PodcastImpara le lingueBecause Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

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

Daniel Midgley, Ben Ainslie, and Hedvig Skirgård
Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.
Ultimo episodio

118 episodi

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

    137: Are Trees Real? (with Yngwie Nielsen and Morten Christiansen)

    01/05/2026 | 1 h 1 min
    What goes on in our minds when we construct an utterance? Linguists often use syntax trees to represent the structure of sentences, but are they psychologically real? Yngwie Nielsen and Dr Morten Christiansen have found evidence for something else: we can recognise patterns in strings of words, even when they don't form coherent "treelets". They're giving us a walkthrough of their latest work.
    Timestamps
    00:00 Start
    00:31 Introductions: Yngwie and Morten
    05:19 Insights into linguistics communication
    07:45 What are syntax trees?
    09:13 Why linguists love syntax trees
    14:15 Treelets vs chunks: Looking beyond hierarchical structure
    17:46 Wanna and gonna: Words that cross treelet boundaries
    22:43 How to prime someone
    28:18 Priming in this experiment: People do recognise chunks
    32:26 Are people just filling in the treelet blanks?
    35:23 Were they accidentally smuggling in treelets?
    38:47 Do we process both treelets and chunks?
    42:23 DensiTrees: A way of representing fuzzy networks
    44:01 What are we doing mentally when we make an utterance?
    47:20 What is language for?
    49:29 Grammatical glue: How do we connect chunks?
    53:23 Being able to language is bonkers
    56:30 Should we be studying language differently?
    01:01:09 Wrap-up and goodbyes
  • Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

    136: These Languages Are Anchors (with Mary Walworth)

    25/04/2026 | 2 h 10 min
    What will happen to the languages of climate refugees? Dr Mary Walworth has been working with the small island community of Nusi in Papua New Guinea, which was recently featured in an episode of Pole to Pole with Will Smith. What's it like doing media for a large audience, and more importantly, how do we help speakers hold onto their language? Dr Walworth joins us for this episode.
    Timestamps
    00:00 Start
    00:45 Intros
    04:00 What's coming up on this episode
    06:58 New patron shoutout and spruik
    09:05 News: Air Canada CEO resigns over English communication
    14:34 News: Banning foreign language election information in the UK
    23:54 News: Can LLMs pass the Wug Test?
    34:03 News: Does closing your eyes help you hear better?
    39:48 Related or Not: Theme
    40:23 Related or Not: GORGE, ENGORGE, and GORGEOUS
    48:09 Related or Not: ANY and MANY
    51:54 Related or Not: GUAVA, GUACAMOLE, GUARANÍ, GUARANÁ
    01:00:20 Interview with Mary Walworth
    01:45:52 Word of the Week: bimbofication
    01:54:00 Word of the Week: glottophobia
    01:55:50 Word of the Week: liveness check
    01:57:54 Comment from Colin: CLAN and PLANTA
    01:59:03 Comment from Lauren: crash blossoms
    02:02:49 The Reads
    02:08:09 Outtake
  • Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

    135: Linguistic Illusions (with Dan Parker)

    03/04/2026 | 2 h 8 min
    "More people have listened to this episode than you have." Why does this sentence look so right, but feel so wrong? When your grammar says one thing, but your brain says another, you may have found a linguistic illusion. We're talking to Dr Dan Parker, author of Linguistic Illusions: A Case Study on Agreement Attraction.
    Video for this episode: https://youtu.be/_9BcmMZrH7s
    Timestamps
    Start: 0:00
    Intros: 0:27
    News: 6:30
    Related or Not: 34:22
    Interview with Dan Parker: 49:53
    Words of the Week: 1:38:00
    Comment: 1:54:16
    The Reads: 1:58:19
    Outtakes: 2:05:39
  • Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

    134: True Colour (with Kory Stamper)

    13/03/2026 | 2 h 21 min
    How do you define what blue is? What even IS colour? Turns out, the quest to define colours was happening along with a standardisation crisis and a dictionary crisis at the venerable Merriam-Webster. Lexicographer and author Kory Stamper tells us all about it, and about her new book True Color.
    Timestamps
    Start: 0:00
    Intros: 1:17
    News: 12:40
    Related or Not: 33:34
    Chat with Kory Stamper, author of True Color: 50:43
    Words of the Week: 1:41:58
    Comment from Lauretta: 2:04:57
    The Reads: 2:08:14
    Outtakes: 2:16:48
  • Because Language - a podcast about linguistics, the science of language.

    133: Why We Talk Funny (with Valerie Fridland)

    26/02/2026 | 2 h 27 min
    We all have an accent — or several! And we use them to communicate things about us, and highlight aspects of our identity. So what's going on with the accents we hear? Are we losing some accents, or are they just changing? Dr Valerie Fridland is the author of Why We Talk Funny, and she joins us for this episode.
    Timestamps
    Start: 0:00
    Intros: 0:30
    News: 6:25
    Related or Not: 17:59
    Interview with Valerie Fridland: 36:53
    Words of the Week: 1:50:34
    The Reads: 2:21:21
    Outtakes: 2:26:14

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