Superlinguo

For those who like and use language

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Immortal Gestures, Damon Young (review)

Damon Young brings his keenly-honed attention to the topic of gesture, and its role in the texture of being human as part of the philosophical detail of life. Young focuses specifically on gestures that have a fixed meaning for a group of users. The category of emblems is a rich topic of exploration, although I am a highly biased reviewer because they are a category of gesture to which I’ve also given a lot of thought. As Young marvels, “[t]hese signs are fluid, subtle; they are finely suited to situations.”

Each of the fifteen chapters focuses on one gesture, the author’s relationship to it as well as what it can tell us about culture, history, religion and so much more. The shrug is an opportunity to ponder the theological question of whether God shrugs, the finger guns are a launch point for a discussion of gun culture, and the salute at the beginning of a fencing match is an opportunity to ponder class and gallantry.

Young uses a depth of research, but with a light touch; he mentions in passing the shrug is a recurrent gesture, while (sensibly) sidestepping the complex relationship between recurrent gestures and emblems as categories. The conversational introduction to key references, rather than a performatively detailed set of formal citations, suits the cosy, conversational tones.

The book is a very pretty, petite, 200 page hardcover, with striking blue cover art by Angi Thomas.

I apologise I am bad at online influencing - I probably should have taken a photo of the cover before this copy lived in my bag for a few days while I read it..

Young’s selection of gestures is wide ranging, including some classic, prototypical emblems (the ‘horns’, the Vulcan salute, the shush), as well as opportunities to push into ritualistic or stylistic actions, including the plié of ballet, taking off a hood (a recurring motif in Star Wars) and slack-mouthed miming life as a goldfish in a bowl. Each short chapter takes its own journey while weaving into a larger set of themes. I enjoyed Young delighting in the observation of actions typically taken for granted, and their storied histories. At one point he marvels “[b]ut I was very much in the world" - capturing the wonderful transition into a way of seeing that comes with paying attention to the gestures of our lives. 

ALT


Purchase Links

Damon Young, Immortal Gestures (Scribe, 2025)

Bookshop.org (affiliate link)

Amazon (affiliate link)

Scribe (publisher page)

31 notes

In praise of niche papers

Mark Dingemanse’s blog post “In praise of niche papers” is a lovely way to share academic influences. It got me thinking about some of my favourite papers that I love and cite, and which I’m always surprised to see aren’t as highly cited as some other work by these authors. So, to follow Mark’s lead, here are two niche papers that are very close to my heart:

Kendon, Adam. (1978). ‘Differential perceptual and attentional frame in face-to-face interaction: two problems for investigation’, Semiotica, 24/¾: 305–15.

Adam Kendon’s contribution to the Gesture Studies literature spans four decades and many of his research papers are foundational texts across a range of topics. This is one of Kendon’s least cited works. It’s also one of the earliest experiments on gesture perception I’ve come across. Kendon used a film projector and played a speech by a speaker of Enga in Papua New Guinea to a group of English speakers, looking at what people attend to in gestures. It was the model we used for Gawne and Kelly (2014) (discussed below).

Hostetter, Autumn B., Martha W. Alibali, and Sheree M. Schrager. (2011). ‘If you don’t already know, I’m certainly not going to show you!: Motivation to communicate affects gesture production’. G. Stam and M. Ishino (eds), Integrating Gestures, pp. 61–74. John Benjamins.

I love this experiment so much: people gesture the same amount if they’re doing an activity helping or competing with someone, but the size and usefulness of the gestures are different. If you’re competing against someone your gestures are smaller and less informative. People, so sneaky. I absolutely made sure to get a reference to this into Gesture: A Slim Guide.

Mark suggested in his post that people share niche papers from their own research. Here are two of my favourite papers of mine that aren’t cited that much, but made me very happy to have out in the world:

Gawne, Lauren, and Barbara F. Kelly. (2014). Revisiting “Significant Action” and gesture classification. Australian Journal of Linguistics, 34/2: 216–33.

This was the first research project I ever run, and (imo) a nifty modern replication of Kendon (1978) discussed above. People generally agree with Gesture Studies researchers on the minimum definition of what a gesture is, but they ascribe communicative intent to a much wider range of actions. Also, I did this research back in 2007 as my honours thesis project, but it took us another seven years to get this through to publication.

Gawne, Lauren, Barbara F. Kelly, Andrea L. Berez-Kroeker, and Tyler Heston. (2017). Putting practice into words: The state of data and methods transparency in grammatical descriptions. Language Documentation & Conservation, 11: 157–89.

This project surveyed 100 descriptive grammars: 50 published grammars and 50 PhD dissertations. There’s lots of good work about how we should go about doing descriptive grammar work, but very little of this is actively discussed or described in the genre of published works. It’s been almost a decade since we published this work. I’d like to think that people aren’t citing it because they’re just quietly improving the way they talk about methods and data in their descriptive grammar writing.

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lingthusiasm:

Transcript Episode 104: Reading and language play in Sámi - Interview with Hanna-Máret Outakoski

This is a transcript for Lingthusiasm episode ‘Reading and language play in Sámi - Interview with Hanna-Máret Outakoski’. It’s been lightly edited for readability. Listen to the episode here or wherever you get your podcasts. Links to studies mentioned and further reading can be found on the episode show notes page.

[Music]

Gretchen: Welcome to Lingthusiasm, a podcast that’s enthusiastic about linguistics! I’m Gretchen McCulloch. I’m here with Dr. Hanna-Máret Outakoski, who’s a professor of Sámi languages at the Sámi University of Applied Sciences in Kautokeino, Norway. She’s a native speaker of Northern Sámi and Finnish and fluent speaker of Swedish. She can read German and uses English mainly for academic publishing purposes. Today, we’re getting enthusiastic about multilingual literacy.

But first, some announcements! We’ve commissioned a jazzed up version of the Lingthusiasm logo with fun little doodles in the classic shape of the Lingthusiasm squiggle adorning your podcast reader right now – now filled in with some linguistics and Lingthusiasm references in little, tiny doodles. See how many you can spot! We’re gonna be sending out a sticker with this new design to everyone who’s a patron at the Ling-thusiast level and higher as of July 1, 2025. If you wanna get this sticker that can adore your laptop, water bottle, and help maybe connect you to other people who are enthusiastic about linguistics, go to patreon.com/lingthusiasm. If you just wanna see a version of this sticker and see how many of the little doodles you can identify, you can go to lingthusiasm.com or @lingthusiasm on all the social media sites. We’ll be posting about it a lot. Our artist, Lucy Maddox, did a really great job, and we’re so excited to share this design with you.

Our most recent bonus episode was about the linguistics of kissing from the physical articulation of kisses – which involves the mouth, much like many linguistic things – as well as the social significance of kissing in various ways, various times to various classes of people, to writing kisses as Xs and with emoji. All of that and 98 other bonus episodes at patreon.com/lingthusiasm help keep the show going.

[Music]

Gretchen: Hello, Hanna-Máret, welcome to the show.

Hanna-Máret: Hi!

Gretchen: It’s so nice to have you here.

Hanna-Máret: It’s really good to be here.

Gretchen: We’re gonna get into more of your work later, but let’s start with the question that we ask all of our guests, which is, “How did you get interested in linguistics?”

Hanna-Máret: I grew up in a multilingual region in northern Finland that’s as far north in Europe as one can get. In my childhood, most people living there, they knew my Indigenous heritage language (that’s Northern Sámi), and they also spoke either Finnish or Norwegian or both. We also learned a lot of English in school and through TV. My home was also right at the border of Finland and Norway. There was only a river marking the state border. Some languages float quite freely in that region. For many people, knowing languages was quite natural. Most people didn’t think so much about the languages, but my father was always talking about some linguistic traits or challenges or other matters. He was a special teacher and had always had an interest in languages and for linguistics. His language enthusiasm spread into my life very early. He also read to me and encouraged me to read a lot in different languages, and then we used to talk about the literature afterwards. I was also really fascinated by the language knowledge and cultural knowledge that my Sámi relatives had, although most of them were not academics. The Sámi speakers in the generation before mine were actually the last ones to grow up speaking mainly Sámi. Their language was so beautiful and so effortless. I decided quite young that I would pursue a career working with my heritage language and do my best to support its survival.

Gretchen: That led you into linguistics.

Hanna-Máret: Yeah, but first I considered a career as a translator or interpreter. I actually got a basic training in that also. But I worked as an interpreter mostly just to make some money so that I could continue studying at the university. I studied Sámi, Finnish, linguistics, pedagogy, and I got a bachelor’s degree in Sámi language. Some of my professors then encouraged me to reach for the master’s degree and then continue with the PhD.

Gretchen: Did you go right into Sámi language revitalisation work, or were you doing more academic stuff?

Hanna-Máret: Well, my first attempt with the PhD was actually in formal linguistics. I was working on reflexivity and reciprocity in Sámi and this more specifically with Government and Binding Theory, which had, at that time, not yet lost its glory. I actually never finished the thesis. Instead, my teaching responsibilities grew every year, and I started noticing that I was more interested in the use of language than in some isolated syntactic structure. I don’t want anyone to get me wrong here. I’m really grateful for having acquired a base in formal linguistics since it has given me the tools not only to describe my language but also to problematise and solve some issues that our traditional, prescriptive grammars in some languages are not able to explain. It’s just that, at some point, I started thinking more about the work that was needed to keep the language in daily use and not just the structures.

Gretchen: But you have a doctorate now. You went back and did something else?

Hanna-Máret: My second attempt to finish the doctoral degree was, happily, a bit more successful, and I get the chance to gather texts written by multilingual Sámi children in three countries. Me and my colleagues, we used something that’s called “keystroke logging” to trace the ways our writers express their thoughts and ideas in three languages. I really found that project very inspiring, although it also showed me how challenging it can be to work with schools and pupils. After that PhD, I got a chance to do my postdoctoral studies within applied linguistics and educational sciences.

Gretchen: Three languages – that would be Sámi, Swedish, Norwegian, Finnish? That’s four.

Hanna-Máret: I was in three countries. It was the majority language of all the countries. In Finland, Finnish; in Sweden, Swedish; and in Norway Norwegian. All the kids here in Nordic countries also study English, so that was the third language.

Gretchen: Okay. The third language depending on the country they did – yeah. Did you bring all of these different backgrounds together?

Keep reading

90 notes

lingthusiasm:

103: A hand-y guide to gesture

Gestures: every known language has them, and there’s a growing body of research on how they fit into communication. But academic literature can be hard to dig into on your own. So Lauren has spent the past 5 years diving into the gesture literature and boiling it down into a tight 147 page book.

In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch get enthusiastic about Lauren’s new book, Gesture: A Slim Guide from Oxford University Press. Is it a general audience book? An academic book? A bit of both. (Please enjoy our highlights version in this episode, a slim guide to the Slim Guide, if you will.) We talk about the wacky hijinks gesture researchers have gotten up to with the aim of preventing people from gesturing without tipping them off that the study is about gesture, including a tricked-out “coloured garden relax chair” that makes people “um” more, as well as crosslinguistic gestural connections between signed and spoken languages, and how Gretchen’s gestures in English have been changing after a year of ASL classes. Plus, a few behind-the-scenes moments: Lauren putting a line drawing of her very first gesture study on the cover, and how the emoji connection from Because Internet made its way into Gesture (and also into the emoji on your phone right now).

There were also many other gesture stories that we couldn’t fit in this episode, so keep an eye out for Lauren doing guest interviews on other podcasts! We’ll add them to the crossovers page and the Lingthusiasm hosts elsewhere playlist as they come up. And if there are any other shows you’d like to hear a gesture episode on, feel free to tell them to chat to Lauren!

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.

Announcements:

We’ve made a special jazzed-up version of the Lingthusiasm logo to put on stickers, featuring fun little drawings from the past 8.5 years of enthusiasm about linguistics by our artist Lucy Maddox. There’s a leaping Gavagai rabbit, bouba and kiki shapes, and more…see how many items you can recognize!

This sticker (or possibly a subtle variation…stay tuned for an all-patron vote!) will go out to everyone who’s a patron at the Lingthusiast level or higher as of July 1st, 2025.

We’re also hoping that this sticker special offer encourages people to join and stick around as we need to do an inflation-related price increase at the Lingthusiast level. As we mentioned on the last bonus episode, our coffee hasn’t cost us five bucks in a while now, and we need to keep paying the team who enables us to keep making the show amid our other linguistics prof-ing and writing jobs. In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about linguist celebrities! We talk about start with the historically famous Brothers Grimm and quickly move onto modern people of varying levels of fame, including a curiously large number of linguistics figure skaters. We also talk about a few people who are famous within linguistics, including a recent memoir by Noam Chomsky’s assistant Bev Stohl about what it was like keeping him fueled with coffee. And finally, we reflect on running into authors of papers we’ve read at conferences, when people started recognizing us sometimes, and our tips and scripts for navigating celebrity encounters from both sides.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

Here are the links mentioned in the episode:

You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.

To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.

You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.

Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com

Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.

Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.

Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles.

This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).

440 notes

Gesture: A Slim Guide - Five Fun Facts

To celebrate the publication of Gesture: A Slim Guide I’ve selected five facts from/about the book to share:

1. The cover is a deepcut reference to my first gesture research project

Gawne & Kelly (2014) is actually work from my honours project in 2007 - it took us a while to write it up for publication. In that experiment, participants watched a short video narrative and marked everything they thought was a ‘gesture’ without being given a definition. On the whole, people agree at a minimum level with Gesture Studies researchers about what a gesture is, but tend to include far more in their definition. The cover illustration from Lucy Maddox captures some of the key gestures from that video. Because we had no budget, I filmed the video of myself narrating the story.

2. Learning a signed language will affect the way you gesture in spoken language

Research on learners of ASL shows that learning a signed language affects the gestures of people who have spent their whole life speaking English. Gesture and signed languages are two very different uses of the same modality, but they influence each other in interesting ways.

3. You can make people imagine emphasis differently by changing the placement of emphatic gestures

Hans Rutger Bosker and David Peeters created experimental video clips that you can see here. They took inspiration for their experimental work from the classic McGurk effect in phonetics, where watching a mouth closing like a /g/ while a /b/ sound is played will make the viewer hear a /d/.

4. Dolphins and seals demonstrate the capacity to follow human pointing gestures

While there is evidence that many domestic animals can follow human pointing gestures, this is the only documented evidence to date that shows this skill in wild animals that aren’t primates.

5. People still gesture even if their audience can’t see them, but the way they gesture changes

Speech and gesture are so closely linked up that we can’t help but gesture, even if our audience can’t see us. Experiments show that changing the audience conditions changes how large or frequent gestures are, but nothing stops us gesturing completely.

The official launch party for Gesture: A Slim Guide will be the April episode of Lingthusiasm, stay tuned!

Book overview

The gestures that we use when we speak are an important, if often over-looked, part of how we communicate. This book provides a friendly, fast-paced introduction to the field of Gesture Studies. Gestures are those communicative actions made with the human body that accompany spoken or signed language. Paying attention to gesture means paying attention to the fuller context in which humans communicate. Gesture is absolute, in that every human community that has language also has gestures as part of that language. But gesture is also relative, in that it is far more heavily context dependent than other elements of communication. This book provides a broad introduction to current understandings of the nature and function of gesture as a feature of communication. This Slim Guide covers the ways gesture works alongside speech and the different categories of gesture. The way these categories are used varies across cultures and languages, and even across specific interactions. We acquire gesture as part of language, and it is deeply entwined with language in the brain. Gesture has an important role in the origin of language, and in shaping the future of human communication. The study of gesture makes a crucial interdisciplinary contribution to our understanding of human communication. This Slim Guide provides an introduction to Gesture Studies for readers of all backgrounds.

Order links

Bookshop .org (affiliate link)

Amazon (affiliate link)

Booko page (for Australians)

96 notes

lingthusiasm:

Lingthusiasm Episode 102: The science and fiction of Sapir-Whorf

It’s a fun science fiction trope: learn a mysterious alien language and acquire superpowers, just like if you’d been zapped by a cosmic ray or bitten by a radioactive spider. But what’s the linguistics behind this idea found in books like Babel-17, Embassytown, or the movie Arrival?

In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch get enthusiastic about the science and fiction of linguistic relativity, popularly known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. We talk about a range of different things that people mean when they refer to this hypothesis: a sciencey-sounding way to introduce obviously fictional concepts like time travel or mind control, a reflection that we add new words all the time as convenient handles to talk about new concepts, a note that grammatical categories can encourage us to pay attention to specific areas in the world (but aren’t the only way of doing so), a social reflection that we feel like different people in different environments (which can sometimes align with different languages, though not always). We also talk about several genuine areas of human difference that linguistic relativity misses: different perceptive experiences like synesthesia and aphantasia, as well as how we lump sounds into categories based on what’s relevant to a given language.

Finally, we talk about the history of where the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis comes from, why Benjamin Lee Whorf would have been great on TikTok, and why versions of this idea keep bouncing back in different guises as a form of curiosity about the human condition no matter how many specific instances get disproven.

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.

Announcements:

In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about two sets of updates! We talk about the results from the 2024 listener survey (we learned which one of us you think is more kiki and more bouba!), and our years in review (book related news for both Lauren and Gretchen), plus exciting news for the coming year.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

Here are the links mentioned in the episode:

You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.

To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.

You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.

Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com

Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.

Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.

Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles.

This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).

In some ways I’ve been preparing to do this episode since my first year of undergrad linguistics.

13 notes

International Conference on Linguistics Communication (LingComm25) - registrations open!

From the LingComm website:

The International Conference on Linguistics Communication, LingComm25, is an online conference for people who do (or who enjoy) science communication in linguistics. LingComm25 is happening 7–10 April, 2025.

We use the Gather platform, where you wander around the conference space as a little avatar among the other attendees. You can attend sessions in the conference rooms, wander close to other people to chat with them, hang out by the pool, and look at posters.

Registrations for LingComm25 are now open!

From the registration eventbrite page:

There are differently priced tickets for the conference. This is meant to make the conference accessible to everyone, while still covering costs. Everyone who registers will have access to the same content, regardless of how much they paid. If you are willing and able to donate, you can choose to add a donation to your ticket. This helps subsidise costs for students and others unable to pay the full costs, as well as the conference in general.

I am not an organiser for the conference this year, but I’ve registered and really looking forward to it. You can check out the program online. I’ll be giving a talk on “How-To: Leverage Lingcomm Clout in Academia” , which will be very late at night for me, so there’s a good chance I’m going to be giving rather unfiltered suggestions.

71 notes

lingthusiasm:

Lingthusiasm Episode 101: Micro to macro - The levels of language

When we first learn about nature, we generally start with the solid mid-sized animals: cats, dogs, elephants, tigers, horses, birds, turtles, and so on. Only later on do we zoom in and out from these charismatic megafauna to the tinier levels, like cells and bacteria, or the larger levels, like ecosystems and the water cycle. With language, words are the easily graspable charismatic megafauna (charismatic megaverba?), from which there are both micro levels (like sounds, handshapes, and morphemes) and macro levels (like sentences, conversations, and narratives).

In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch take advantage of the aptly numbered 101th episode to get enthusiastic about linguistics from the micro to macro perspective often found in Linguistics 101 classes. We start with sounds and handshapes, moving onto accents and sound changes, fitting affixes into words, words into sentences, and sentences into discourse. We also talk about areas of linguistics that involve language at all these levels at once, including historical linguistics, child language acquisition, linguistic fieldwork, sociolinguistics, and psycholinguistics. Plus: why we don’t follow this order for Lingthusiasm episodes or Crash Course Linguistics and how you can give yourself a DIY intro linguistics course.

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.

Announcements:

To celebrate Lingthusiasm now having more than 100 episodes, we have compiled a list of 101 places where you can get even more linguistics enthusiasm! This is your one-stop-shop if you want suggestions for other podcasts, books, videos, blogs, and other places online and offline to feed your interest in linguistics. Even with a hundred and one options, we’re sure there’s still a few that we’ve missed, so also feel free to tag us @ lingthusiasm on social media about your favourites! 

In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about what psycholinguistics can tell us about creative writing, with Julie Sedivy, psycholinguist and the author of Memory Speaks and Linguaphile! We talk about moving from the style of scientific writing to literary writing by writing a lot of unpublished poetry to develop her aesthetic sense, how studying linguistics for a writer is like studying anatomy for a sculptor or colour theory for a painter, and how you could set up an eyetracking study to help writers figure out which sentences make their readers slow down.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

Here are the links mentioned in the episode:

Lingthusiasm episodes mentioned:

You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.

To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.

You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.

Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com

Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.

Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.

Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles.

This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).

1,927 notes

lingthusiasm:

lingthusiasm:

101 places to get enthusiastic about linguistics

In honour of Lingthusiasm’s 100th episodiversary, we’ve compiled this list of 101 public-facing places where linguists and linguistics nerds hang out and learn things! 

17 podcasts about linguistics

  1. Lingthusiasm — A podcast that’s enthusiastic about linguistics! 
  2. The Vocal Fries — Language discrimination and how to fight it
  3. The History of English — From Proto-Indo-European to Shakespeare in 180 episodes (and still running!)
  4. A Language I Love Is — Guests (some linguists, some not) talk about languages they love and why
  5. En Clair — Forensic linguistics and literary detection
  6. Because Language — New guests every episode discuss their linguistic interests
  7. The Allusionist — Stories about language and the people who use it 
  8. Subtitle — A podcast about languages and the people who speak them
  9. Field Notes — Five seasons on linguistic fieldwork 
  10. Tomayto Tomahto — Language meets cog sci, politics, history, law, anthropology, and more
  11. Word of Mouth — A long-running and wide-ranging linguistics program on BBC 4.
  12. Words Unravelled - A new and very well edited etymology podcast with popular creators RobWords and Jess Zafarris
  13. Something Rhymes with Purple — Learn the background behind another word or phrase each episode
  14. Lexitecture — A classic etymology podcast with a huge back catalogue
  15. A Way with Words — A “lively and upbeat” public radio call-in show about language and culture
  16. Språket — A radio program in Swedish answering listener questions about language. We don’t speak Swedish, but this was the most-mentioned non-English content in our listener survey!
  17. Living Voices — A podcast in Spanish about endangered languages of the Amazon

12 nonfiction books about linguistics

  1. Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language by Gretchen McCulloch (Amazon; Bookshop) — A linguist shows how the internet is transforming the way we communicate
  2. How Language Works: How Babies Babble, Words Change Meaning and Languages Live or Die (Amazon; Bookshop) by David Crystal — A journey through the different subsystems of language 
  3. That’s Not What I Meant!: How Conversational Style Makes or Breaks Relationships by  Deborah Tannen (Amazon; Bookshop) — A pioneering researcher on conversations gives advice on how they can go wrong
  4. Memory Speaks: On Losing and Reclaiming Language and Self by Julie Sedivy (Amazon; Bookshop) — Scientific and personal reflections on nostalgia, forgetting, and language loss
  5. The Art of Language Invention: From Horse-Lords to Dark Elves to Sand Worms, the Words Behind World-Building by David J Peterson (Amazon; Bookshop) — an accessible guide to making your own conlang 
  6. Highly Irregular: Why Tough, Through, and Dough Don’t Rhyme—And Other Oddities of the English Language by Arika Okrent (Amazon; Bookshop) — The history behind English’s many oddities
  7. Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language by Amanda Montell (Amazon; Bookshop) — A well-researched pushback on sexist language ideology
  8. Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries by Kory Stamper (Amazon; Bookshop) — A lifelong lexicographer discusses the job and the things she’s learned along the way 
  9. Lingo: Around Europe in Sixty Languages by Gaston Dorren (Amazon; Bookshop) — A quick, funny tour of the quirks of 60 European languages
  10. Bina: First Nations Languages, Old and New by Felicity Meakins, Gari Tudor-Smith, and Paul Williams (Amazon; Bookshop) — The story of Australian indigenous languages’ resistance and survival
  11. Says Who?: A Kinder, Funner Usage Guide for Everyone Who Cares About Words by Anne Curzan (Amazon; Bookshop) — A writers’ style and grammar guide focused on real usage, not made-up rules
  12. The Language Lover’s Puzzle Book: A World Tour of Languages and Alphabets in 100 Amazing Puzzles by Alex Bellos (Amazon; Bookshop) — Solve puzzles about writing, grammar, and meaning drawn from real and fictional languages
  13. Poems from the Edge of Extinction: An Anthology of Poetry in Endangered Languages (Amazon; Bookshop) — An anthology of poems in endangered languages, with commentary

6 linguistically-inspired novels

  1. Babel: Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution by R.F. Kuang (Amazon; Bookshop) — Imagine a world where linguistics was as vital — and as ethically compromised — as engineering is in ours
  2. True Biz by Sara Nović (Amazon; Bookshop) — Love, friendship, and struggle at a residential high school for the Deaf
  3. Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel in Letters by by Mark Dunn (Amazon; Bookshop) — “A progressively lipogrammatic epistolary fable” full of wordplay and weirdness
  4. Semiosis by Sue Burke (Amazon; Bookshop) — Human space colonists communicate with sentient plants
  5. Translation State by Ann Leckie (Amazon; Bookshop) — What does life look like for a perfectly genetically engineered alien–human translator? (Spoiler: weird, that’s what.)
  6. Stories of your Life and Others by Ted Chiang (Amazon; Bookshop) — Includes the long short story that became Arrival, plus other reflections on humanity and change

13 linguistics youtube channels

  1. Crash Course Linguistics — A whole linguistics course in 16 videos
  2. Tom Scott’s Language Files — Pithy language facts explained quickly and clearly
  3. NativLang — Language reconstruction and the history of writing
  4. Geoff Lindsay — Facts (and some scholarly opinions) about regional English pronunciation
  5. The Ling Space — An educational channel all about linguistics
  6. langfocus — A language factoid channel that digs deeper than many
  7. K Klein — Language quirks, spelling reform, and a little conlanging
  8. biblaridion — Teaching about conlanging and worldbuilding, with lots of linguistics along the way
  9. RobWords — "A channel for lovers and learners of English"
  10. Otherwords — "the fascinating, thought-provoking, and funny stories behind the words and sounds we take for granted"
  11. LingoLizard — Widely spoken languages and their quirks, comparisons, and history
  12. linguriosa — Spanish linguistics (in Spanish), including learning tips and linguistic history
  13. human1011 — Quick accessible facts about linguistics (and sometimes other things) 
  14. Simon Roper — Language evolution and historical English pronunciation

10 shortform video channels about linguistics (tiktok/reels)

  1. etymologynerd — Internet speak, etymologies and more! (reels)
  2. linguisticdiscovery — Writing systems, language families, and more (reels)
  3. jesszafaris — Fun facts about words, etymologies, and more (reels)
  4. cmfvoices — An audiobook director talks about the linguistics of voice acting (eels)
  5. mixedlinguist — A linguistics professor comments on the language of place, identity, politics, technology, and more (reels)
  6. landontalks — Linguistic quirks of the US South (reels)
  7. sunnmcheaux — Language and culture from Harvard’s first and only professor of Gullah (reels)
  8. dexter.mp4 — Talks about many branches of science, but loves linguistics enough to have a linguisticsy tattoo (reels)
  9. danniesbrain — Linguistics and psychology from a researcher who studies both (reels)
  10. wordsatwork — Quick facts on languages, families, and linguistic concepts (reels)
  11. the_language — The Ojibwe language — plus food, dancing, and more

101 places to get enthusiastic about linguistics

In honour of Lingthusiasm’s 100th episodiversary, we’ve compiled this list of 101 public-facing places where linguists and linguistics nerds hang out and learn things! 

8 linguistically-inspired videogames and board games 

  1. Heaven’s Vault (video game) — Decode a mystery hieroglyphic language as a space archeologist traveling with her trusty robot sidekick
  2. Chants of Sennaar (video game) — puzzle your way through uncoding the language and world of The Tower 
  3. Tunic (video game) — You don’t need to decode the writing system to enjoy exploring this video game as an anthropomorphic fox, but some people have enjoyed the additional challenge of cracking the writing system
  4. Cypher & Epigraph (video game) — Test and grow your cryptographic skills with these increasingly feendish puzzles 
  5. Wavelength (board game) — A relaxed and silly party game featuring comparatives and scales. Very fun for a flexible-sized group. 
  6. Xenolanguage (board game) — An ethereal storytelling game about communicating with aliens featuring a unique ouija-board inspired gameplay mechanic 
  7. The Gostak (interactive fiction) — A classic text adventure you need to decipher a secret language to play
  8. IPA Scrabble (board game) — Do-it-yourself instructions for making your own International Phonetic Alphabet Scrabble tiles

7 blogs, newsletters, and magazines about linguistics

  1. Nancy Friedman’s substack — A professional name developer (that’s a thing!) weighs in on trends
  2. Language Log — One of the longest running linguistics blogs: a few professors discuss their interests
  3. Separated by a Common Language — "Observations on British and American English by an American linguist in the UK"
  4. Sesquiotica — Riffs on etymology and meaning
  5. Language Hat — Another longtime classic, featuring literature, translation, and lexical curiosities
  6. @official-linguistics-post — Sharing posts and conversations of linguistic interest from around Tumblr
  7. Babelzine — A print magazine of language and linguistics, great for school libraries to subscribe to

8 linguistically-inspired movies and tv shows 

  1. Atlantis: The Lost Empire — A linguist protagonist meets a conlang plot device
  2. Arrival — The most linguistic fieldwork you’ll ever see in a sci-fi blockbuster 
  3. Darmok — The Star Trek episode that launched a thousand linguistics memes 
  4. CODA — The biggest names in ASL theatre in a multilingual movie
  5. Avatar — The sci-fi epic that gave us Na'vi, one of the best loved conlangs
  6. We Still Live Here: Âs Nutayuneân — A documentary about the Wampanoag scholar who revived her nation’s language
  7. My Fair Lady — A classic musical about dialect, social class, and (of course) love
  8. The King’s Speech — Based on a true story: a speech-language pathologist helps King George VI overcome his stammer
  9. Talking Black in America — A documentary series on African American English, Black ASL, and more

6 linguistics-related events and physical spaces 

  1. Planet Word (Washington, DC, USA) — An immersive language museum 
  2. Mundolingua (Paris, France) — A hands-on museum with exhibits on many branches of linguistics
  3. The COSI language pod (Columbus, OH, USA) — Participate in linguistics experiments inside this science museum 
  4. The SLIYS summer camp (Columbus, OH, USA) — The Summer Linguistic Institute for Youth Scholars introduces high school students to linguistics
  5. Kletskoppen Festival (Nijmegen, Netherlands) — A festival about language and language development for children, and their adults 
  6. International Linguistics Olympiad (2025 in Taipei, Taiwan) — An annual puzzle-solving competition for secondary school students, with many national editions in various countries 

9 places to get even more 

  1. r/linguistics — A subreddit for discussing linguistics; check out their reading list (Note that we singled out this one for being a big, public, high-traffic community — but if you’d prefer a closed Discord server or a Facebook meme group or any other platform-specific thing, ask other linguistics nerds on that platform and you’ll probably find one.) 
  2. Bluesky linguistics starter pack — Some linguists who post actively about linguistics, several of which have also made starter packs for specific subfields 
  3. conlang.org’s community list — Pointers to the many places conlangs are discussed
  4. Superlinguo’s list of linguistics podcasts — Many more podcasts than we had room for 
  5. A very long list of pop linguistics books on All Things Linguistics — Many more books, too…
  6. Linguistic Discovery’s list of books — …and even more!
  7. High School Linguistics’ books list for teens — Get started early…
  8. Superlinguo’s list for kids — …and even earlier!
  9. Mutual Intelligibility’s resource directory — Links on a wide range of subjects
  10. linguistics humor tag on All Things Linguistic — Just the funny stuff

We’ve been doing lingcomm since 2011 and we’re astounded by how many more pop linguistics resources have come into existences since we started and how many difficult decisions we had to make to get it down to just 101 places  

If you’re more on the lingcomm creator side, check out the lingcomm website — we’d love to hang out with you at the LingComm Conference (it’s online!). 

Many thanks to the people who filled out the Lingthusiasm survey over the past 3 years for suggesting over 1000 places where you get enthusiastic about linguistics! Please feel free to highlight your favourites from this list or add further suggestions for the benefit of other people reading! 

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Cover Reveal - Gesture: A Slim Guide

I’m so excited to be able to share the final cover for Gesture: A Slim Guide, which will be out in March! I’ll be sharing more about the contents (and the origins of the wonderful cover image from Lucy Maddox) in the lead up to publication.



Book overview

The gestures that we use when we speak are an important, if often over- looked, part of how we communicate. This book provides a friendly, fast-paced introduction to the field of Gesture Studies. Gestures are those communicative actions made with the human body that accompany spoken or signed language. Paying attention to gesture means paying attention to the fuller context in which humans communicate. Gesture is absolute, in that every human community that has language also has gestures as part of that language. But gesture is also relative, in that it is far more heavily context dependent than other elements of communication. This book provides a broad introduction to current understandings of the nature and function of gesture as a feature of communication. This Slim Guide covers the ways gesture works alongside speech and the different categories of gesture. The way these categories are used varies across cultures and languages, and even across specific interactions. We acquire gesture as part of language, and it is deeply entwined with language in the brain. Gesture has an important role in the origin of language, and in shaping the future of human communication. The study of gesture makes a crucial interdisciplinary contribution to our understanding of human communication. This Slim Guide provides an introduction to Gesture Studies for readers of all backgrounds.

Order links

Bookshop .org (affiliate link)

Amazon (affiliate link)

Booko page (for Australians)

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lingthusiasm:

10 most popular Lingthusiasm episodes

In honour of the 100th episode of the podcast that’s enthusiastic about linguistics, here is our most popular episode from each “decade” of Lingthusiasm! 

Episode 01 - Speaking a single language won’t bring about world peace

Wouldn’t it solve so many problems in the world if everyone just spoke the same language? Not so fast!  

Episode 13 - What Does it Mean to Sound Black? Intonation and Identity Interview with Nicole Holliday

If you grow up with multiple accents to choose from, what does the one you choose say about your identity? How can linguistics unpick our hidden assumptions about what “sounds angry” or “sounds articulate”? What can we learn from studying the melodies of speech, in addition to the words and sounds? 

Episode 25 - Every word is a real word

We don’t point at a chair or a tree and assert that it’s not a word. Of course it’s not! So why, then, do people feel called to question the wordhood of actual words?  

Episode 39 - How to rebalance a lopsided conversation

Why do some conversations seem to flow really easily, while other times, it feels like you can’t get a word in edgewise, or that the other person isn’t holding up their end of the conversation? 

Episode 49 - How translators approach a text

How do translators decide whether to more closely follow the literal structure of the text or to adapt more freely? 

Episode 59 - Are you thinking what I’m thinking? Theory of Mind 

We talk about the highly important role of gossip in the development of language, reframing how we introduce people to something they haven’t heard of yet, and ways of synchronizing mental states across groups of people, from conferences to movie voiceovers.

Episode 68 - Tea and skyscrapers - When words get borrowed across languages

When societies of humans come into contact, they’ll often pick up words from each other. When this is happening actively in the minds of multilingual people, it gets called codeswitching; when it happened long before anyone alive can remember, it’s more likely to get called etymology.

Episode 72 - What If Linguistics - Absurd Hypothetical Questions with Randall Munroe of xkcd

We answer absurd hypothetical linguistic questions from special guest Randall Munroe, creator of the webcomic xkcd

Episode 80 - Word magic

The magical kind of spell and the written kind of spell are historically linked. Saying a word can change the state of the world, both in terms of fictional magic spells and in terms of the real-world linguistics 

Episode 90 - What visualizing our vowels tells us about who we are

Vowels are a significant component of what we think of as someone’s accent, so we commissioned custom vowel diagrams and explore how they’re made and what factors might affect your vowels.

My favourite episode of Lingthusiasm is usually the one that’s about whatever topic I’m currently talking to you about. It makes me so happy to have found a project that lets me keep talking about ALL of the linguistics.

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Introducing the Lingcomm Bibliography: tracking research on linguistic communication

I have been tinkering on a new project with Jess Kruk to track research that focuses on the way we use linguistics to communicate about linguistics with public audiences.

https://bit.ly/lingcomm-biblio

The bibliography lists publications by year. One of the challenges of this work is that ‘linguistics communication’ and 'lingcomm’ are terms that have only been used in the last couple of years, but there is a tradition of scholars talking about these topics using other terms.

From the bibliography page:

What is in this bibliography?

For the purposes of this bibliography, ‘lingcomm’ is the creation of materials about linguistics for general audiences. This bibliography specifically includes research publications that discuss and analyse the practice of lingcomm. Please note that research does not have to use the term ‘lingcomm’ to be lingcomm, it just has to discuss public communication about linguistics. We take a very broad definition of general audiences, but this does not include formal classroom teaching as part of an established curriculum. Listed publications are mostly in English, but references in other languages are welcome. 

This bibliography is not a reference list of lingcomm projects. For links to a variety of projects see the resources page on the LingComm.org website. 

If you believe something should be included in the bibliography and is not listed (or if you notice an error), you can submit a proposal via this Google form. We will aim to update the bibliography quarterly, but we are only two people doing this voluntarily. 

This bibliography is modelled directly on the Trans Language Bibliography maintained by Lal Zimman and the UCSB Trans Research in Linguistics Lab. Our thanks to them for the format, which we have directly borrowed. 

I know there are definitely deep cut classics out there that we haven’t added, so if you know of anything please use the form to let us know!

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lingthusiasm:

Lingthusiasm Episode 100: A hundred reasons to be enthusiastic about linguistics

This is our hundredth episode that’s enthusiastic about linguistics! To celebrate, we’ve put together 100 of our favourite fun facts about linguistics, featuring contributions from previous guests and Lingthusiasm team members, fan favourites that resonated with you from the previous 99 episodes, and new facts that haven’t been on the show before but might star in one of the next 100 episodes in greater detail.

In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne talk about brains, gesture, etymology, famous example sentences, languages by the numbers, a few special facts about the word “hundred” and way more! This episode is both a fun overview of the vibe of Lingthusiam if you’ve never listened before, and a bonus bingo card game for diehard fans to see how many facts you can recognize.

We also invite you to share this episode alongside one of your favourite fun facts about linguistics and help more people find Lingthusiasm in honour of our 100th episodiversary! Whether you pick something new that resonates from this episode, or share the fact you were sitting on the edge of your seat hoping we’d mention, we look forward to staying Lingthusiastic with you for the next 100 episodes.

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.

Announcements:

In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about some of our favourite deleted bits from recent interviews that we didn’t quite have space to share with you! First, we go back to our interview with phonetician Jacq Jones, previously seen talking about how binary and non-binary people talk. Then, we return to computational linguist Emily M. Bender to talk about how Emily’s students made a computational model of Lauren’s grammar of Lamjung Yolmo and how linguistics is a team sport. Finally, we return to our group interview with the team behind Tom Scott’s Language Files to talk about sneaky Icelandic jokes and the unedited behind-the-scenes version of the gif/gif joke.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

Here are the links and citations mentioned in the episode:

Lingthusiasm episodes mentioned:

Merch mentioned in this episode:

You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.

To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.

You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.

Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com

Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.

Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.

Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles. This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).

Celebrating 100 episodes of Lingthusiasm!

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Superlinguo 2024 in review

I returned to full time work after a year of parental leave. That, alone, would have been enough for this year. Unfortunately, it turned into a terrible year at my university, with key senior colleagues in my department losing their jobs.

I like these reviews most year, but looking back on last year it feels even more important than usual to remember that there were some good things that happened in spite of everything going on with my university.

Lingthusiasm in 2024

Image for: Lingthusiasm in 2024

Lingthusiasm turned 8! We maintained our regular pace, posting a dozen main episodes as well as our monthly bonus episodes for patrons. We plotted our vowels and covered a wide range of topics, including some great interviews with guests.

We launched our perfectly calibrated, Very Serious ‘Which Lingthusiasm episode are you?’ quiz guide you!

We were also reviewed in the New York Times, were featured in Lauren Passell’s Podcast the Newsletter, and conducted our final survey in the trilogy we planned.

We released a new sticker/badge that says “Ask Me About Linguistics”, new merch that says “more people have read the text on this shirt than I have” and a range of merch with a very elegant Gavagai from Lucy Maddox, which are both available alongside merch for all kinds of linguists and language fans.

Main episodes

Bonus episodes

Top Superlinguo posts in 2024

Image for: Top Superlinguo posts in 2024

I honestly expected to have nothing to post here, so it’s lovely to know that I do still get small changes to blog throughout the year.

General posts

Academic articles in 2024

Image for: Academic articles in 2024

Four publications this year, across lingcomm, gesture and emoji. I also spent a lot of this year finishing Gesture: A Slim Guide, which will be out with OUP in 2025.

  • McCulloch, G. & L. Gawne. 2024. Towards a theory of linguistic curiosity: applying linguistic frameworks to lingcomm and scicomm. Linguistics Vanguard 10(s3): 181-189. DOI: 10.1515/lingvan-2024-0073 [OA published version][blog summary]
  • Gawne, L., & Cooperrider, K. (2024). Emblems: Meaning at the interface of language and gesture. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics. doi: 10.16995/glossa.9705 [OA published version][blog summary]
  • Cabraal, A. & L. Gawne. 2024. Using emoji as a creative tool for data analysis. In H. Kara, D. Mannay & A. Roy (Eds), The Handbook of Creative Data Analysis, 201-212. Bristol: Polity Press.
  • Gawne, L., G. McCulloch, N. Sweeney, R. Alatalo, H. Bodenhausen, C. Riley & J. Grieser. 2024. Creating Inclusive Linguistics Communication: Crash Course Linguistics. In A. Charity Hudley, C. Mallinson, and M. Bucholtz (Eds), Inclusion in Linguistics, 383-396. Oxford University Press. [Open Access PDF][blog post summary]

The year ahead

Image for: The year ahead

After a year of upheaval, next year will be a time of rebuilding. There will be a new team, a new curriculum, and I’m not silly enough to assume that also means a new, manageable pace of work. I’ll still be sharing work here and recording Lingthusiasm. I’ve also been spending more time on Bluesky, perhaps I’ll see you there?

Browsing old Superlinguo content?

Image for: Browsing old Superlinguo content?

I have a welcome page on the blog that points you to aggregate posts, and series of posts I’ve done over the years, as well as themed collections of posts that have appeared on the blog in the last twelve years.

Previous years

Image for: Previous years

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lingthusiasm:

Lingthusiasm Episode 99: A politeness episode, if you please

If it wouldn’t be too much trouble, if you have a spare half hour, could we possibly suggest that you might enjoy listening to this episode on politeness? Or, if you’ve prefer a less polite version, “Listen! Now!”

In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne get enthusiastic about what politeness and rudeness are made up of at a linguistic level. We talk about existing cultural notions of “saving face” and “losing face”, aka the push and pull between our desire for help vs our desire for independence, and how they’ve been formalized in a classic linguistics paper. We also talk about being less polite to show intimacy, addressing God in English and French, which forms of politeness are and aren’t overtly taught, different uses of “please” in UK vs US English, levels of indirectness, email etiquette across generations and subcultures, rudeness and pointing, nodding norms in Japanese and English, smiling at strangers in the US vs Europe, and how a small number of politeness ingredients can combine in so many different ways that are culturally different.

Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.

Announcements:

In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about science metaphors and learning everything with Tom Lum and Caroline Roper, cohosts of Let’s Learn Everything! We talk about whether programming languages should count as a language credit, numbers and ritual stock phrases like seventeen and “once upon a time”, as well as etymology and metaphor in ecology, chemistry, and linguistics. We also talk about turning the “constantly trying to figure things out” part of your brain off, attending the word of the year vote, and how linguists have a tendency to be curious about language all the time, which… sometimes gets us into trouble.

Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.

Looking for a last minute gift for the language nerd in your life? Or are you trying to get someone in your life to love linguistics as much as you do? Patreon have newly added a gift memberships feature! So if you’d be excited to receive a patreon membership to Lingthusiasm, forward this link to your friends and/or family with a little wink wink nudge nudge.

Here are the links mentioned in the episode:

You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.

To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.

You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.

Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com

Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.

Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.

Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles.

This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).