Wherein we are not warful.
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3:36 A slight correction about the etymology of “magic”5:55 Linguistics Thing Of The Day: Verb voice, aka diathesis23:01 Question 1: I [once] initially used "tiring" to describe someone, and then realized it didn't quite fit right, so I used "tiresome" instead. [T]hose should basically mean the same thing, and I can't [put the difference into words, but] they feel very different. How do words develop different connotations like that? / does the “-eous” suffix mean that something just has a flavor or hue of a thing but isn’t actually the thing? (Flavor/hue may not be the right words but I don’t remember what the correct term is) Like how “rightful” and “righteous” are not the same. I haven’t looked up the definition of “beauteous”, but I think it does mean something different from “beautiful”.35:39 Question 2: I saw this screenshot of a tumblr post and it got me wondering. The grammar in the dialogue might be trying to suggest that the cavemen's language is "primitive", and we could imagine that the scene is set in a time when (spoken) language was still very much in development compared to what it is today. With that in mind, do you think they would have opted to use consonant clusters like gl, gr, and rg in their names? Are those (especially gl) common across languages spoken today (idk what to look for in WALS...)? When do you think they first appeared in a spoken language? What do we know about the sounds (phonemes?) our ancestors could produce; which likely came first and which ones are more recent?51:30 Question 3: "Optimality Theory is bullshit." Discuss.1:01:28 The puzzler: What is 3/7 chicken, 2/3 cat, and 2/4 goat?Covered in this episode:
If you are a patient, you are experiencing a problem; if you are being patient, you are probably also experiencing a problem“Collectivity” is not a word people knowEtymology is not destinyEnglish “caveman speak” relies heavily on phonesthemesHuman babies are scientifically proven to evolve into human adultsSooner or later, M shows upEli is not an optimality theorist (because he thinks optimality theory is bullshit)Eli apologizes to optimality theorists for calling their thing bullshitSarah fails to correctly divide a word into two-letter unitsLinks and other post-show thoughts:
Lexical gaps in EnglishGermanic / French / Latinate word triplets in English and it comes up here tooCollectivity is technically a word, and is a synonym of collectivenessPer our belovèd Etymonline, “[Flour] also was spelled flower until flour became the accepted form c. 1830 to end confusion.” It doesn’t specify why it became the accepted form, but Webster’s “A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language” was published in 1806 and his “American Dictionary of the English Language” was published in 1828, so the timing would actually fit!IPA pulmonic consonant chartsThis was cut during editing, but we did discuss how there are many grayed out squares in the IPA for physically impossible soundsOptimality TheoryAsk us questions:
Send your questions (text or voice memo) to [email protected], or find us as @lxadpodcast on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
Credits:
Linguistics After Dark is produced by Emfozzing Enterprises. Audio editing is done by Luca, and show notes and transcriptions are a team effort. 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 :)