We're excited to be part of the broader linguistics podcast community and bring you behind the scenes on other shows!
In this interview, Lauren sat down with Daniel Midgley of the Talk the Talk radio show/podcast to talk about how Daniel got into linguistics, what linguists and radio producers have in common, his favourite linguistics resources, and how linguists can be better at e...
2018-01-11 20:56:15 +0000 UTC
View Post
When we talk about things that languages have in common, we often talk about the physical side, the fact that languages are produced by human bodies, using the same brain and hands and vocal tract. But they’re also all produced (so far) by people from the same planet and going through the same fourth dimension: time.
As the earth revolves around the sun again, each of your Lingthusiasm cohosts...
2017-12-21 23:52:14 +0000 UTC
View Post
First things first: YAaaaaayyyyyYYYyyy!!! Less than a year after starting the podcast, we not only have a Patreon model that is sustainable, but you now get a full-length bonus episode every month from December on!
(Also, Patreon isn't changing their payment structure after all, so everything is as it was before, and apologies for any confusion on that front.)
When we started t...
2017-12-15 03:59:59 +0000 UTC
View Post
This episode is the Q&A session recorded after the Discourse markers liveshow. We fielded questions from the audience, as well as some sent in by patrons and fans who couldn't attend, and now you get to hang out with this excellent roomful of lingthusiasts in virtual space!
We discuss...
2017-12-11 22:37:07 +0000 UTC
View Post
Are you up for some prepositions? You might think you’re over prepositions, but have you ever really looked into them, or have you just gone by them? Other parts of speech notwithstanding, prepositions are something we’re really down with.
In Episode 14 of Lingthusiasm, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne introduce you to our favourite English grammar book, the mammoth, 1800-page ...
2017-11-17 19:55:47 +0000 UTC
View Post
By popular demand, we now have Lingthusiasm merch! We're soft-launching the merch here on Patreon because we wanted you all to be the first to know, and it'll be released to the internet at large in time for the next episode on Thursday (but please keep it under wraps until then).
Lingthusiasm the podcast transforms your boring commute or chores into a lively, nerdy conversation, and now y...
2017-11-12 07:49:22 +0000 UTC
View Post
November is the 1-year anniversary episode of Lingthusiasm! To celebrate a whole year of enthusiastic linguistics podcasting, we’re aiming to hit another milestone at the same time: 100,000 listens across all episodes. We’re currently just above 95.5k, so it’s totally doable!
This time last year, Lingthusiasm was a top-secret project that no one had listened to yet (though ...
2017-11-10 08:02:32 +0000 UTC
View Post
We asked you if a burrito was a sandwich, and you said 'no'. We asked you if ravioli was a sandwich and you said 'heck no'. We asked you if an ice cream sandwich was a sandwich and things...started to get a little murky. This isn't just a sandwich problem: you can also have similar arguments about what counts as a cup, a bird, a fish, furniture, art, and more!
So wait...does an...
2017-11-02 22:05:40 +0000 UTC
View Post
If you grow up with multiple accents to choose from, what does the one you choose say about your identity? How can linguistics unpick our hidden assumptions about what “sounds angry” or “sounds articulate”? What can we learn from studying the melodies of speech, in addition to the words and sounds?
In Episode 13 of Lingthusiasm, your host Gretchen McCulloch ...
2017-10-19 23:54:34 +0000 UTC
View Post
Is a hotdog a sandwich? What about pizza? What about a taco? What even is a sandwich?
Wait, but is cereal soup? Is a bench a chair?? Is a cup a bowl???
AHHH HOW DOES MEANING WORK????
In an upcoming bonus episode, we're going to explore the hotly debated, much-requested "Is X a sandwich?" issue, and what this question tells us about how we assign meanings to words.
2017-10-12 22:27:33 +0000 UTC
View Post
There are all these little words and phrases that we use all the time - y'know, anyway, okay, right, so, however, I mean, uh, and then... They aren't strictly necessary, and yet our speech would feel so weird without them. Welcome to the world of discourse markers!
In this special Lingthusiasm live show, recorded in Montreal at Argo Bookshop, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren...
2017-10-06 23:11:49 +0000 UTC
View Post
Why does it always sound slightly off when someone tries to imitate your accent? Why do tiny children learning your second language already sound better than you, even though you’ve been learning it longer than they’ve been alive? What does it mean for there to be sounds you can’t hear?
In Episode 12 of Lingthusiasm, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gr...
2017-09-21 20:06:28 +0000 UTC
View Post
Later this month Lauren will be travelling to Montreal for a conference, and it just so happens that Montreal is where Gretchen lives! We decided that we couldn't resist this rare occasion for both of us being in the same place at the same time to try organizing a liveshow!
We're thinking of it as a practice run for the big Patreon liveshow goal that we're planning for the future, and yes...
2017-09-14 06:48:51 +0000 UTC
View Post
What's the etymology of this word? When did people start using that thing? How is this new slang term used?
Answering common linguistic questions is often a matter of where to look. In this bonus episode, Gretchen and Lauren talk about our favourite freely accessible linguistics research tools, from Etymonline to corpora, and how to get access to other kinds of linguistics resources...
2017-09-08 00:39:10 +0000 UTC
View Post
Our next bonus episode is going to be about doing linguistic research, especially when you're just getting started, not at a university, or don't have a huge budget. It was a tie with the previous topic, so we're happy to see that all the suggestions have been so popular, but we also don’t want to deprive you of a chance to click buttons and make your thoughts known this month!
So instea...
2017-08-30 02:13:31 +0000 UTC
View Post
– Would you like some coffee?
– Coffee would keep me awake.
Does that mean yes coffee, or no coffee? It depends! Is it the morning or the evening? Is the person trying to pull an all-nighter or take an afternoon nap? A computer looking strictly at the meanings of the words would be confused, but we humans do this kind of thing all the time without...
2017-08-17 21:15:30 +0000 UTC
View Post
You've probably heard of Pig Latin, or ig-Pay atin-Lay, where you bring the initial consonants to the end of the word and add -ay. But what about the inverse, where you bring the final consonants to the beginning of the word and add -ay? gay-Pi nay-Lati? In theory, it should be just as easy. In practice, the second one is way more difficult for your brain. But why?
This bonus episode of L...
2017-08-08 22:22:13 +0000 UTC
View Post
The recent poll was so close that we've decided that bonus 6 will be about language games, and episode 7 will be about linguistic research ideas.
Don't worry, we know you like the chance to vote (well, except the three of you who voted in the last poll against choosing), so we'll have a fun ~mystery poll~ instead of next month's topic poll.
2017-08-01 09:26:29 +0000 UTC
View Post
Which topic, suggested by your fellow patrons, would you like to hear for lingthusiasm bonus 6?
2017-07-25 03:58:14 +0000 UTC
View Post
Some linguists work with multiple languages, while others focus on just one. But for many people, learning a language after early childhood is the thing that first gets them curious about how language works in general and all the things in their native language(s) that they take for granted.
In episode 10 of Lingthusiasm, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne talk about how learni...
2017-07-21 03:24:10 +0000 UTC
View Post
Is it "you and me" or "you and I"? Does "octopus" pluralize as "octopuses", "octopi" or "octopodes? If you're ordering a nice bottle of champagne, how do you say Moët? And what does that say about you?
People care a lot about talking "correctly" -- sometimes so much that we over-apply things we've been corrected on even in contexts where they didn't originally apply, a phenomenon known a...
2017-07-07 20:07:54 +0000 UTC
View Post
The new recorder is here, thanks to all you lovely patrons, so we thought we'd let you get the first glimpse of it in its, er, natural habitat!
(Don't worry, it was returned to its protective case as soon as the photo was taken!)
2017-07-04 04:45:16 +0000 UTC
View Post
How do we get from knowing words to making brand-new sentences out of them? In episode 9 of Lingthusiasm, we talk about how words form groups with other words: constituency.
Once you start looking for it, constituency is everywhere: in ambiguous sentences like “time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana”, in remixed films like “Of Oz The Wizard”, &n...
2017-06-15 18:57:32 +0000 UTC
View Post
We have two candidates for the topic of bonus five, and voting is open until Saturday. Which topic are you most interested in?
2017-06-14 06:42:06 +0000 UTC
View Post
A while back, Gretchen was interviewed as part of an NPR story on the 'doggo' meme. While we were recording episode 8, Gretchen shared some of the backstory to the meme, and Lauren weighed in with her A...
2017-06-02 17:03:21 +0000 UTC
View Post
We just wanted to take this chance to say thanks to all of you that help make Lingthusiasm happen! This was the first month that your pledges paid our producer and our transcriber, which is a huge help for keeping the podcast ad-free and sustainable.
We were both big fans of the Patreon model before we decided it was the best fit for Lingthusiasm. We love how it allows fans and c...
2017-05-31 16:54:00 +0000 UTC
View Post
Last month Gretchen was interviewed as part of an NPR story on the 'doggo' meme. While we were recording episode 8, Gretchen shared some of the backstory to the meme, and Lauren weighed in with her Australian nicknaming in...
2017-05-26 06:44:49 +0000 UTC
View Post
Dictionaries: they’re made by real people!
In episode 8 of Lingthusiasm, your hosts Lauren Gawne and Gretchen McCulloch talk about Word by Word, a recent book by Kory Stamper, a lexicographer at Merriam-Webster, about how dictionaries get made. (Spoiler: we liked it.) We also talk about how dictionaries get made for languages that don’t have any yet, the changing role of dictionaries o...
2017-05-18 19:40:16 +0000 UTC
View Post
Whether it's a semester of Linguistics 101, a BA, or a PhD, in our third bonus we share our tips for selling linguistics to future employers. We talk about why linguists have valuable skills that employers love, how to translate linguist-speak into boss-speak, the linguistic and other skills that have made our own careers possible, and cool things that other linguists have gone on to do for work. ...
2017-05-15 22:33:01 +0000 UTC
View Post
We have two topic ideas for bonus three. Voting is open over the weekend and Monday. Which topic would you most like to get the lowdown on?
2017-05-06 08:33:32 +0000 UTC
View Post