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5 votes
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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 -
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 -
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 -
Why I'm possessive about apostrophes
13 votes -
Spirit scripts: Japan’s mysterious outcast alphabets
6 votes -
A dialect dissection of Britney Spears
8 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 -
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 -
Why are there so many different types of “R”?
9 votes -
Study finds positive bias in human languages
4 votes -
Anyone here into conlanging?
I've been creating new languages for a few years now. I like to do it in my spare time, which becomes smaller and smaller each year, mostly from proto-languages that already exist. I'm currently...
I've been creating new languages for a few years now. I like to do it in my spare time, which becomes smaller and smaller each year, mostly from proto-languages that already exist. I'm currently working on a Slavic language in Belarus and Ukraine for fun. Anyone else into this stuff or wanna know more about conlanging in general?
25 votes -
Why do people say "Jesus H. Christ," and where did the "H" come from?
38 votes -
How language governs our perceptions of gender
3 votes -
Language wars: The nineteen greatest linguistic spats of all time
10 votes -
Origin of Sino-Tibetan language family revealed by new research
8 votes -
Why is English spelling so damn weird?
8 votes -
Guam starts new effort to save dying CHamoru language
7 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 -
Hearing hate speech primes your brain for hateful actions
11 votes -
Noam Chomsky & Michel Foucault - On human nature
5 votes -
Why White people don't use White emoji: Does shame explain the disparity in the lesser use of light-skin-tone symbols in the US?
18 votes -
Emoji don't mean what they used to - The pictorial language has moved away from ideography and toward illustration
23 votes -
Lets get rid of the apostrophe
15 votes -
Learning English from the ground up
There was a recent thread on ~talk about which linguistics habits people find annoying, and much to my horror, I have most of those which were mentioned. After thinking about it a little more, I...
There was a recent thread on ~talk about which linguistics habits people find annoying, and much to my horror, I have most of those which were mentioned. After thinking about it a little more, I realized that a lot of these habits were picked up from the media I consume and the people I interact with. I also feel that this problem is exacerbated by my poor knowledge of English grammar.
While I was taught grammar at an elementary level in school, I didn't quite grok it back then, and mostly relied on my instinct, as to what "sounded" right. I have since forgotten most of what I had learnt, and my instinct is failing me - my grammar is atrocious, my punctuation is terrible and I only have auto-correct to thank for my spelling.
I understand that English, like other languages, is constantly evolving. What is wrong now might be right tomorrow. However, I believe that this is no excuse for my shortcomings as there is merit speaking and writing in accordance with what is considered correct in the present day.
I would like to learn English from "first principles", and would greatly appreciate if some users could suggest some books/resources which could help me (bonus points for resources pertaining to British English). Any other suggestions would also be great.
Thanks, and have a nice day.
24 votes -
The mysterious origins of punctuation
15 votes -
Punctuation that failed to make its mark
18 votes -
A debate over the word for ‘grandmother’ in China exposes a linguistic and political rift
8 votes -
Investigating the potential for miscommunication using emoji
5 votes -
Koko, the beloved gorilla that learned to communicate using sign language, has died
15 votes