117: Sometimes It Feels Like I'm the Only One Trying to Fix English Around Here (live with friends for LingFest25)

117: Sometimes It Feels Like I'm the Only One Trying to Fix English Around Here (live with friends for LingFest25)

Video version of this episode: https://youtu.be/wxGeXMzlwng

If you repeat something twice, how many times did you do it? Can more than one dinner be "the perfect dinner"? And what does "every other" mean?

We are once again fixing English, in a live episode in which we pile all our friends into a room and vote on vexing semantic questions. These results are binding on English-speakers throughout time and space, because that's how language works. By committee!

Timestamps

  • Cold open: 0:00
  • Intros: 0:55
  • News: 4:12
  • Related or Not: 31:06
  • Fixing English: 47:59
  • Words of the Week: 1:13:44
  • The Reads: 1:34:00
  • Outtakes: 1:42:40

Jaksot(100)

113: "Official" English (with Carmen Fought)

113: "Official" English (with Carmen Fought)

Breaking news: The president of the United States intends to sign an executive order designating English the official language of the USA. Is this a big deal? Why was this necessary, and what happens now? Dr Carmen Fought joins us on this episode. Timestamps Theme and intros: 0:00 Discussing the executive order with Carmen: 0:56 Thanks and reads: 47:38

2 Maalis 48min

112: WotY 2024: The Last Word

112: WotY 2024: The Last Word

What really goes on behind the scenes at the biggest Word of the Year vote in linguistdom? Are we really going to stick with sanewashing for our word? And which words did we miss? We lock in and crash out with New Words Data Czar Dr Kelly Wright. Timestamps Open: 0:00 Intros: 0:57 Words: 6:54 Related or Not: 59:22 Comments: 1:19:19 The Reads: 1:24:00 Outtake: 1:32:39

21 Helmi 1h 33min

111: Words of the Week of the Year 2024 (live with Mignon Fogarty and friends)

111: Words of the Week of the Year 2024 (live with Mignon Fogarty and friends)

It's our Words of the Year episode, where we do a vibe check on all the words and name one of them our Because Language Word of the Year. We're joined by Grammar Girl Mignon Fogarty and a lot of friends and supporters. It's going to be weird. It's going to be brat. You know we're going to eat that. Timestamps Cold open: 0:00 Intros: 0:54 All the words from everywhere: 10:58 Related or Not: 43:28 Words from Mignon and James: 58:50 Our Words of the Week of the Year: 1:13:23 The Reads: 1:33:40 Outtakes: 1:39:29

21 Joulu 20241h 42min

110: Diego's Dossier (with Diego Diaz)

110: Diego's Dossier (with Diego Diaz)

What's in the linguistic news? Diego knows. He's been tracking down stories and words for us all year long, and now he's curated an entire show for us. It's the latest in the Diego series. How do you write laughter in Spanish? Or other languages? Why do islands have so many languages? Why are speakers of an Indonesian language using Korean Hangul as their writing system? Plus Words of the Week and Related or Not! Timestamps Start: 0:00 News: 5:07 Related or Not: 34:14 Words of the Week: 46:40 The Reads: 59:30 Outtakes: 1:03:18

18 Joulu 20241h 4min

109: Language Oppression in Tibet (with Gerald Roche and Sasha Wilmoth)

109: Language Oppression in Tibet (with Gerald Roche and Sasha Wilmoth)

Minority languages are under threat everywhere, but Tibet represents a particularly difficult challenge. The Tibetan language family is under pressure from (no surprise) Mandarin, even as community support for Tibetan remains high. But where does that leave the many other minority languages of the area, like Manegacha? Language policy, community pressure, and individual language choice are coming together in a turbulent mix. Is there any place for hope in this setting? Dr Gerald Roche tells us about this unique situation, drawing from his new book The Politics of Language Oppression in Tibet.  Daniel chats with Dr Sasha Wilmoth about a very surprising sentence, and how our brains process language in some surprising ways. Timestamps Cold open: 0:00 Intros: 0:55 News: 5:30 Chat with Sasha Wilmoth: 21:30 Related or Not: 39:40 Interview with Gerald Roche: 54:40 Words of the Week: 2:02:56 The Reads: 2:29:16 Outtakes: 2:32:56

6 Joulu 20242h 35min

108: Mailbag of Etymology (with Douglas Harper)

108: Mailbag of Etymology (with Douglas Harper)

We're joined for the first time by Douglas Harper, proprietor of the world-renowned Online Etymology Dictionary (etymonline.com). He's here to help us with our Mailbag questions, and even test us in a game of Related or Not. In our Mailbag this time: What's the difference between DEPENDENCE and DEPENDENCY? Why is TONGUE spelled that way? What does it mean if reciting a tongue twister in your mind is just as hard as saying it out loud? Why is STYGIAN the adjective form of the River Styx? Why are WHY and BECAUSE the same in some languages? Timestamps Cold open: 0:00 Intros: 2:01 Questions for Douglas Harper: 9:16 Mailbag questions 1: 24:00 Related or Not: 41:24 Mailbag questions 2: 1:03:20 Comments: 1:14:18 The Reads: 1:18:00 Outtakes: 1:22:47

16 Marras 20241h 24min

107: Linguaphile (with Julie Sedivy and Matt Spike)

107: Linguaphile (with Julie Sedivy and Matt Spike)

Language is a lot like love. You can enjoyably lose yourself in both. They can both be dangerous. And they both entail a responsibility to keep each other safe. A new book Linguaphile: A Life of Language Love is both a language book and a memoir, connecting the strands of language learning, language love, and language loss. Daniel speaks with author Dr Julie Sedivy. Also: Large language models have proven adept at duplicating patterns of language that humans find possible. But what about impossible language patterns? Can LLMs learn those? And what even is an impossible language? Dr Matt Spike explains. Timestamps Cold open: 0:00 Intros: 0:34 News: 5:49 Interview with Matt Spike: 32:01 Related or Not: 50:57 Interview with Julie Sedivy: 1:05:34 Words of the Week: 1:33:33 The Reads: 1:55:04 Outtakes: 2:01:21

29 Loka 20242h 7min

106: What One Thing? (with Mark Ellison)

106: What One Thing? (with Mark Ellison)

What one thing explains the most about language? Here to answer that question is linguist and friend of the pod Dr Mark Ellison — and many of our listeners and friends. It's one of our Deck Chats! Grab a coffee and follow along. Timestamps Cold open: 0:00 Intros: 0:31 Mark's work: 1:51 Listener responses: 9:07 Daniel's answer: 43:34 Mark's answer: 1:03:45 Wrap up: 1:17:17

23 Syys 20241h 21min

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