-
17 votes
-
Ace Linguist: Dialect Dissection: ABBA
5 votes -
A very quick lesson on the southern accent
5 votes -
Dead as a doornail
3 votes -
Gender in Latin and beyond
3 votes -
Kempt, couth, ruth: On the disappearing antonyms of “grumpy” words
7 votes -
Why Koko the gorilla couldn't talk
13 votes -
Why we turn off autocaps and only write in lowercase online
12 votes -
Which language do you think is best?
I don’t think best necessarily needs to mean most useful. For example though English, Mandarin, and Spanish are widely spoken they all have their problems, for example the reliance of Chinese on...
I don’t think best necessarily needs to mean most useful. For example though English, Mandarin, and Spanish are widely spoken they all have their problems, for example the reliance of Chinese on non-phonetic logograms or English’s complete mess when it comes to spelling and vocabulary.
I’ve been learning some Dutch these past few days and have been enjoying it quite a bit. It’s got a lot of the Germanic roots I’m familiar with without the junk and inconsistencies that seem pervasive in English.
Korean also seems like a potentially interesting “objectively good” language to learn since I believe the writing system was invented relatively recently (1950s?) and is phonetic.
All that being said, that’s pretty much all I know about linguistics so I’d love to hear peoples input on language and what they enjoy.
13 votes -
What features would you add to languages?
If you had the option to add new features to your primary language, what would they be? Is there something from a foreign language you'd like to import to your primary language? A couple examples:...
If you had the option to add new features to your primary language, what would they be? Is there something from a foreign language you'd like to import to your primary language?
A couple examples:
- A prefix to indicate intensity or degree. BBS/early hacker jargon had terms like "k-rad" to mean 1000x (2^10?) as radical as "rad" without the prefix.
That Montessori preschool was t-cool but why would they think calling it "Hobbledehoy" was a good idea? - Making an indication of how confident you are in an a statement obligate and easy. I hedge all the time because I think it's important to convey, but it's clunky. We do a bit of that non-verbally but that doesn't translate to text, and has the other complications of non-verbal cues.
It would be nice if there was an established vocabulary to quickly convey things like "experienced first-hand, repeatedly", "99% certain", "I've heard but never looked into", etc. From there it would be nice if this was as required as the gender, in gendered languages.
12 votes - A prefix to indicate intensity or degree. BBS/early hacker jargon had terms like "k-rad" to mean 1000x (2^10?) as radical as "rad" without the prefix.
-
Why West Africa keeps inventing new scripts
3 votes -
The harmful ableist language you unknowingly use
24 votes -
Esperanto, the invented language that found a second life online
9 votes -
Ido: A reformed and simplified offspring of Esperanto
12 votes -
Birds: Surprisingly connected etymologies
5 votes -
Disney brought its streaming service to Iceland last year – the country's education minister has sent a letter of complaint over the lack of Icelandic dubbing and subtitling
5 votes -
The word "Robot" is a hundred years old this month
19 votes -
How to revive a dead language: Although it was the language of sacred texts and ritual, modern Hebrew wasn’t spoken in conversation till the late nineteenth century
10 votes -
I just got accepted to do a Master's degree!
I'm dead excited, and I just wanted to share somewhere! Since graduating from my Bachelor's I've been working in IT support, and it's slowly killing me. Progression is slow, the work is boring,...
I'm dead excited, and I just wanted to share somewhere!
Since graduating from my Bachelor's I've been working in IT support, and it's slowly killing me. Progression is slow, the work is boring, and at the end of the day all I have to show for my efforts is (hopefully) a slightly lower number of open tickets than at the start. It all feels incredibly pointless, and like I'm not making a difference in peoples' lives.I decided earlier this year to start looking into possible Master's degree programs, to help me enter a different field, and I'm happy to say that from next September I'll be returning to my alma mater to study Linguistics and English Language Teaching. From there, I'm hoping to go into teaching English as a foreign language, first abroad, and then to immigrants and refugees back here in the UK.
I'm super excited, and also a little nervous. I coasted through my Bachelor's and the past few years of my working life, so it'll be a shock to the system to have a proper workload again. I've got to get through the next 8 months or so first, but that will be easier knowing that I have something different and exciting waiting for me at the end of this particular career path. I'm desperately saving up as much money as I can to cover my living expenses for the year (I don't intend to work during my degree), which is another thing to feel nervous about.
But right now, I'm mostly just ecstatic, and wanted to share! In the interest of discussion, I'd love to hear about your experiences studying a Master's degree, and whether or not it helped you in your life after graduation.
25 votes -
How many languages are there?
5 votes -
What is the meaning of "Cheeki Breeki"?
3 votes -
Conlang Critic: Toki Pona
9 votes -
Conlang Critic: Lingwa de Planeta
4 votes -
Academics are really, really worried about their freedom
27 votes -
Which is "Bouba", and which is "Kiki"?
14 votes -
The subtle linguistics of polite white supremacy
11 votes -
Samfundssind – A word buried in the history books helped Danes mobilise during the pandemic, flattening the curve and lifting community spirit
9 votes -
How should I refer to you? | Review of “What's Your Pronoun?”, by Dennis Baron
8 votes -
How a climate crisis helped shape Norse mythology – a group of archaeologists, linguists and other experts have teamed up to analyse the inscriptions of the Rök Stone
9 votes -
Ə: The most common vowel sound in English
14 votes -
Abso-bloody-lutely: Expletive infixation
9 votes -
How Bernie Sanders answers a question
23 votes -
United Nations guidelines for gender-inclusive language in English
16 votes -
When artificial intelligence lost in translation is
9 votes -
If you could make any event(s) in history not happen, which one(s) would you pick?
I didn't know tildes has trending topics. I'd either pick the rise of the bolsheviks in Russia (You can replace them with the mensheviks, who wanted to abide by democracy.), The division of the...
I didn't know tildes has trending topics.
I'd either pick the rise of the bolsheviks in Russia (You can replace them with the mensheviks, who wanted to abide by democracy.), The division of the HRE (A united germany in 900CE would be very consequential.) And the rise of the hapsburgs in what would be Austria-Hungary, since it meshed a dozen linguistic groups together.
13 votes -
Sámi are the only officially recognised indigenous people in the EU and some of their languages are on the brink of extinction
12 votes -
Gwoyeu Romatzyh
6 votes -
Why do we move our hands when we talk?
7 votes -
Spirit scripts: Japan’s mysterious outcast alphabets
6 votes -
Why I'm possessive about apostrophes
13 votes -
A dialect dissection of Britney Spears
8 votes -
Moontrap: Target Earth, possibly the worst movie ever made
This is what you get when you search VUDU for free science fiction movies. The plot is banal enough. A spacecraft is discovered in Colorado that is 14,000 years old. A linguist and her lover are...
This is what you get when you search VUDU for free science fiction movies. The plot is banal enough. A spacecraft is discovered in Colorado that is 14,000 years old. A linguist and her lover are hired to read an inscription and then summarily paid and told to go home by the mysterious and unlikeable head of the project, Richard Kontral.
This description in no way does justice to how bad the script is. My first theory was that a rich father gave his fourteen year old son a chance to create a movie for his birthday present. But it's really just a low budget sequel to an obscure cult film called Moontrap.
The lead character, Scout, is played by Sarah Butler who evidently rose to wordly fame in I Spit on Your Grave. Every line that Scout says to the villain includes adolescent sexual insults. The villain is I believe a washed up actor from an old sitcom called The Nanny. This guy is really hard to watch, the acting is as bad as the script.
There's a scene of robots fighting that looks like it was choreographed with Rockem Sockem Robots, a toy from my childhood. If you're a collector of bad movies, this is a true gem.
It was tough to watch, but our free streaming was slim pickings that night. I wanted to watch Day of the Triffids a classic bad movie from the '60's , but got outvoted. At least that movie was based on an interesting SF novel by John Wyndham. Maybe tomorrow night.
5 votes -
Altaic: Rise and fall of a linguistic hypothesis
3 votes -
English is not normal: No, English isn’t uniquely vibrant or mighty or adaptable. But it really is weirder than pretty much every other language.
12 votes -
The language sounds that could exist, but don't
18 votes -
Wolof: A language of West Africa
5 votes -
‘Like’ isn’t a lazy linguistic filler – the English language snobs need to, like, pipe down
13 votes -
Community size matters when people create a new language
9 votes -
Study uncovers unusual method of communicating human concept of time
10 votes -
The birth of the semicolon
16 votes