!linguistics@lemmy.ml
This community was migrated to !linguistics@mander.xyz (Kbin link).
!linguistics
@lemmy.mlUPDATE, 2024/JAN/17: this address has been locked so mods only can post. Use the new one.
This comm is being moved to !linguistics@mander.xyz (Lemmy link) or /m/linguistics@mander.xyz (Kbin link). Same old topic, same old rules, same old mod. Different instance, focused on sciences. That's it.
A few additional points:
If you believe that it's worth keeping !linguistics@lemmy.ml as a separated community, and wishes to moderate it, please say so in this thread. Or wait until the migration is over and ask lemmy.ml admins, whichever you prefer.
I've tried looking for this project all over Libgen, Internet Archive and similar sites, but could not find it anywhere. I was only able to come across a Reddit post with the physical copies of the book.
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2309583120
I'm creating this thread to hopefully promote a bit more activity in the community.
If you want to talk about something Linguistics-related, but for some reason you don't want to create a new post just for that, feel free to post it here instead.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUl4u3cNGP63BZGNOqrF2qf_yxOjuG35j
https://www.sil.org/blog/language-and-poverty
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/archaeology/hittite-ancient-language-discovered-turkey-b2448942.html
Discovery helps reveal how a long-lost empire used multiculturalism to achieve political stability
https://news.mit.edu/2023/how-blue-and-green-appeared-language-1102
A new study suggests the way a language divides up color space can be influenced by contact with other languages. Tsimane’ people who learned Spanish as a second language began to classify blue and green into using separate words, which their native tongue does not do.
https://kielioblog.wordpress.com/15-1-facts-about-the-finnish-language/
(A non-native English version of this blog post.) Recently, the blog called Very Finnish Problems published a list of “fun facts” about the Finnish language. As a typical killjoy linguist, I was a …