Mirror Neurons: The Brain’s Imitation Engine

2 weeks ago

Discover how a serendipitous discovery involving monkeys and peanuts revolutionized our understanding of linguistics. We dive into the science of…

Zombie Nouns: The Plague of Nominalization

2 weeks ago

Nominalization occurs when strong verbs are transformed into static, heavy nouns (like changing "utilize" to "utilization"), creating what linguists call…

Dyslexia in Logograms: Reading Differences in Chinese

2 weeks ago

While Western dyslexia is primarily a phonological challenge involving sound-letter mapping, research shows that dyslexia in Chinese functions differently, impacting…

The Hierarchy of Color: Why ‘Red’ Always Beats ‘Blue’

2 weeks ago

Why do almost all languages develop a word for "Red" before they create a word for "Blue"? This post explores…

The ‘Dot That Died’: Hangul’s Lost Vowel

2 months ago

The Korean alphabet, Hangul, is praised for its scientific design, but it once held a secret: a lost vowel called…

Stuttering John’s Lost Language

2 months ago

In the 10th century, an envoy named John of Gorze adopted a radical language-learning strategy: two years of total silence…

The Town That Fought Over Its Apostrophe

2 months ago

What happens when a local council tries to erase a single punctuation mark from a place name? In the English…

How Dr. Seuss Invented ‘Nerd’

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Where did the word 'nerd' come from? The answer lies not in a dusty dictionary, but in the whimsical pages…

The Treaty That Had Two Meanings

2 months ago

New Zealand's founding document, the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, exists in two languages—but it tells two different stories. A crucial…

The Doctor Who Invented a Writing System

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Discover the forgotten story of Dr. J. W. P. Davis, a Liberian doctor who invented a unique writing system for…

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