Archive for the ‘Linguistics’ Category

Classifying ‘Clicks’ In African Languages To Clear Up 100-year-old Mystery

ScienceDaily (July 16, 2009) — A new way to classify sounds in some human languages may solve a problem that has plagued linguists for nearly 100 years–how to accurately describe click sounds distinct to certain African languages.

Cornell University professor Amanda Miller and her colleagues recently used new high-speed, ultrasound imaging of the human tongue to precisely categorize sounds produced by the N|uu language speakers of southern Africa’s Kalahari Desert. The research potentially could change how linguists describe “click languages” and help speech scientists understand the physics of speech production.

The African languages studied by Miller use a series of consonants called “clicks” which are unlike most consonants in that they are produced with air going into the mouth rather than out. The N|uu clicks, produced using both the front and back of the tongue, are difficult to characterize.

“When we say ‘k’ or ‘t,’ the sound is produced by air breathing out of our lungs,” said Miller. “But click sounds are produced by breathing in and creating suction within a cavity formed between the front and back parts of the tongue. While linguists knew this, most didn’t want to accept it was something people controlled.” So they loosely classified these click consonants using imprecise groupings.

“For nearly a century, some of these sounds fell into an imprecise catch-all category that included every type of modification ever reported in a click language,” said Miller. “The movements of the tongue at the front of the mouth were quite accurately classified. But tongue movements at the back part of the mouth were not classified properly.”
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How Language Shapes Us

By Virginia Prescott on Tuesday, June 30, 2009.

Here’s a question that’s been stumping philosophers and psychologists for centuries: does the language we use to describe the world actually shape how we view the world? In other words, does an English speaker actually think differently, and live their life differently, than someone who speaks Mandarin, or Turkish?

That idea was largely pushed aside for the past half-century. Linguists like Noam Chomsky looked for universalities – aspects of grammar common to all languages, to show that we all think similarly, despite differences in language.

Now the idea that language shapes thought is coming back into fashion, thanks in part to researchers like Stanford neuroscientist Lera Boroditsky. She’s been collecting data from China, Greece, Chile, Indonesia, Russia and Aboriginal Australia, among other places. And she believes language plays a big role in how we view the world. She joins us from San Francisco.

listen: Windows Media | MP3

Source: http://www.nhpr.org/node/25804

“My brother and his seven children live in the blue house to the left of the big tree”.