[lg policy] Blog: What's the world's weirdest language?

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at GMAIL.COM
Wed Jul 3 14:56:52 UTC 2013


What's the world's weirdest language? Rick Moran

This is a fascinating article in Foreign
Policy<http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/07/01/do_you_speak_the_world_s_weirdest_language>of
all places, that reports on a researcher who coded in 21 different
factors relating to 239 different languages to come up with what he calls
the "weirdest" language spoken in the world.

 Are you one of the 6,000 people in the world who speaks Chalcatongo
Mixtec? Congratulations! You speak the world's weirdest language.

That's what Tyler Schnoebelen <https://twitter.com/TSchnoebelen> and the
researchers at Idibon <https://twitter.com/idibon>, a natural language
processing company, found <http://idibon.com/the-weirdest-languages/> when
they statistically compared 239 languages to see how like or unlike they
were to one another. Using the World Atlas of Language
Structures<http://wals.info/>,
Idibon coded the languages for 21 characteristics including, for example,
how subjects, objects, and verbs are ordered in a sentence, or how a
language makes clear that a sentence is a question.

When Schnoebelen ran the numbers, Chalcatongo Mixtec, spoken in Oaxaca,
Mexico, was the least like the majority of the world's other languages. And
it *is* pretty unusual: Schnoebelen describes it as a "verb-initial tonal
language" that has no mechanism for demonstrating questions (so "You are
alright." and "Are you alright?" sound the exact same). "I have spent part
of the day imagining a game show in this language," Schnoebelen wrote in
his analysis (for more on how to say everything from "I am sick" to "I
bought many long ropes" in Chalcatongo Mixtec, see
here<http://wals.info/example/all/wals_code_mxc>).
It's probably not surprising that some of the strangest languages are some
of the most obscure. The second weirdest is Nenets, spoken in Siberia,
followed by Choctaw, a Native American language from the central plains.

But some of the weirdest languages are widely spoken. The seventh-strangest
language, Kongo, is spoken by half a million people in Central Africa.
After that comes Armenian, then German. English ranks fairly high as well,
coming in 33rd. There's also no particular region of strange languages --
the top 25 weirdest (pictured with red dots in the map below) are scattered
across every continent. Mandarin is one of the strangest languages, while
Cantonese is one of the most "normal." And linguistic families are also no
guarantee of similarity. Schnoebelen notes that while Germanic languages
are all pretty weird, Romance languages run the full breadth of the
strangeness spectrum, from Spanish, which falls in the Weirdness Index's
top 25, down to Portuguese, which ranked as one of the most mundane
languages.

 I'd love to meet this fellow Tyler Schnoebelen. Anyone who tries to
imagine a game show in one of the most obscure languages in the world has
to be a fascinatating guy to sit next to on a bar stool.

Read more:
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/07/whats_the_worlds_weirdest_language.html#ixzz2XzisQcfb
Follow us: @AmericanThinker on
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http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/07/whats_the_worlds_weirdest_language.html

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