What Bloomfield said.

De Reuse, Willem WillemDeReuse at MY.UNT.EDU
Tue May 14 13:28:59 UTC 2013


You are right, Bob and all, I did not look up what good ole Leonard actually said.  I did remember the celibate part, from when you quoted it in our class!

My point was, for us (noncelibates), one or two languages is plenty.

Willem
________________________________
From: Siouan Linguistics [SIOUAN at listserv.unl.edu] on behalf of Rankin, Robert L. [rankin at KU.EDU]
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2013 2:33 PM
To: SIOUAN at listserv.unl.edu
Subject: Re: What Bloomfield said.

> Don't feel too bad about this. As Bloomfield famously said, it is almost impossible to document one language in a lifetime, and you have documented two.

Let me paraphrase what Bloomfield actually said, since I'd have to go to the library to get the exact wording:  If a linguist devotes every Summer to collecting field data and every Winter to processing those data, AND REMAINS CELIBATE, he may "turn to account three languages" in a lifetime.

Needless to say, I'm not even closing in on two.

Bob

P.S. If I recollect rightly, the original Bloomfield passage is from the introduction to his Menominee Grammar (but I could be corrected on the source.  It could be the Ojibwa grammar and the quote could be Hockett quoting Bloomfield.).
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