Status Updates From An Introduction to Language
An Introduction to Language by
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Ashkan
is on page 60 of 624
اول تابستون فکر میکردم بتونم هفتهای یه فصل بخونم ولی ماشالا حجمش یه مقدار بیشتر از تصوراتمه. دارم لذت میبرم از مسیر ولی.
— Aug 22, 2023 05:38AM
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Ashkan
is on page 43 of 624
هم تخصصیتر و مفصلتره از یول و هم روون و خوشخونتر.
— Aug 13, 2023 12:16AM
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مازن رياض
is on page 95 of 624
The colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
— May 11, 2023 01:15PM
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مازن رياض
is on page 56 of 624
Disobvious? Unobvious? Exobvious? Antiobvious? Inobvious? Subobvious? Nonobvious?
Not clear!
— Apr 06, 2023 11:24AM
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Not clear!
مازن رياض
is on page 10 of 624
As Juliet says in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet:
What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
— Mar 12, 2023 01:35PM
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What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet;
Aurora Liang
is on page 216 of 624
What an absolute banger, I absolutely love this book 10/10, may Fromkin rest in peace🙏
— Sep 30, 2022 04:22AM
3 comments
Yidir Bentizza
is starting
found this copy in a used bookstore in Bab Doukala, Marrakech. I've read somewhere before that it is used as a coursebook to teach linguistics in most universities abroad, so i grabbed it right away.
— Nov 05, 2021 03:43AM
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محمد حسين ضاحي
is on page 487 of 643
It's just a hopm skip and jump to the end.
"كلها فركة كعب"، وأُنهي الكتاب.
— Sep 30, 2021 07:03AM
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"كلها فركة كعب"، وأُنهي الكتاب.
Exina
is on page 280 of 624
A dialect is not an inferior or degraded form of a language, and logically could not be so because a language is a collection of dialects.
— Aug 24, 2021 12:06AM
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Exina
is on page 193 of 624
In 1888 members of the International Phonetic Association developed a phonetic alphabet to symbolize the sounds of all languages.
— Aug 23, 2021 11:37PM
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Exina
is on page 171 of 624
An implicature is a great example of extra-truth-conditional meaning.
— Aug 23, 2021 11:08PM
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Exina
is on page 156 of 624
The best-known lexical relations are synonyms.
— Aug 23, 2021 10:51PM
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Exina
is on page 80 of 624
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. This is a very interesting sentence, because it shows that syntax can be separated from semantics - that form can be separated from meaning.
— Aug 23, 2021 06:50AM
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Exina
is on page 56 of 624
Back-formations
"Some word creation comes from deliberately miscast back-formations. The word bikini comes from the Bikini atoll of the Marshall Islands. Because the first syllable bi- is a morpheme meaning ‘two’ in words like bicycle, some clever person called a topless bathing suit a monokini and a tank top with a bikini bottom a tankini."
— Aug 23, 2021 06:38AM
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"Some word creation comes from deliberately miscast back-formations. The word bikini comes from the Bikini atoll of the Marshall Islands. Because the first syllable bi- is a morpheme meaning ‘two’ in words like bicycle, some clever person called a topless bathing suit a monokini and a tank top with a bikini bottom a tankini."
Exina
is on page 17 of 624
Birds cannot tell us their story, however beautifully they sing.

Displacement and discreteness are two fundamental properties that distinguish human language from the communication systems of birds and other animals.
— Aug 23, 2021 05:05AM
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Displacement and discreteness are two fundamental properties that distinguish human language from the communication systems of birds and other animals.
Exina
is on page 10 of 624
In 1762 Bishop Robert Lowth wrote A Short Introduction to English Grammar with Critical Notes. Lowth prescribed a number of new rules for English, many of them influenced by his personal taste. Lowth, decided that “two negatives make a positive” and therefore one should say I don’t have any; and that even when you is singular it should be followed by the plural were.
— Aug 23, 2021 01:08AM
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Exina
is on page 6 of 624
Creativity is a universal property of human language.
— Aug 23, 2021 12:55AM
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محمد حسين ضاحي
is on page 338 of 643
just finished the core parts of grammar: morphology, syntax, semantics and phonetics and phonology, and going into PART 3.
— Aug 20, 2021 05:30AM
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Al
is on page 31 of 620
Peoples’ thoughts and perceptions are not determined by the words and structures of their language. We are not prisoners of our linguistic systems. If speakers were unable to think about something for which their language had no specific word, translations would be impossible, as would learning a second language.
— Aug 03, 2021 04:07AM
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Al
is on page 16 of 620
In a society where “linguistic profiling” is used to discriminate against speakers of a minority dialect, it may behoove those speakers to learn the prestige dialect rather than wait for social change. But linguistically, prestige and standard dialects do not have superior grammars.
— Aug 03, 2021 04:04AM
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Al
is on page 3 of 620
To understand our humanity, one must understand the nature of language that makes us human.
— Aug 03, 2021 04:01AM
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ceren
is on page 100 of 624
i love linguistics and documenting that i’m doing my ling101 readings regularly. sue me. it’s the single thing that brings me joy!!! and makes me consider changing my major so what.big deal.
— Apr 26, 2021 05:04AM
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محمد حسين ضاحي
is on page 178 of 643
finished the chapter on syntax, delving into semantics
— Oct 10, 2020 12:06PM
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محمد حسين ضاحي
is on page 73 of 643
A little progress in a big while.
This part was on the brain and language or about neurolinguistics.
— Aug 16, 2020 03:54AM
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This part was on the brain and language or about neurolinguistics.
Cary
is 61% done
Loved this chapter. But time to jump to another book.
— Aug 25, 2019 07:43AM
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Chadi Raheb
is on page 446 of 624
«The ancient philosophers asked whether a sound is produced if a tree falls in the middle of the forest with no one to hear it. This question has been answered by the science of acoustics. Objectively, a sound is produced; subjectively, no sound is heard.»
— Jul 24, 2019 02:39AM
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Cary
is 41% done
IPA, Grice's Cooperative Principle, Semantics, Pragmatics, Implicatures, Presuppositions, and many others! I loved revisiting these concepts again!
— Jun 23, 2019 03:01PM
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