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Linguistics After Dark
Linguistics After Dark
25 episodes
1 day ago
Linguistics After Dark is a podcast where three linguists (and sometimes other people) answer your burning questions about language, linguistics, and whatever else you need advice about. We have three rules: any question is fair game, there's no research allowed, and if we can't answer, we have to drink. It's a little like CarTalk for language: call us if your language is making a funny noise, and we'll get to the bottom of it, with a lot of rowdy discussion and nerdy jokes along the way. At the beginning of the show, we introduce a new linguistics term, and there's even a puzzler at the end!
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Science
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All content for Linguistics After Dark is the property of Linguistics After Dark and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Linguistics After Dark is a podcast where three linguists (and sometimes other people) answer your burning questions about language, linguistics, and whatever else you need advice about. We have three rules: any question is fair game, there's no research allowed, and if we can't answer, we have to drink. It's a little like CarTalk for language: call us if your language is making a funny noise, and we'll get to the bottom of it, with a lot of rowdy discussion and nerdy jokes along the way. At the beginning of the show, we introduce a new linguistics term, and there's even a puzzler at the end!
Show more...
Science
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Episode 15: Mr. White Is On Blast
Linguistics After Dark
1 hour 29 minutes 45 seconds
8 months ago
Episode 15: Mr. White Is On Blast

Wherein we enjoy swearing, big lakes, and ambiguity more than most people.

Jump right to:

  • 6:25 Linguistics Thing Of The Day: Swearing
  • 26:10 After marrying my wife, who is from Chicago, I (who am a native of Boston) often get comments from my in-laws or wife's friends that my accent sounds "British" to them. I think that's ridiculous, but I'm wondering why I consistently get the observation that Bostonians are "British-sounding." Incidentally, I don't think I have a Boston accent at all, but a lot of them say that I do (I don't drop 'r's for example).
  • 37:06 In a previous episode, you mentioned Linear B being a syllabary and that Linear A might be. How do we know this? What is cool about this? What fun things should we know?
  • 1:01:20 On the topic of syntactic ambiguity I was wondering if there are different languages and grammar systems that are better at mitigating ambiguity compared to English? How do they do it and clarify things as to avoid overlap?
  • 1:27:26 The puzzler: What do the English words “uncopyrightable” and “dermatoglyphics” have in common

Covered in this episode:

  • Cherries
  • Swearing
  • Not swearing
  • Objurgation is just a really excellent word
  • Either everyone has an accent or no one has an accent
  • England has too many accents
  • Lake Champlain is not invited
  • The only accents are Boston, Chicago, or British?
  • 40 actual linguists with swords
  • Confusing future archaeologists
  • ꙮ
  • You could write English entirely in katakana or romaji, but you shouldn’t
  • Spaces between words are a mirage
  • The Law of Conservation of Linguistic Ambiguity
  • Frugivorous time flies are much less confusing in speech than text
  • There is no Platonic realm of language
  • Natural Language Processing
  • Finishing other people’s sentences
  • Puzzles designed for high class sailors from the 1800s

Links and other post-show thoughts:

  • Lingthusiasm’s Little Longitudinal Language Acquisition Project onesies
  • Swearing is becoming less taboo
  • Swearing reduces pain
  • How many categories of swear words there are depends on how any given study chooses to group them; three, four mostly, five, or more; in general, the list seems to be religion, sex/sexual acts, bodily functions, animals, family/mothers, death/disease, and slurs
  • The list of functions of swear words that Sarah found
  • Boston Brahmins
  • The New England historical accent grid Sarah’s husband has mentioned is real! Eli’s guesses were backwards, however—the north–south distinctions are different vowel mergers, while the east–west distinctions are rhoticity: Northern New England accents have typically had the cot–caught merger, while southern New England accents have tended to have the father–bother merger; eastern New England is historically non-rhotic, while western New England is historically r-ful
  • Eli was also wrong about the pin–pen merger; it’s one of the most well-known features of Southern American English, not at all associated with New England. (He may have been thinking of the cot–caught merger, which is most common in the northeastern US?)
  • The Great Lakes vs Europe map overlay
  • The Eskimo-snow myth
  • Margalit Fox’s book on Linear B, and also her books on sign language, Arthur Conan Doyle, and two British soldiers escaping a POW camp with the help of a Ouija board
  • Minoan civilization and Mycenaean Greece
  • Michael and Alice are indeed the correct first names! Linear B was deciphered in 1952 by English architect and self-taught linguist Michael Ventris, based on the research of American classicist Alice Kober
  • The fiber arts tumblr post Eli quoted
  • Minute Cryptic

Ask us questions:

Send your questions (text or voice memo) to questions@linguisticsafterdark.com, or find us as @lxadpodcast on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.

Credits:

Linguistics After Dark is produced by Emfozzing Enterprises. Audio editing is done by Charlie, show notes are done by Jenny, and transcriptions are done by Luca. Our music is "Covert Affair" by Kevin MacLeod.

And until next time… if you weren’t consciously aware of your tongue in your mouth, now you are :)

Linguistics After Dark
Linguistics After Dark is a podcast where three linguists (and sometimes other people) answer your burning questions about language, linguistics, and whatever else you need advice about. We have three rules: any question is fair game, there's no research allowed, and if we can't answer, we have to drink. It's a little like CarTalk for language: call us if your language is making a funny noise, and we'll get to the bottom of it, with a lot of rowdy discussion and nerdy jokes along the way. At the beginning of the show, we introduce a new linguistics term, and there's even a puzzler at the end!