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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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

7 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?

7 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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