Language irregularities. - Details on a "Need to know" basis?
Nicholas Ostler
nicholas at OSTLER.NET
Mon May 23 11:59:17 UTC 2011
VYAKARAN: South Asian Languages and Linguistics Net
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John Peterson, University of Osnabrueck, Germany
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This is a fascinating discussion, Dileep, but any chance you could let
the rest of us know what this verb is that you translate as "insert" and
assert to have loopy semantics? Any script will do. We are supposed to
be "South Asian Linguists", so I think we should be told. That way we
might actually gain something beyond the feeling "Wow! Isn't language
strange!"
Nicholas Ostler
On 23/05/2011 12:51, Dileep Damle wrote:
> VYAKARAN: South Asian Languages and Linguistics Net
> Editors: Tej K. Bhatia, Syracuse University, New York
> John Peterson, University of Osnabrueck, Germany
> Details: Send email to listserv at listserv.syr.edu and say: INFO VYAKARAN
> Subscribe:Send email to listserv at listserv.syr.edu and say:
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>
> Indeed! In Marathi, you "insert in" rings (in fingers), necklaces (in
> necks), bangles (in hands/arms), shirts and coats (in bodies),... But
> you 'Put pictures on walls'. So it is a question of meaning rather
> than mistranslation or etymology).
>
> Prepositions are often based on convention rather than logic in most
> human languages and getting those right is frequently a difficult task
> for foreign language learners. Surely, the biggest challenge of human
> languages is the irregularities they contain and how it is that we
> humans cope with them. While these provide an important and
> interesting research area which could shed light on how our minds
> work, does it necessarily mean that the irregularities and
> irrationalities are to be treasured?
>
> Madhukar Gogate wrote "People may or may not mind irregularities".
> But in the English speaking world, we expect children to learn these
> irregularities and test them on it and chastise then for failures in
> spelling, all so unnecessary. Did those children who were caned in
> the past not mid these irregularities? Certainly, some people have
> the attitude that - I can cope with them and that gives me an
> advantage over those who can't, so irregularities are a good thing.
>
> Dileep Damle
>
> -----Original Message----- From: Paul Kiparsky
> Sent: Monday, May 23, 2011 7:05 AM
> To: VYAKARAN at LISTSERV.SYR.EDU
> Subject: Re: Language irregularities.
>
> VYAKARAN: South Asian Languages and Linguistics Net
> Editors: Tej K. Bhatia, Syracuse University, New York
> John Peterson, University of Osnabrueck, Germany
> Details: Send email to listserv at listserv.syr.edu and say: INFO VYAKARAN
> Subscribe:Send email to listserv at listserv.syr.edu and say:
> SUBSCRIBE VYAKARAN FIRST_NAME LAST_NAME
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> Languages can indeed have odd and "illogical" features, but they can
> also be illusions due to mistranslation into another language (often
> based on etymology rather than actual meaning). So I'm curious about
> the Marathi expression you translate as "insert in". Could it really
> mean something like "attach to" or "put on"? In that case, it should
> also be possible in Marathi to describe hanging a picture ("inserting
> it in the wall"), putting on a ring ("inserting it in your finger"),
> and so on.
>
> Paul Kiparsky
>
>
>
> On May 23, 2011, at 6:36 AM, Madhukar N. Gogate wrote:
>
>> Probably every language has got
>> some illogical features. In Marathi, we say, equivalent to
>> (insert shoe in foot) while really (foot is inserted in shoe).
>> Language is for people, and not just for scholars. People
>> do not mind some odd features ! -- Madhukar N. Gogate
>> ==========================================
--
Nicholas Ostler
nicholas at ostler.net
+44 (0)1225-852865, (0)7720-889319
Chairman: Foundation for Endangered Languages
www.ogmios.org
Author: Empires of the Word (2005),
Ad Infinitum (2007), The Last Lingua Franca (2010)
www.nicholasostler.com
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