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Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

50: Climbing the sonority mountain from A to P

Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne

Science

4.8743 Ratings

🗓️ 19 November 2020

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Blick” is not a word of English. But it sounds like it could be, if someone told you a meaning for it. “Bnick” contains English sounds, but somehow it doesn’t feel very likely as an English word. “Lbick” and “Nbick” seem even less likely. What’s going on? In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch get enthusiastic about the underlying pattern behind how sounds fit together in various languages, what linguists call sonority. We can place sounds in a line -- or along the steps up a mountain -- according to how sonorous they are, and this lets us compare and contrast how languages put together their syllables. We also talk about the incredibly weird case of S. --- This month’s bonus episode is a behind the scenes look at the creation of Crash Course Linguistics! We’re joined by Jessi Grieser, the third member of our linguistics content team behind the scripts of Crash Course Linguistics. We talk about how we structured the syllabus of Crash Course Linguistics, how Gavagai came to be a recurring character in the series, finding our delightful host Taylor Behnke, and what it's like working with the awesome teams at Complexly and Thought Cafe. Get all the details and access to 44 other bonus episodes by becoming a Patron! https://www.patreon.com/lingthusiasm Announcements We’re coming up on Lingthusiasm’s fourth anniversary! In celebration, we’re asking you to help people who would totally enjoy listening to fun conversations about linguistics, they just don’t realize it exists yet! Most people still find podcasts through word of mouth, and we’ve seen a significant bump in listens each November when we ask you to help share the show, so we know this works. If you tag us @lingthusiasm on social media in your recommendation post, we will like/retweet/reshare/thank you as appropriate, or if you send a recommendation to a specific person, we won’t know about it but you can still feel a warm glow of satisfaction at helping out (and feel free to still tell us about it on social media if you’d like to be thanked!). Trying to think of what to say? One option is to pick a particular episode that you liked and share a link to that. Also, Crash Course Linguistics videos are coming out every Friday! Subscribe on YouTube, or sign up for Mutual Intelligibility email newsletters to get an email when each video comes out, along with exercises to practice the concepts and links for further reading. For links to the things mentioned in this episode: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/635258033226776576/lingthusiasm-episode-50-climbing-the

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Lingthusiasm, a podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics. I'm Gretchen

0:22.6

McCulloch. And I'm Lauren Gorn, and today we're getting enthusiastic about sonority.

0:28.0

But first, happy anniversary Lingthusiasm month.

0:31.5

Happy anniversary, Lauren.

0:33.3

Happy anniversary, Gretchen. It's been four years of Lingthusiasm.

0:38.0

Which is kind of amazing. We launched with three episodes in December, 2016, but we celebrate

0:43.3

the anniversary in November because we were recording them in advance.

0:46.4

It's also our 50th main episode. Those couple of extra episodes that we launched with

0:53.0

explain why it's not something divisible by 12.

0:56.2

But we're so excited to hit our 50th episode of main Lengthusiasm episodes in our anniversary month.

1:03.5

Which is, yeah, it's a nice round number for another nice round number.

1:06.5

Thank you to everybody who has already shared a link to your favorite episode or just your excitement about link enthusiasm. In honor of our anniversary, there's still another week to do that

1:15.3

within our anniversary month. And of course, we welcome this all year round as well. Most people

1:19.3

still find podcasts through word of mouth. And a lot of people don't yet realize they could be

1:23.9

having a fun linguistics chat in their ears every month or in their eyes, because

1:28.5

all episodes also have transcripts.

1:30.1

As with every year at our anniversary in particular, we're asking you to help us connect

1:34.9

with people who would be totally interested in a linguistics podcast if only they knew

1:39.3

linguistics existed.

1:40.6

We've done this call for extra sharing of the linkthusiasm every year and anniversary,

1:46.1

and we always see in the stats that your recommendations really do help more people find the show.

1:49.9

And if you share it on social media, tag us, we'll reply, we'll like your tweet, we'll try

...

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