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Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

91: Scoping out the scope of scope

Lingthusiasm - A podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics

Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne

Science

4.8743 Ratings

🗓️ 18 April 2024

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When you order a kebab and they ask you if you want everything on it, you might say yes. But you'd probably still be surprised if it came with say, chocolate, let alone a bicycle...even though chocolate and bicycles are technically part of "everything". That's because words like "everything" and "all" really mean something more like "everything typical in this situation". Or in linguistic terms, we say that their scope is ambiguous without context. In this episode, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch get enthusiastic about how we can think about ambiguity of meaning in terms of scope. We talk about how humour often relies on scope ambiguity, such as a cake with "Happy Birthday in red text" written on it (quotation scope ambiguity) and the viral bench plaque "In Memory of Nicole Campbell, who never saw a dog and didn't smile" (negation scope ambiguity). We also talk about how linguists collect fun examples of ambiguity going about their everyday lives, how gesture and intonation allow us to disambiguate most of the time, and using several scopes in one sentence for double plus ambiguity fun. Read the transcript here: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/748141442230272000/transcript-episode-91-scope Announcements: In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about the forms that our thoughts take inside our heads! We talk about an academic paper from 2008 called "The phenomena of inner experience", and how their results differ from the 2023 Lingthusiasm listener survey questions on your mental pictures and inner voices. We also talk about more unnerving methodologies, like temporarily paralyzing people and then scanning their brains to see if the inner voice sections still light up (they do!). Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 80+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds. You can find us at patreon.com/lingthusiasm Also: Join at the Ling-phabet tier and you'll get an exclusive “Lingthusiast – a person who’s enthusiastic about linguistics,” sticker! You can stick it on your laptop or your water bottle to encourage people to talk about linguistics with you. Members at the Ling-phabet tier also get their very own, hand-selected character of the International Phonetic Alphabet – or if you love another symbol from somewhere in Unicode, you can request that instead – and we put that with your name or username on our supporter Wall of Fame! Check out our Supporter Wall of Fame and become a Ling-phabet patron here: patreon.com/lingthusiasm For links to things mentioned in this episode: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/748139974576275456/lingthusiasm-episode-91-scoping-out-the-scope-of

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Enthusiasm, a podcast that's enthusiastic about linguistics.

0:21.5

I'm Lauren Gorn.

0:22.7

And I'm Gretchen McCulloch.

0:23.9

And today we're getting enthusiastic about scope.

0:26.4

But first, our most recent bonus episode was about inner voice and the different ways that people organize their interior narrative, such as inner speech, inner visualization, inner non-symbolic thought,

0:41.0

and other ways that our minds are surprisingly different from each other.

0:44.4

We look at a classic paper on Inner Voice, and we also include some results about Inner Voice

0:49.7

from our 2023 listener survey.

0:52.6

It was fun to see how our results compared to the results of that

0:55.9

classic survey and compare differences in methodologies and how the insides of our minds are

1:02.0

both similar and different to each other. Also on Patreon, our patrons at the Lingfabeteer

1:07.8

not only get all of our bonus episodes, but they get a Lingthusiest sticker,

1:12.7

which is not available anywhere else.

1:15.1

So this is a sticker that says Lingthusiest, a person who's enthusiastic about linguistics,

1:19.3

if you want to stick it on your laptop or your water bottle and try to encourage people to talk

1:23.4

about linguistics with you.

1:24.5

And we also give people in the Lingfabit tier your very own

1:28.7

hand-selected character of the International Phonetic Alphabet, or if you have another symbol

1:33.5

from somewhere in Unicode, you can request that instead. And we put that in your name or your

1:38.2

username on our sponsorship, Wall of Fame on our website to thank you for supporting the show.

1:44.1

You can see our supporter wall of fame at Lingthusiasm.com slash supporters, and maybe you can join

1:49.6

it as well. We also make delightful, high-quality, human-edited transcripts for all of our episodes,

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