Myriad of Tongues

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A01=Caleb Everett
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amazonian languages
anthropological linguistics
Australia
Author_Caleb Everett
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=CFF
Category=JHMC
Category=JMR
cognitive anthropology
color terms
COP=United States
cultural cognition
cultural evolution
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disappearing
emotions
endangered
environment
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
evolution
extinction
fieldwork
grammar
iconicity
idioms
language diversity
language evolution
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linguistic fieldwork
linguistics
New Guinea
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perception and language
Phonetics
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senses
smell vocabulary
softlaunch
spatial language
syntax
syntax variation
time concepts
WEIRD people
weird societies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674976580
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Sep 2023
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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"An assured guide" (New Scientist) to the relationship between the language we speak and our perception of such fundamentals of experience as time, space, color, and smells.

We tend to assume that all languages categorize ideas and objects similarly, reflecting our common human experience. But this isn’t the case. When we look closely, we find that many basic concepts are not universal, and that speakers of different languages literally see and think about the world differently.

Caleb Everett takes readers around the globe, explaining what linguistic diversity tells us about human culture, overturning conventional wisdom along the way. For instance, though it may seem that everybody refers to time in spatial terms—in English, for example, we speak of time “passing us by”—speakers of the Amazonian language Tupi Kawahib never do. In fact, Tupi Kawahib has no word for “time” at all. And while it has long been understood that languages categorize colors based on those that speakers regularly encounter, evidence suggests that the color words we have at our disposal affect how we discriminate colors themselves: a rose may not appear as rosy by any other name. What’s more, the terms available to us even determine the range of smells we can identify. European languages tend to have just a few abstract odor words, like “floral” or “stinky,” whereas Indigenous languages often have well over a dozen.

Why do some cultures talk anthropocentrically about things being to one’s “left” or “right,” while others use geocentric words like “east” and “west”? What is the connection between what we eat and the sounds we make? A Myriad of Tongues answers these and other questions, yielding profound insights into the fundamentals of human communication and experience.

Caleb Everett, Professor of Anthropology and of Linguistics and Cognitive Science and Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences at the University of Delaware, is the author of Numbers and the Making of Us and Linguistic Relativity: Evidence across Languages and Cognitive Domains.

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