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Re: Sapir-WhorFreakiness

From:Andreas Johansson <andjo@...>
Date:Friday, August 20, 2004, 22:57
Quoting "Mark P. Line" <mark@...>:

> Steg Belsky said: > > Weird article a friend of mine showed me... > > > > http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/science/08/19/science.counting.reut/ > > index.html > > > Actually, Piraha is much freakier than the article in _Science_ lets on. > Also, there may be a reason for much of the freakiness in Piraha that has > nothing to do with Sapir-Whorf relativity: > > http://lings.ln.man.ac.uk/info/staff/DE/cultgram.pdf
Freaklang, indeed. I usually respond to claims that people X somewhere far away think and feel the same way as you and me by denying that I think and feel the same way as you, but perhaps I should in the future simply link to this instead. Wonderful allophonics, BTW. [n] and [g] as allophones of the same sound is almost too good to be true. Given that /b/ has an allophone /m/, one wonders if there used to be an /d/ phoneme that merged with /g/. Less freaky, but the language is also one with different phonemic inventories for men and women. How and why do such systems arise? Andreas

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Roger Mills <rfmilly@...>