god's weakest soldier is scrolling tumblr instead of being productive or participating in any of their hobbies

JVL
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
todays bird
trying on a metaphor

Discoholic 🪩
styofa doing anything
Not today Justin

#extradirty
Show & Tell
Peter Solarz
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
d e v o n
One Nice Bug Per Day
taylor price

JBB: An Artblog!
RMH
almost home

oozey mess

★

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@gaoxingdetuzi
god's weakest soldier is scrolling tumblr instead of being productive or participating in any of their hobbies
What is a ‘wug’?
If you’ve been to linguist tumblr (lingblr), you might have stumbled upon this picture of a funny little bird or read the word ‘wug’ somewhere. But what exactly is a ‘wug’ and where does this come from?
The ‘wug’ is an imaginary creature designed for the so-called ‘wug test’ by Jean Berko Gleason. Here’s an illustration from her test:
“Gleason devised the Wug Test as part of her earliest research (1958), which used nonsense words to gauge children’s acquisition of morphological rules—for example, the “default” rule that most English plurals are formed by adding an /s/, /z/ or /ɨz/ sound depending on the final consonant, e.g., hat–hats, eye–eyes, witch–witches. A child is shown simple pictures of a fanciful creature or activity, with a nonsense name, and prompted to complete a statement about it:
This is a WUG. Now there is another one. There are two of them. There are two ________.
Each “target” word was a made-up (but plausible-sounding) pseudoword, so that the child cannot have heard it before. A child who knows that the plural of witch is witches may have heard and memorized that pair, but a child responding that the plural of wug (which the child presumably has never heard) is wugs (/wʌgz/, using the /z/ allomorph since “wug” ends in a voiced consonant) has apparently inferred (perhaps unconsciously) the basic rule for forming plurals.
The Wug Test also includes questions involving verb conjugations, possessives, and other common derivational morphemes such as the agentive -er (e.g. “A man who ‘zibs’ is a ________?”), and requested explanations of common compound words e.g. “Why is a birthday called a birthday?“ Other items included:
This is a dog with QUIRKS on him. He is all covered in QUIRKS. What kind of a dog is he? He is a ________ dog.
This is a man who knows how to SPOW. He is SPOWING. He did the same thing yesterday. What did he do yesterday? Yesterday he ________.
(The expected answers were QUIRKY and SPOWED.)
Gleason’s major finding was that even very young children are able to connect suitable endings—to produce plurals, past tenses, possessives, and other forms—to nonsense words they have never heard before, implying that they have internalized systematic aspects of the linguistic system which no one has necessarily tried to teach them. However, she also identified an earlier stage at which children can produce such forms for real words, but not yet for nonsense words—implying that children start by memorizing singular–plural pairs they hear spoken by others, then eventually extract rules and patterns from these examples which they apply to novel words.
The Wug Test was the first experimental proof that young children have extracted generalizable rules from the language around them, rather than simply memorizing words that they have heard, and it was almost immediately adapted for children speaking languages other than English, to bilingual children, and to children (and adults) with various impairments or from a variety of cultural backgrounds. Its conclusions are viewed as essential to the understanding of when and how children reach major language milestones, and its variations and progeny remain in use worldwide for studies on language acquisition. It is “almost universal” for textbooks in psycholinguistics and language acquisition to include assignments calling for the student to carry out a practical variation of the Wug Test paradigm. The ubiquity of discussion of the wug test has led to the wug being used as a mascot of sorts for linguists and linguistics students.”
Here are some more illustrations from the original wug test:
Sources:
Wikipedia, All Things Linguistic
official linguistics post
This tickles me.
@cherryvampyyri
Omg, this is actually relatable!! It started raining last time I was doing mascot stuff outside and the suit got so wet I had to take it home in the evening to dry it 😆😆
windows of suzhou gardens by 小卖部阿姨
婺源wuyuan, jiangxi province
chinese garden in bright summer by 北城君
China's Chang Yani and Chen Yiwen won gold🥇and USA’s Kassidy Cook and Sarah Bacon took silver🥈 in women's diving syncho 3m springboard finals
+ and kassidy cook’s reaction to their bridal carry pose going viral in china
By 爱鼓捣的形志磊xing zhilei
Listening to 不明白's episode on the LGBT community in China, I just thought I'd share some of the interesting vocabulary I was able to pick up :
打壓 [dâ yâ] -› to suppress
報導 [bào dâo] -> to report (in the media)
針對 (zhēn duì] -> to target, to be aimed at or against
審查 (shēn chá] -> to censor out
保守 [bâo shôu] -> conservative
右翼 [yòu yì] -> (politically) right wing
極端 [jí duān]右翼 -> extreme right wing
性少數 (xìng shâo shū] -> Igbt (sexual minorities)
跨性別 [kuà xing bié] -> transgender
One of the best things about this podcast is that they post transcripts pretty fast after each episode, which makes the content so approachable even for intermediate learners like me.
Guys, I swear the source website of this picture had helped me out so much both when I started learning chinese and now!
Link:
Aug 21, 2017 - HSK Chinese Test Preparation Course is For The People Who are going to take The HSK(Hanyu Shuiping Kaoshi) Exam. After a Shor
I don't usually recommend pinterest to find useful websites but I did find this website there somehow lol. Istg half the links of pinterest are unavailable or something.
If you study ANY foreign languages and post about your study logs/journey frequently, please interact with this post because I'd love to follow more langblrs!
The directional "下/上/出/去/来" puzzle guide
I for one still confuse the usage of 出来 and 出去 and other similar structures so here's a guide to slightly depuzzle this puzzle.
上去 (Shàngqù): To go up and away from the speaker
下去 (Xiàqù): To go down and away from the speaker
出去 (Chūqù): To go out and away from the speaker
出来 (Chūlái): To go out and towards the speaker
上来 (Shànglái): To go up and towards the speaker
下来 (Xiàlái): To go down and towards the speaker
过来 (Guòlái): To ask someone to come over to the speaker
过去 (Guòqù): This one is tricky as it can have a few meanings so here are some random examples.
Movement away from the speaker e.g. 我来这家公司工作已经过去五年了= I have been working in this company for the past five years
Movement in time during the past e.g. 过去的年份里,公园里有很多树和花= In the past years, there were many trees and flowers in the park
Here's an illustration I made (it's been a while lol) to make it less (?) confusing:
I Verbs in Chinese
A guide to some common I verbs in Chinese~
Ignore - 忽视 - hūshì Illuminate - 照亮- zhàoliàng Imagine - 想象 - xiǎngxiàng Imitate - 模仿 - mófǎng Improve - 改善 - gǎishàn Implement - 实施 - shíshī Include - 包括 - bāokuò Incorporate - 合并 - hébìng Increase - 增加 - zēngjiā Indulge - 沉迷 - chénmí Inform - 通知 - tōngzhī Innovate - 创新 - chuàngxīn Initiate - 启动 - qǐdòng Inquire - 询问 - xúnwèn Inspire - 启发 - qǐfā Instruct - 指示 - zhǐshì Interact - 互动 - hùdòng Interrupt - 打断 - dǎduàn Intervene - 介入- jièrù Introduce - 介绍 - jièshào Investigate - 调查 - diàochá Invite - 邀请 - yāoqǐng Involve - 参与 - cānyù Invent - 创造 - chuàngzào Invest - 投资 - tóuzī
common verbs
是 (Shì)to be (links noun to noun)
很(hěn) very (links noun to adjective)
有(yǒu) have, there is
没有(méiyǒu) do/does not have
不 (bù) makes verbs after it negative
要(yào) want
想(xiǎng) would like to(often used for future plans)
可以 (kěyǐ) can
需要(xū yào) need
得(děi) must, have to
覺得/得(juédé) think
認為/认为(rènwéi) think
說/说(shuō ) say, speak, tell
告诉(gàosù) tell
知道(zhīdào) know
帮助(bāngzhù) help
喜歡/喜欢( xǐhuān) like
去(qù) go
笑(xiào) smile laugh
買/买(mǎi) buy
Chinese Verbs Cheat sheet: E's
My quick guide to some common E- verbs in Chinese!
Eat - 吃 - chī Educate - 教育 - jiàoyù (this ones a bit formal) Empty - 清空 - qīngkōng Ensure - 确保 - quèbǎo Enter - 进入 - jìnrù Encourage - 鼓励 - gǔlì End - 结束 - jiéshù Enjoy - 享受 - xiǎngshòu Estimate - 估计 - gūjì Evaluate - 评价 - píngjià Examine - 检查 - jiǎnchá Excel - 出色 - chūsè Exceed - 超出 - chāochū Exchange - 交换 - jiāohuàn Exercise - 锻炼 - duànliàn Exist - 存在 - cúnzài Expect - 期望 - qīwàng Experience - 经历 - jīnglì Explain - 解释 - jiěshì Explore - 探索 - tànsuǒ