The Dictionary’s Phantom: Story of ‘Dord’
What happens when a word that doesn't exist appears in the dictionary? For thirteen years, the non-word 'dord' lived in the pages of Webster's Second New International, defined simply as…
Unlocking the Universe of Languages
What happens when a word that doesn't exist appears in the dictionary? For thirteen years, the non-word 'dord' lived in the pages of Webster's Second New International, defined simply as…
What if you could record every moment of your child's life to understand how they learn to talk? MIT researcher Deb Roy did just that, wiring his home with cameras…
Excorporation is a rare linguistic process where a grammatical piece, once bound inside a larger word, "escapes" to become an independent word itself. We explore this fascinating phenomenon, using the…
Have you ever wondered how a simple action can be described with endless detail? The secret lies in a hidden layer of meaning within every verb, a concept from linguistic…
How are new languages born from scratch? This article explores the fascinating debate over creolization, contrasting the "abrupt" theory, where children create language in one generation, with the "gradual" view…
Ever wonder if that glowing five-star review is too good to be true? The secrets of deceptive writing are often hidden in plain sight, embedded in the very words and…
Ever wonder how a single word can have multiple meanings based only on its melody? This post explores "tone spreading", a fascinating process in many African languages where the pitch…
Ever wonder why German has a word for taking pleasure in someone else's misfortune (*Schadenfreude*), but English doesn't? This post explores these "lexical gaps"βconcepts that are easily expressed in one…
Your native language does more than just give you words for "left" and "right"; its very grammar shapes how you perceive, remember, and navigate space. From the distinction between prepositions…
Can a word be a specific type of itself? This article introduces autohyponymy, a fascinating linguistic quirk where words like "dog" can mean both the entire species and just a…
Go inside your smart speaker and discover how it turns sound into text through the lens of linguistics. Explore the core components of Automatic Speech Recognition, from acoustic models that…
Why does Italian have 'pala' (shovel) but also 'palla' (ball)? This phenomenon, known as gemination or consonant doubling, isn't just a spelling quirk. It represents a distinct, longer consonant sound…
What do the 's' in 'cats', the 'en' in 'oxen', and the vowel change in 'feet' have in common? They are all allomorphsβdifferent forms of the same unit of meaning,…
Why can you count 'chairs' but not 'furniture'? This linguistic puzzle is explained by the mass-count distinction, a fundamental rule that shapes how we talk about everything from objects to…
Mednyj Aleut is a rare "mixed language" from the Commander Islands that defies typical linguistic classification. It was created by a community of mixed Russian-Aleut heritage and uniquely combines the…
Ever found yourself accidentally copying the sentence structure of the person you're talking to? This isn't a coincidence; it's a fascinating psycholinguistic phenomenon called syntactic priming. Discover the unconscious 'echo'…
Forget the weathered notebook and tape recorder. Modern linguists are deploying a high-tech toolkit to document endangered languages, using portable ultrasound to image the tongue in motion and photogrammetry to…
We use them every day to add an aside or crack a digital smile, but have you ever wondered where parentheses come from? From their origins as a 14th-century scribal…
Ever felt your directness was seen as rudeness, or that someone's polite "maybe" was actually a firm "no"? This communication gap can be explained by Edward T. Hall's theory of…
Imagine being the first outsider to document a language with no written form. How would you create its first-ever dictionary? From pointing at your nose to defining 'untranslatable' cultural concepts,…