Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Podjoint Logo
US
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/b4/b2/9f/b4b29fe6-90fe-1c20-f75e-56125b126f61/mza_6162907415805858436.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Tomayto Tomahto
Talia Sherman
32 episodes
2 days ago
I say tomayto, but you say tomahto. Why? What cognitive, economic, racial, or social factors led you to say tomahto and I tomayto? How did you acquire the ability to produce and perceive coherent sentences? These are some questions that linguists attempt to answer scientifically. Led by Talia Sherman, a Brown University undergrad, this podcast explores language: what it is, how it works (both cognitively and in practice), and its relationship to politics, history, law, pedagogy, AI, neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, critical theory, and more!
Show more...
Education
RSS
All content for Tomayto Tomahto is the property of Talia Sherman 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.
I say tomayto, but you say tomahto. Why? What cognitive, economic, racial, or social factors led you to say tomahto and I tomayto? How did you acquire the ability to produce and perceive coherent sentences? These are some questions that linguists attempt to answer scientifically. Led by Talia Sherman, a Brown University undergrad, this podcast explores language: what it is, how it works (both cognitively and in practice), and its relationship to politics, history, law, pedagogy, AI, neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, critical theory, and more!
Show more...
Education
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_nologo/22279488/22279488-1714496300229-95ef40463285f.jpg
Live from NYC: Favorite Linguistics Facts
Tomayto Tomahto
42 minutes 27 seconds
1 year ago
Live from NYC: Favorite Linguistics Facts

Picture this: it's early January, 2024, and hundreds upon hundreds of linguists have gathered for the Linguistic Society of America (LSA)'s annual meeting in New York City. With so many language nerds in one place, I couldn't help but interview as many people as I could about their favorite linguistics fact.

This episode contains tantalizing tidbits of information about everything from onomastics, non-concatenative morphology, and the McGurk effect—to historical events effecting language change, and statistics about sociolinguistic judgements. There are allusions to the debate of creole uniformitarianism vs exceptionalism, as well as examples of the Great Vowel Shift and the ongoing discussion of language's encapsulation of culture. From etymology facts, to tricky syntactic constructions, to cross-linguistic phonological observations, to the entrenchment of misogyny through language, you will be entranced and entertained for the entire episode.

The voices showcased here represent a diverse field; linguists hail from all backgrounds and subfields, and they work in industries like academia, healthcare, technology, journalism, and media. Who knew linguistics was such a versatile discipline that can totally and most definitely aid you in a lucrative career where you'll never have to worry about "tenure"??

Several interviews were filmed and posted to Nicole Holliday's tiktok page, accessible here.

Thank you to all who participated in this episode. Being a linguist is one of the greatest privileges I have ever known. I feel immeasurably lucky to be able to share that title with all of you.

Voices heard throughout the episode, in the order they appear:

Heidi Harley, Professor at University of Arizona

Nicole Holliday, Professor at Pomona College

Daniel Ginsberg, Director of Strategic Initiatives at the American Anthropological Association

Canaan Breiss, Professor at USC

Caitl Light, Academic Advisor at Loyola University Chicago

Kirby Conrod, Professor at Swarthmore College

Allison Casar, PhD candidate at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Joshua Dees, PhD candidate at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Walt Wolfram, Professor at North Carolina State University

Gretchen McCulloch, Internet Linguist and host of Lingthusiasm: a podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

Kelly Elizabeth Wright, Post-doc at Virginia Tech

Jordan Douglas Tavani, PhD candidate at UCSB

Rachel Burdin, Professor at UNH

Gabby Poplawski, Undergraduate student at Pomona College

Jamaal Muwwakkil, Post-doc at UCLA

Michel DeGraff, Professor at MIT

Aaliyah Bullen, Undergraduate student at Swarthmore College

Paul Reed, Professor at University of Alabama

Alex Johnston, Professor at Georgetown and Consultant

Brad Davidson, Director of Medical Anthropology at Havas Health and You; Penny Eckert, Professor Emeritas at Stanford

Ceci Cutler, Professor at CUNY Graduate Center and Lehman College

Valerie Fridland, Author of Like, Literally, Dude, and Professor at University of Nevada, Reno

Mike Stern, PhD student at Yale

Katie Russel, PhD candidate at UC Berkeley

Bruno Ferenc Segedin, PhD student at Brown

Alexa Little, Learning Experience Designer at Veeam Software

Emily Bender, Professor at University of Washington

Ben Zimmer, Columnist for the Wall Street Journal

Aiden Malanoski, PhD candidate at CUNY Graduate Center

Jon Stevenson, PhD candidate at University of York

Byron Ahn, Professor at Princeton

and me, Talia Sherman, Undergraduate student at Brown

Tomayto Tomahto
I say tomayto, but you say tomahto. Why? What cognitive, economic, racial, or social factors led you to say tomahto and I tomayto? How did you acquire the ability to produce and perceive coherent sentences? These are some questions that linguists attempt to answer scientifically. Led by Talia Sherman, a Brown University undergrad, this podcast explores language: what it is, how it works (both cognitively and in practice), and its relationship to politics, history, law, pedagogy, AI, neuroscience, psychology, anthropology, critical theory, and more!