BerLinguistin, to random
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar

Here is a short summary of the talk on “German Beyond Its Native Speakers” I gave at the Austria Centre Leiden a few weeks ago!

https://www.universiteitleiden.nl/en/news/2024/05/dr.-naomi-truan-delivers-lunchtime-talk-at-austria-centre-leiden

benjamingeer, to Korean
@benjamingeer@zirk.us avatar
BerLinguistin, to academia
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar

On positioning: Every time I do sociolinguistic fieldwork or conduct interviews, people assume I am a student 🙃 I could decide to be angry, and I am, at a structural/systemic level, but I think I also use it to my advantage to minimize inherent power hierarchies... Thoughts?

BerLinguistin, to random
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar
wollman, to random
@wollman@mastodon.social avatar

There's got to be a good paper about the sudden rise of three-letter symbols for places and geographically linked organizations among people who are not involved in the travel industry. Intuitively I suspect it has to do with the late-1990s decline of the travel-agency model and a concomitant rise in self-booked travel, but even if this is true it wouldn't explain the crossover to sports teams (and media), supermarket locations, bumper stickers, tourist apparel, etc.

dialect, to books
@dialect@mastodon.scot avatar

We're in paperback!!! And we're 20% off!!! 🎉🎉🎉

Hall-Lew, Lauren, Emma Moore, & Robert J. Podesva (eds.) 2021. Social Meaning and Linguistic Variation: Theorizing the Third Wave. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
https://www.cambridge.org/gb/universitypress/subjects/languages-linguistics/sociolinguistics/social-meaning-and-linguistic-variation-theorizing-third-wave

stronglang, to linguistics
@stronglang@lingo.lol avatar

"Pigs knock you down and fucking fuck you": the obscene language of the kros

@stancarey on a special speech genre in Papua New Guinea:

https://stronglang.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/pigs-knock-you-down-and-fucking-fuck-you-the-obscene-language-of-the-kros/

dialect, to linguistics
@dialect@mastodon.scot avatar

One of the best masters dissertations I've ever had the pleasure of supervising is "Perception and production of singular They in British English" by Nadir Junco, now available online: https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/41355

"...reading time data indicates a significant demographic effect which has not been reported in previous studies..."

Check it out!!

benjamingeer, to languagelearning
@benjamingeer@zirk.us avatar

Is Arabic under threat on the Arabian peninsula?

“language anxiety, which is less about language and more about social and political tensions”

https://www.languageonthemove.com/is-arabic-under-threat-on-the-arabian-peninsula/

DrLinguo, to linguistics German

Die zweite Folge des -Podcasts ist online! (created by @sfb1412 ).
In dieser Folge erklären Manfred Krifka und Tonjes Veenstra ihre Forschung zu Kreolsprachen und Register!

https://registergeknister.buzzsprout.com/2227743/13990368

@linguistics @academicchatter

j_mieczni, to linguistics German
@j_mieczni@101010.pl avatar
BerLinguistin, to linguistics
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar

The slides for my invited lecture on “Whose Language Counts?” at the University of Groningen next Monday (27 Nov, 15:00-17:00) are ready (yes, always enough in advance to not be stressed ☺️)!

Join us onsite or online (meet.google.com/jfb-xucu-yvc) 🤩

First slide of a powerpoint presentation: Whose Language Counts? German Through the Lens of Its Multilingual Speakers Naomi Truan, Leiden University n.a.l.truan@hum.leidenuniv.nl University of Groningen EUROCULTURE Lecture Series 27 November 2023, 15:00 - 17:00

BerLinguistin, to random
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar

The preprint of my paper on the language ideologies on gender-inclusive language of L2 speakers of German is available here: https://shs.hal.science/halshs-04245878

It's still work in progress, and I'm looking forward to your comments!

KathyReid, to linguistics
@KathyReid@aus.social avatar
BerLinguistin, to linguistics
@BerLinguistin@mas.to avatar

Here is your reminder to submit an abstract for the working group “Evaluating register(s)” at the Annual Conference of the German Linguistic Society ! Deadline: 25 August 2023. I’ll be an invited discussant at this one 😊

https://www.linguistik.hu-berlin.de/de/institut/professuren/multilinguale-kontexte/ag11-dgfs2024

meow_factor, to Cats

"All paws on deck! 'Purrieties of Language: How We Talk about Cats Online' provides a feline twist on the linguistic analysis of online language variation.

📅 Join author @meow_factor
for a virtual book launch on , 8th August."

https://cambridge-org.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_cx5hGWewQ_ecIUitZlE9TA?utm_source=hootsuite&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Brand+Comms_BL#/registration

futurebird, to random
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

Are there any cultures where people don't have names and refer to each other by relation only? Eg.

"Good morning, teacher"
"Honey, I'm home."
"Mother, get the gun."
"Team Leader please stop singing."
"Pharmacist what have you done?"
"I'm always impressed with you, Beekeeper."

etc.

fkaOctaviaKeats,
@fkaOctaviaKeats@wandering.shop avatar

@futurebird
Southern US English speaking people, especially Black folks /older generations, do this more than younger folks. There is a mix of friendliness within an acknowledged social hierarchy. Cuz or cousin, auntie, uncle, bruh or brotha, sis or sistah, honey, sugar, baby girl, sweetheart even for people unrelated by blood.
For Christians, sister or brother.

vilyrou, to linguistics
@vilyrou@mastodon.social avatar
stancarey, to Korean

Edited an article with the text "a HR meeting" and left the "a" intact. In Irish English the name of the letter H is aspirated: "haitch" rather than "aitch".

This is deeply controversial in some quarters, as I reported here: https://stancarey.wordpress.com/2013/11/19/an-aitch-or-a-haitch-lets-ear-it/

#language #linguistics #phonetics #speech #sociolinguistics #IrishEnglish #dialect #editing #haitch

Jyoti, to random
@Jyoti@mas.to avatar

Who knew so many people on here were as fascinated with as I am?

I have learnt so much from Mast! :ablobcatheart:

Somewhere is smiling approvingly....

(he's not dead, btw, I just like to picture him watching over any sociolinguistical chuntering)

Jyoti, to Aus
@Jyoti@mas.to avatar

has basically been absorbed into British slang now. I reckon you can blame Neighbours and Home And Away for that.

Also commonplace now is and as in ill.

I have yet to hear average Brits call each other a or but I live in hope.

magdelenehall, to random German
@magdelenehall@mastodon.social avatar
Jyoti, to random
@Jyoti@mas.to avatar

As an old person, I eschew teenage argot (unless it's from my own teens, in which case I enthusiastically overuse it).

I never did say 'sick' as in good and that's come and gone now. No one under the age of thirty says it, thank fuck.

Currently waiting for 'slaps' to pass. Patiently.

Also waiting for posh white kids to stop appropriating / ruining and but not holding my fucking breath on that one.

Jyoti, to random
@Jyoti@mas.to avatar

Sometimes the similarity of words from / to other languages surprises me, though I know it shouldn't because, you know, we are one people bound by, trade, war, spices, love. Don't even need to go to .

When I first found out Óchi Chórnyje meant Eyes Dark, it made a deep sense to me.

Ochi is sooo close to aakhi. 😃

:ablobcool:

Jyoti, to random
@Jyoti@mas.to avatar

I love the language threads that I've been involved in today - was right is FUN!

Also, it's another vindication of because how amazing are other peoples? Other cultures?
:ablobmeltsoblove:

indeed.

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