The “If” That Changes Everything: How Counterfactuals and the Subjunctive Mood Built Science

10 months ago

What if the ability to say "if" was a prerequisite for science itself? This post explores how counterfactuals and the…

Building Languages for Machines: The Linguistic Principles Behind Programming Languages

10 months ago

We think of Python or Java as "computer languages," but they are fundamentally constructed languages built on core linguistic principles.…

The Agent and the Patient: How Transitivity Shapes Blame and Responsibility

10 months ago

Who broke the window? The choice between saying "The boy broke the window" and "The window broke" is more than…

Classifying Reality: The Social Impact of Noun Classes and Grammatical Gender

10 months ago

Beyond the simple "he/she/it" of English, many languages categorize the world in ways that are deeply tied to culture and…

The Future Tense That Never Was: How Languages Without a Future Tense Shape Planning and Perception

10 months ago

Did you know that many languages, like Mandarin Chinese and Finnish, get by perfectly well without a grammatical future tense?…

The Language of Salt: How a Single Commodity Carved Paths Across the Lexicon

10 months ago

Long before refrigeration, salt was a mineral so valuable that Roman soldiers were paid in it, giving us the word…

A Blind Mind’s Eye: How People with Aphantasia Experience Language

10 months ago

How does someone who cannot form mental images understand a phrase like "a forest of emerald green"? This post explores…

I Heard, I Saw, I Inferred: The Linguistic World of Evidentials

10 months ago

In English, we use optional phrases like "I heard" or "I saw" to show how we know something. But in…

The Power of a Question: How Linguistic Manipulation Shapes Police Confessions

10 months ago

A confession can seem like the most straightforward form of evidence, but the language used to obtain it is incredibly…

The Unwritten Rules of Conversation: Are You Violating Grice’s Maxims?

10 months ago

Ever felt a conversation was awkward or that someone was being evasive, but couldn't pinpoint why? Philosopher Paul Grice proposed…

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