For tens of thousands of years, humans have transmitted long and intricate stories to each other, which we learned directly from witnessing other people telling them. Many of these collaboratively composed stories were among the earliest things written down when a culture encountered writing, suc...
2024-02-16 02:45:10 +0000 UTC
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In this bonus episode, Lauren and Gretchen get enthusiastic about two kinds of fun linguistic questionnaires!
First: if you were a Lingthusiasm episode, which one would you be? We've made a tongue-in-cheek quiz that transforms your answers to questions like "You're about to start a ma...
2024-02-01 22:58:46 +0000 UTC
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It’s easy to find claims that certain languages are old or even the oldest, but which one is actually true? Fortunately, there’s an easy (though unsatisfying) answer: none of them! Like how humans are all descended from other humans, even though some of us may have longer or shorter family tr...
2024-01-18 23:35:08 +0000 UTC
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We've interviewed lots of great people on Lingthusiasm, and sometimes there's a story or two that we just don't have space for in the main episode, so here's a bonus episode with our favourite recent outtakes! Think of it as a special bonus edition DVD from the past year of Lingthusiasm with dire...
2024-01-04 22:44:03 +0000 UTC
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Language lets us talk about things that aren’t, strictly speaking, entirely real. Sometimes that’s an imaginative object (is a toy sword a real sword? how about Excalibur?). Other times, it’s a hypothetical situation (such as “if it rains, we’ll cancel the picnic” - but neither the pi...
2023-12-22 00:24:36 +0000 UTC
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The words that a culture considers taboo or obscene can tell us things about what that culture considers important or profane. For example, many swear words in present-day English relate to sex and body functions, while historically in English we've also had more religious swears, like "God's blo...
2023-12-07 23:40:35 +0000 UTC
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Basque is a language of Europe which is unrelated to the Indo-European languages around it or any other recorded language. As a minority language, Basque has faced considerable pressure from Spanish and French, leading to waves of language revitalization movements from the 1960s and 1980s to the ...
2023-11-17 00:20:22 +0000 UTC
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Are there linguistics things in your life that you would like advice about? In honour of our 7th anniversary making Lingthusiasm, this is an episode answering your advice questions, from the serious to the silly. We're not professional advice columnists but we are professional linguists, an...
2023-11-03 00:55:38 +0000 UTC
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When you have a sentence like "I visit them", the word order and the shape of the words tell you that it means something different from "they visit me". However, in a sentence like "I laugh", you don't actually need those signals -- since there's only one person in the sentence, the meaning would...
2023-10-20 00:11:14 +0000 UTC
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What if there was a summer camp for linguists? Like, imagine you could just go somewhere for a few weeks or a month and do linguistics classes and go to linguistics talks and eat your meals with linguists all day every day? Well, this event exists, sort of, and they're called linguistics institut...
2023-10-06 00:16:57 +0000 UTC
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Pointing creates an invisible line between a part of your body and the thing you’re pointing at. Humans are really good at producing and understanding pointing, and it seems to be something that helps babies learn to talk, but only a few animals manage it: domestic dogs can follow a point but w...
2023-09-22 03:39:18 +0000 UTC
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Linguists often do research by interviewing people from a particular linguistic community. Sometimes these communities are nearby, sometimes very far away. Sometimes it's a community that the researcher is themselves a member of, sometimes this involves first building relationships with a communi...
2023-09-08 01:59:23 +0000 UTC
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Young kids growing up in Guatemala often learn Q’anjob’al, Kaq’chikel, or another Mayan language from their families and communities. But they don’t live next to the kinds of major research universities that do most of the academic studies about how kids learn languages. Figuring out what...
2023-08-18 02:49:37 +0000 UTC
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A new round of Lingthusiasm merch is here!
"Etymology isn't destiny" on shirts, magnets, notebooks, and more!
Words change their meanings over time, and when we remind ourselves that et...
2023-08-10 01:04:15 +0000 UTC
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All of the Lingthusiasm main episodes and bonus episodes have transcripts, which involves some interesting technical challenges, including writing words in lots of languages, choosing between writing examples in their conventional spelling versus according to their phonetic value, and translating...
2023-08-03 23:48:34 +0000 UTC
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Linguists are often interested in comparing several languages or dialects. To make this easier, it’s useful to have data that’s relatively similar across varieties, so that the differences really pop out. But what exactly needs to be similar or different varies depending on what we’re inves...
2023-07-21 03:45:52 +0000 UTC
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Sometimes linguistics example sentences are so charmingly bland that they could lull you to sleep, listed one after each other without any larger story for context. We thought, what if we took this effect literally?
We present: LingthusiASMR, a very special bonus episode, in which your host...
2023-07-07 00:29:49 +0000 UTC
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In the sentence “the horse has eaten an apple”, what is the word “has” doing? It’s not expressing ownership of something, like in “the horse has an apple”. (After all, the horse could have very sneakily eaten the apple.) Rather, it’s helping out the main verb, eat. Many ...
2023-06-16 01:46:25 +0000 UTC
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Linguistics professors are some of the most visible career role models that you see if you're taking courses in linguistics (since they're teaching the courses), but most people who study linguistics go on to jobs outside academia. Eight years ago, Lauren was trying to figure out what some of tho...
2023-06-02 00:23:08 +0000 UTC
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The magical kind of spell and the written kind of spell are historically linked. This reflects how saying a word can change the state of the world, both in terms of fictional magic spells that set things on fire or make them invisible, and in terms of the real-world linguistic concept of performa...
2023-05-19 01:03:19 +0000 UTC
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In late 2022, we ran our first Lingthusiasm audience survey! We wanted to get to know you better and try out some linguistic experiments with you, so we got formal ethics approval from La Trobe University in case we want to use any of these findings in a research paper later. Thank you to the ove...
2023-05-05 00:41:03 +0000 UTC
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Spoken languages can change the pitch or melody of words to convey several different kinds of information. When the pitch affects the meaning of the whole phrase, such as rising to indicate a question in English, linguists call it intonation. When the pitch affects the mea...
2023-04-20 23:07:44 +0000 UTC
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In this bonus episode, originally recorded as a liveshow on the Lingthusiasm patron Discord server, your host Gretchen gets enthusiastic about how languages do gender with special guest Dr. Kirby Conrod. Since we last saw them in our episode on the grammar of singular they, Kirby is now a Visitin...
2023-04-07 00:24:07 +0000 UTC
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Languages change over time. So when you write a book set a few hundred years in the future, some aspects of how people talk are going to be different, and authors can invent potential future versions of a language as a way of speculating about what might be different about future societies.
2023-03-03 00:40:50 +0000 UTC
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This is your reminder that the Lingthusiasm liveshow about language and gender with Kirby Conrod will be starting in exactly three (3) hours from the timestamp of this post/email, thanks to the magic of scheduling posts at very specific times!
The show will take place on the Lingthu...
2023-02-18 18:00:04 +0000 UTC
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Singapore is a small city-state nation with four official languages: English, Mandarin, Tamil, and Malay. Most Singaporeans can also speak a local hybrid variety known as Singlish, which arose from this highly multilingual environment to create something unique to the island. An important part of...
2023-02-17 01:44:24 +0000 UTC
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In this bonus episode, Lauren and Gretchen get enthusiastic about what we've been up to in 2022 (much travel for Gretchen, with linguistic impressions of Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand!) and what's coming up for 2023 (a second tiny human, er, longitudinal language acquisition project for L...
2023-02-02 23:40:40 +0000 UTC
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Language names come from many sources. Sometimes they’re related to a geographical feature or name of a group of people. Sometimes they’re related to the word for “talk” or “language” in the language itself; other times the name that outsiders call the language is co...
2023-01-20 01:21:31 +0000 UTC
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We've interviewed lots of great people on Lingthusiasm, and sometimes there's a story or two that we just don't have space for in the main episode, so here's a bonus episode with our favourite recent outtakes! Think of it as a special bonus edition DVD from the past two years of Lingthusiasm with...
2023-01-05 21:55:51 +0000 UTC
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Emotions are a universal part of the human experience, but the specific ways we express them are mediated through language. For example, English uses the one word “love” for several distinct feelings: familial love, romantic love, platonic love, and loving things (I love &nb...
2022-12-15 21:40:53 +0000 UTC
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