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taylorwardwell15

The Tangled Roots of English - 0 views

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    Researches might be closer to discovering the root of English. They discuss new theories and evidence.
Lisa Stewart

Appendix:List of Proto-Indo-European roots - Wiktionary - 2 views

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    list of proto-indo-european roots (stone age language)
kourtneykwok20

Latin may help students bridge their native language with English -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

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    This article describes how knowing Latin roots can be beneficial to English learners. Essentially, researchers found that Latin roots help Spanish speaking students learn English by finding connections between certain words.
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    This article is about how researchers have found that in teaching students who are trying to learn English the Latin roots of words, it has helped them figure out the meaning of unfamiliar words.
kellyyoshida18

How Brains See Music as Language - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    The brains of jazz musicians who are engaged with other musicians in spontaneous improvisation show robust activation in the same brain areas traditionally associated with spoken language and syntax. In other words, improvisational jazz conversations "take root in the brain as a language"
Ryan Catalani

Futurity.org - Human speech is music to our ears - 7 views

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    "Humans may love music, biologically speaking, because it mimics the sounds of our own voices. Neuroscientists say the use of 12 tone intervals in the music of many human cultures is rooted in the physics of how our vocal anatomy produces speech and conveys emotion." The study: http://purveslab.net/publications/bowling_purves_2009.pdf
Lisa Stewart

Language Log » Flew v. Flied - 1 views

  • Could it be that there's a recent shift in the direction of de-regularization?
  • Could it be that there's a recent shift in the direction of de-regularization?
  • "Three batters later, the bases were loaded for Derek Jeter, but he flew out harmlessly to right field", and commented: I watched the game on tv and I can tell you that Derek's feet stayed firmly rooted on the ground.
mikahmatsuda17

Smile, You're Speaking Emoji: The Rapid Evolution of a Wordless Tongue - 1 views

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    Decoding pictures as part of communication has been at the root of written language since there was such a thing as written language. "What is virtually certain," writes Andrew Robinson in Writing and Script: A Very Short Introduction, is "that the first written symbols began life as pictures." Pictograms-i.e., pictures of actual things, like a drawing of the sun-were the very first elements of written communication, found in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and China. From pictograms, which are literal representations, we moved to logograms, which are symbols that stand in for a word ($, for example) and ideograms, which are pictures or symbols that represent an idea or abstract concept. Emoji can somewhat magically function as pictograms and ideograms at the same time.
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    emojis were born from a man named Shigetaka Kurita back in the late 1990s. They came up with emojis as a way to appeal to teens. Emoji which is a japanese neologism means "picture word". A bunch of different emojis can actually be traced back to some Japanese custom or tradition.
Lara Cowell

Can Latin Help Younger Students Build Vocabulary? - 4 views

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    According to Timothy Rasinski, a literacy education professor at Kent State, teaching young students about morphology (the study of word forms) and word patterns improves their ability to gain meaning from unfamiliar words, which helps with reading overall.
Lara Cowell

Sign language in the US has its own 'accents' - 2 views

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    People in Philadelphia speak with a distinctive Philly accent, and those who converse in sign language are no different. The area is known for having one of the most distinctive regional sign language accents, and two researchers based at the University of Pennsylvania are trying to figure out why. In sign language, an accent is apparent in how words are signed differently-it's a lexical difference, similar to how some Americans say "pop" while others say "soda," explains Meredith Tamminga, one of the professors conducting the research. Some possible reasons: the first sign language teacher in the United States and the person who founded the first Philadelphia school for the deaf, Laurent Clerc, was a Frenchman. Many Philadelphia deaf signers were educated at the school, and moreover, remained geographically stable, limiting their exposure to signers who used conventional ASL. While ASL has evolved to a distinctive American sign language over time, the Philadelphia version maintains more of its French roots.
Parker Tuttle

Unique dialects of Appalachia give the mountain people their identity - 2 views

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    When trying to define the roots of Appalachian mountain language, to make sweeping generalizations more often than not sacrifices accuracy. Since pioneers from virtually all parts of Europe made the trek to the mountains to settle, folks can drive an hour in any direction and find themselves scratching their heads at how different the local lingo is from one mountain hollow to the next.
Ryan Catalani

The largest whorfian study EVER! (and why it matters) - 0 views

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    Examining the results and methodology of a large Whorfian study (17 languages), which tested differences if there are differences in cognition between speakers of verb-frame languages (like Spanish, if the "Path is characteristically represented in the main verb or verb root of a sentence") and satellite-frame languages (like English, if the path is "characteristically represented in the satellite and/or preposition"). Important conclusion regarding study methodology: "Strong claims regarding the (in)validity of the Whorfian hypothesis in the encoding of motion events cannot be made on the basis of a limited number of languages or a restricted range of manner and path contrasts." They could have reached opposite conclusions if they only compared certain language pairs.  This is made in contrast with studies by, e.g., Boroditsky, which had relatively small sample sizes.
Ryan Catalani

In Search of Music's Biological Roots - 3 views

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    For both English and Mandarin speakers, the major formants in vowel sounds paralleled the intervals for the most commonly used intervals in music worldwide, namely the octave, the fifth, the fourth, the major third, and the major sixth. To Purves, the upshot is a simple truth: "There's a biological basis for music, and that biological basis is the similarity between music and speech," he says. "That's the reason that we like music." "Whenever we've heard happy speech, we've tended to hear major-scale tonal ratios," Purves says. "Whenever we've heard sad speech, minor tones tend to be involved."
Lisa Stewart

Pokorny Root Index - 1 views

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    each consonant and vowel sound from proto-Indo-European (links from each letter take you to all the traceable words)
Rachel Rosenfeld

Do I Sound Gay? - 1 views

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    There are many ways that we can express our identities. We can alter the way we look, the things we're interested in, the way we dress. But one thing we're pretty much stuck with is our voice. Sure the words coming from our mouths can be tailored to a situation or a desired persona, but the actual sound of our voice is difficult to change. For writer David Thorpe, the sound of his own voice always had him contemplating the same question: "Do I sound gay?" However, his wasn't simply an inquisitive statement; it was an expression of dissatisfaction that he had a gay voice, even though he was openly gay. Using his own struggle with his identity as the common thread, he consults linguists who illuminate the mechanical traits of gay speech and attribute this common characteristic to a strong feminine influence in the early lives of gay men.
nikkirousslang15

American Political Jargon - QuickTake - 2 views

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    The grass roots are at war with astroturf . Yellow Dog Democrats become boll weevils and then Blue Dogs. Beltway bandits troll Pennsylvania Avenue in search of earmarks and extenders . Say what? Every subculture has its lingo, but few add secret code faster than the American political class.
jtamanaha15

Japanese Language History and Facts | Today Translations London, UK - 0 views

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    From "karate" to "karaoke", from "adzuki beans" to "Zen Buddhism", Japanese language has been exporting oriental traditions to the Western culture for decades. Some come and go as fads (bringing up a "Tamagotchi"); some take root ("bonsai") and spread. Breeding giant fish ("koi") or eating raw fish with rice ("sushi"), Japanese is ubiquitous nowadays.
Samantha Pang

How Brains See Music as Language - 4 views

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    Article reports on the research of Dr. Charles Limb, of Johns Hopkins. Through fMRI, Limb found the brains of jazz musicians engaged with other musicians in spontaneous improvisation show robust activation in the same brain areas traditionally associated with spoken language and syntax. In other words, improvisational jazz conversations "take root in the brain as a language," Limb said. However, the areas of the brain associated with meaning are not activated.
maiyasmith13

The Bilingual Advantage - 13 views

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    An interview with Ellen Bialystok, a cognitive neuroscientist, about the advantages of being bilingual.
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    A cognitive neuroscientist, Ellen Bialystok has spent almost 40 years learning about how bilingualism sharpens the mind. Her good news: Among other benefits, the regular use of two languages appears to delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease symptoms. Dr. Bialystok, 62, a distinguished research professor of psychology at York University in Toronto, was awarded a $100,000 Killam Prize last year for her contributions to social science.
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    "In our next studies , we looked at the medical records of 400 Alzheimer's patients. On average, the bilinguals showed Alzheimer's symptoms five or six years later than those who spoke only one language. This didn't mean that the bilinguals didn't have Alzheimer's. It meant that as the disease took root in their brains, they were able to continue functioning at a higher level. They could cope with the disease for longer." No other website I have found has so comprehensively covered the various benefits of being bilingual. This is a concise interview that displays that bilingual people are not only better at multitasking but can also delay the onset of Alzheimer's by up to 5 years.
jamie shimamoto

Maori Language, Once Shunned, Is Having a Renaissance in New Zealand - 2 views

As of lately in New Zealand, the Maori language is making a comeback. It wasn't spoken for a long time because as it started to die out, many people didn't understand it so they just stopped speaki...

https:__www.nytimes.com_2018_09_16_world_asia_new-zealand-maori-language.html?rref=collection%2Ftimestopic%2FLanguage%20and%20Languages&action=click&contentCollection=timestopics®ion=stream&module=stream_unit&version=latest&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=co

started by jamie shimamoto on 04 Oct 18 no follow-up yet
Lara Cowell

A Linguistic Guide to Donald Trumpʻs Scatological Insults - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Did Donald Trump use the word shithole when referring to African countries in a meeting with lawmakers on immigration policy, or did he actually say shithouse? These are the scatological depths to which our political discourse has sunk. Let's stipulate that regardless of whether Trump said shithole or shithouse, it does little to change the underlying racist sentiment of disparaging the whole continent of Africa (and Haiti and El Salvador as well, according to some accounts). But just as it's possible to trace the literary roots of shithole, we can observe how the word shithouse has been put into use over the centuries leading up to this peculiar moment in presidential history.
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