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Posts tagged "babies"
Bonus #23 - Naming people (and especially babies) | Lingthusiasm on Patreon
Here’s a riddle:
Everyone has one, but I use yours more than I use my own.
What is it?A name!
Naming a brand-new tiny human is a big linguistic task. They might carry that name for the rest of their life – or at least for a number of formative years, if they decide to change it when they’re older. But a baby can’t tell you anything about what kind of name they’d like. So how do you pick a name for someone?
In this 23rd bonus episode, Lauren and Gretchen get enthusiastic about the linguistics of naming people. There are lots of factors to consider: does a name sound old-fashioned or super-trendy? How does the name fit in with the rest of the family and with the cultural context? How might a name get misspoken, misspelled, misheard, or mis-nicknamed? Plus, we share how our parents decided on our names, and other name decision strategies to consider as Lauren prepares to name her upcoming tiny human.
To listen to this bonus episode, plus 22 other previous bonuses, support Lingthusiasm on Patreon!
“
Gretchen: When you’re born, you pay attention to any sound that could be relevant for any of the world’s languages. Then by the time you hit the age of, like, three months or six months or nine months, depending on the sound pairs, you lose that ability, and you retain the ability only to perceive the sounds that are relevant for the languages that you’re exposed to.
Lauren: That’s so early! It constantly astounds me how early this happens.
Gretchen: And so when you try to talk about these sound contrasts that people aren’t used to hearing the difference between, when you introduce it Intro Linguistics classes, people almost don’t believe they’re real. Because we’ve spent almost our entire lives getting used to paying attention to only a particular set of sounds. It’s kind of like optical illusions.
Lauren: It’s like growing up and only being told that the picture of the duck that rotates as a rabbit is a duck, and you’re like, “This is only a duck,” and you can only see it as a duck.
Gretchen: And then linguistics is like “Actually, there’s also a rabbit there” and you’re like “What?”
Lauren: You need to train yourself to be able to see the rabbit again. Or in this case, to perceive the differences between sound pairs you’ve been ignoring since a few months after you were born.
”—
Excerpt from Episode 12 of Lingthusiasm: Sounds you can’t hear - Babies, accents, and phonemes (edited).
Listen to the episode, read the full transcript, or check out more links about learning sounds linguistically.
About Lingthusiasm
A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne.
Weird and deep conversations about the hidden language patterns that you didn't realize you were already making.
New episodes (free!) the third Thursday of the month.