion is wrong because there might be hidden subtleties that make me right," which seems like a fallacious position to me, or at least a pretty meaningless one. And when you stop to think about what was said, you realize that in fact, enjoying a video game might indeed be the most important, if not the only, metric in assessing its quality.
But the inclination to agree with anyone using the "just because, doesn't mean" format is definitely there I think. I'm not sure if that falls under the category of some other identifiable fallacy or not, but I thought I'd see what others thought.
8 votes -
Programmer migration patterns
9 votes -
Are you a purist or evolutionist? What your language 'pet peeve' reveals about you
6 votes -
The art of biblical translation, part two: Modern translators and their tin-ear to the literature of the Hebrew Bible
8 votes -
Trying to switch from Literature to Linguistics: similar experience and/or advices?
Hi! I've recently graduated as a BA of Italian philology. But I am interested in pursuing my further studies and academical career in linguistics, studying language contact and linguistic strata...
Hi! I've recently graduated as a BA of Italian philology. But I am interested in pursuing my further studies and academical career in linguistics, studying language contact and linguistic strata in particular. I was wondering if anybody took a similar path and am interested in advice from such folks and also any other humanists here. I'm studying some online material and will try to partecipate in some local university's linguistics BA as a visiting student (I guess it's called a freemover in English) if I can find an affordable option. Also I have found out recommended reading material from local universities I'm interested in and some papers about my field. Do you know of any useful resources for making the transition smoother? What has been you experience if you've taken a similar path to your studies? Thanks in advance!
6 votes -
The art of biblical translation, part one: On the eloquence of the King James Version
5 votes -
Why 'ji32k7au4a83' is a remarkably common password
57 votes -
Hearing hate speech primes your brain for hateful actions
11 votes -
Brain-imaging modern people making Stone Age tools hints at evolution of human intelligence
6 votes