Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language. - podcast cover

Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

Daniel Midgley, Ben Ainslie, and Hedvig Skirgårdbecauselanguage.com
A podcast about linguistics, the science of language.
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Episodes

46: Just Words (with Rebecca Shapiro)

Can dictionaries create a more fair world? One language observer sees that dictionaries, far from being a neutral chronicle of language, are capable of promoting social justice. Daniel speaks with Dr Rebecca Shapiro, author of Fixing Babel: An Historical Anthology of Applied English Lexicography .

Feb 10, 20221 hr 35 min

45: Mailbag of Words

The Words of the Year are out! And we're talking about 'em. We're answering all the questions in our voluminous Mailbag. We have here , there , and where . We also have that and what . Was there ever a hat ? Why are we friends with someone? Is the distribution of emoji Zipfian? If you study linguistics — the science of language — are you a STEM major? And Hedvig springs a game on us.

Jan 29, 20221 hr 20 min

44: Words of the Week of the Year 2021 (with Lauren Gawne)

Our listeners have voted, and here are all the words! Which were our top Words of the Week? Which were the worst? And what did all the dictionary people pick? We're joined by our very special guest (and lingopod pal) Dr Lauren Gawne for this very cheugy episode of Because Language .

Dec 22, 20211 hr 23 min

43: Journal Club: Zoomies on Zoom (with Hadas Kotek and friends)

Our friends and listeners bring us lots of great stories, questions, and words. So for this episode, we've invited them to present them themselves! All patrons have been invited to join us for this live episode, and many have brought pets. Also, Dr Hadas Kotek has examined the sentences used in linguistic textbooks and examples. How are people represented in our discipline?

Dec 17, 20211 hr 23 min

42: Replicability Crisis (with Martine Grice and Bodo Winter)

The sciences are facing a replicability crisis. Some landmark studies were once considered settled, but then failed when they were retested. So have any linguistic experiments been toppled? And how do we fix this problem? Dr Martine Grice and Dr Bodo Winter have contributed to a special issue of Linguistics , and they join us for this fun episode.

Dec 01, 20211 hr 35 min

41: Mailbag of Caitlin University (with Caitlin Green)

Here to help us answer our voluminous Mailbag is the tireless Dr Caitlin Green, Vice Cancellor of Caitlin University. Among our questions: NON-BINARY or NONBINARY? What's behind coffee names? Why is there an L in WOULD? Could swearing get in the way of persuasion? When is it time to stop supporting a minority language? What's with the D in TIDDIES? Fee fi fo… fun? Why doesn't it rhyme with ENGLISHMAN? Where does TUCKER come from?...

Nov 16, 20211 hr 14 min

40: Dialect Playthrough (with Hakan Seyalıoğlu and Stephen Mann)

Dialect is a role-playing game about language and how it dies. Over the course of a game, players form an isolated community, create a private language, and watch it fade away as the community's isolation is breached. We're very pleased and honoured to play a game of Dialect , with game creator Hakan Seyalıoğlu of Thorny Games leading us through it.

Nov 15, 20212 hr 56 min

39: Is This a Reference? (with Sylvia Sierra)

You probably communicate with your friends using media references all the time. Not that there's anything wrong with that. But why do we include media references, when we could just talk? Turns out it has a lot to do with identity, building social relationships, and communication — all the stuff that language normally does. We're having a media-heavy discussion with Dr Sylvia Sierra about her book Millennials Talking Media: Creating Intertextual Identities in Everyday Conversation ....

Nov 01, 20211 hr 42 min

38: Generativism 2: How It's Going (with Taylor Miller and Adam Tallman)

This is the second of a two-parter on generativism, the linguistic school of thought originated by Noam Chomsky. This time, it's from the perspective of early-career researchers. How is generativism relevant to them, and how do they regard its claims? We ask: What importance does linguistic theory have on day-to-day research? How does generativism relate to nativism , the idea that at least some language is innate? Is there a conflict between generativism and functionalism today? What's the next...

Oct 14, 20211 hr 56 min

37: Generativism 1: How It Started (with David Adger and John Goldsmith)

We're doing a deep dive into generativism , the linguistic school of thought championed by Noam Chomsky. It's had an enormous impact on the direction of linguistics, and even those who disagree with the generative programme will be at least somewhat conversant with its claims and the debate around it. Here, we'll try to answer questions such as: What is generativism, and what are its claims? What does generativism help you to do in linguistics? What is the relationship to nativism , the idea tha...

Sep 30, 20211 hr 51 min
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