1531: y'all, yous, and yinz Feb 21, 2019
Even in the few forms of a second-person plural English pronoun, such as 'y'all', 'yous' and 'yinz', they pretty much all originate from combinations. While there are dozens of varieties of English, the main two sort of standard models are the Standard American and Standard British styles; neither of these have a distinction between the singular and plural forms for the second person pronoun but the other pronouns worked their ways out of this same word. 'Y'all' is just the elision of 'you all', and 'yous' comes from the '-s' form for general pluralization. 'Yinz' comes from 'you -uns'. which is shortened form of 'you ones'; originating in Ireland, it follows the same pattern as 'youngin', but gained greater popularity in Appalachia and the Midwest in the 19th century.
1530: pica Feb 20, 2019
Following yesterday's post about the unit of 'pica', it should be noted that this is a term used in printing, but also medicine, in which it denotes a tendency to eat non-food items. While it may be considered a serious term insofar as it is jargon for two professions, both of these terms originate from a Latin word for 'magpie'. The reason why this would have the meaning it does in medicine is fairly easy to understand, but in printing this makes less sense at first. However, it is believed that it comes from the appearance of piebald (a word that also comes from 'magpie') appearance of a printed page, compared to hand-written and illustrated ones.
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1529: Why 12-Point Font Feb 19, 2019
On many word processors, the default font-size is 12 points, nowadays, for whatever the font. This number may seem random, but—within the imperial system—it makes a lot of sense. Using standard measurements, a point is one-twelfth of a pica, which is just about one-sixth of an inch. Traditionally, all fonts would need to be measured not only to fit the page, but also measured against each other, so these numbers were important and 12 became standard. With digital printing however, many fonts will be larger or smaller than stated, no longer actually using points as a form of standard measurement.
More on fonts here.
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1528: -ing in English Names Feb 18, 2019
While the suffix '-ing' meaning 'small' noly appears at the end of a few words like 'duckling', 'gosling', or 'fledgling', it used to be quite a bit more popular, and it shows today. Many British surnames also come from this root, but this can be harder to discern, because another Old English word meaning 'people of' now resembles this today, such as in the city of Reading, England.
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1527: 'Arab World' Feb 17, 2019
1526: City of Lights Feb 16, 2019
1525: Conservative use of English in Pakistan Feb 15, 2019
1524: Sprachbund Feb 14, 2019
1523: Linguistic Diversity in California Feb 13, 2019
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1522: (Basically) No Writing Systems in North America Feb 12, 2019
North of Mesoamerica, there are no independent writing systems from before European contact in the Americas. For reference, the Greek island of Crete has two writing systems unique to that bit of land, and the section of North America in question is about 2 millions times bigger. This deficiency however, is true of many cultures that lacked large-scale trade and dedicated systems for storage. Indeed, increased trade after the arrival of Europeans, both with other tribes and with the Europeans led to the creation of several native writing systems, ranging from hieroglyphs to alphabets and syllabaries.
Watch more about the creation of writing here: https://youtu.be/dntJLHmkfhw
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1521: (Some) Reasons for Official Writing Systems Feb 11, 2019
Classifying something as a language can be political at times, such as with calling Croatian and Serbian distinct, but this is also true of writing systems. A whole system of writing can change the way that people consider a language. For instance, to make Kazakhstan less culturally russified, the government decided to use a Latin-based script instead of a Cyrillic one in the last few years, whereas China uses the same writing—let alone writing system—for all Chinese dialects even if they aren't really mutually intelligible. Sometimes this is done more-or-less accidentally however as is the case with Laotian and Thai, which are mutually intelligible but have different writing systems.
See more on censorship in the new video: https://youtu.be/IFwACamZhmM
1520: Why Dutch isn't spoken in the DRC Feb 10, 2019
The history of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is often discussed as if it was colonized by Belgium, but this is not entirely true, and the linguistic makeup of the DRC and its government represents this. In 1885, what is now the DRC was colonized by King Leopold II as his personal property, but even after he gave over control to the Belgian government decades later, Flemish (Dutch) was barely recognized as a language in Belgium, even though it is spoken by half the population. Today, Belgium has 3 recognized languages: French, Flemish and German, but because French was favored for much of Belgium's history, only French is the official language of the DRC. For more on this theme, watch the video about how anthropology intersects with linguistics: https://youtu.be/oqmZCCXL_Hg.
1519: North Korean Censorship Feb 9, 2019
Watch the new video on censorship here.
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In North Korea, there are huge limitations on what gets into the country, but in the age of the Internet, this also means a monitoring on what gets out. For instance, there are only 28 websites registered with the .kp handle, which means that Internet in North Korea not only can be easily regulated by the government, but basically all media is controlled to stop communication. As a result, both of Internet and of everything else in terms of isolation, there are many terms and other linguistic signals that are used in South Korea that North Koreans have reported not understanding. For more on censorship watch the new video.
1518: cricket and croquet Feb 8, 2019
Although the practice of the sports themselves are quite different, the words 'cricket' and 'croquet' both come from the same root word. It is not a case in which one was brought about by the other, but the type of batting tool used both come from the same origin as 'crook' as in staff. For more on sports, see yesterday's post.
1517: pitch Feb 6, 2019
https://youtu.be/E8wxfur1HwI
1516: Regional Phrases in the USA Feb 5, 2019
Make sure to watch the new video about how genetics has helped linguistics, and vice-versa: https://youtu.be/oqmZCCXL_Hg
1515: Classical Music Feb 4, 2019
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https://youtu.be/oqmZCCXL_Hg
1514: El Dorado Feb 3, 2019
The famed city of El Dorado has inspired many myths, theories, and movies, but a bit of knowledge about the name would have cleared that up. The translation of 'el dorado' from Spanish is 'the golden', which doesn't make much sense by itself, but actually this is because the first account of the tale was from the phrase 'el hombre dorado', or 'the golden man'. This is because the legend comes from a right of passage ceremony for the local chief of dumping gold in a lake to appease their Sun deity.
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1513: Pitching or Throwing a Fit Feb 2, 2019
Often, words will have definitions that are petty straight forward, but these won't always follow a clear pattern. This is true a lot of prepositions, such as how an alarm will go 'off' before it is turned 'off', but also some words just don't make a lot of sense. For instance, 'throw' and 'pitch' are used in a lot of the same scenarios, including 'throwing' or 'pitching' a fit, and while those words can relate to making something, like throwing a party or pitching a tent, the fact that they can mean that at all, at the same time as they both mean to propel a ball doesn't make a lot of sense. In fact, while the phrase "having a fit" can be dated back to the 17th century, 'pitching' or 'throwing' one isn't attested for until about 200 years later, even though it is all just a continued process of stretching a word's already plentiful definitions.
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