HEATED RIVALRY ► 1x01 - Rookies You're an awesome player to watch. Yes.

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HEATED RIVALRY ► 1x01 - Rookies You're an awesome player to watch. Yes.
ANDOR | WELCOME TO THE REBELLION (2x09) - dir. Janus Metz "We need to speak out. We need to stand up and speak the truth."
The BBC wiped or threw away many old Doctor Who recordings decades ago, so fans thought some episodes were gone forever. In 2013, 11 film recordings were found at a television relay station in Nigeria, including nine episodes that had been missing from the BBC archive.
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Lingthusiasm Episode 100: A hundred reasons to be enthusiastic about linguistics
This is our hundredth episode that's enthusiastic about linguistics! To celebrate, we've put together 100 of our favourite fun facts about linguistics, featuring contributions from previous guests and Lingthusiasm team members, fan favourites that resonated with you from the previous 99 episodes, and new facts that haven't been on the show before but might star in one of the next 100 episodes in greater detail.
In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne talk about brains, gesture, etymology, famous example sentences, languages by the numbers, a few special facts about the word "hundred" and way more! This episode is both a fun overview of the vibe of Lingthusiam if you've never listened before, and a bonus bingo card game for diehard fans to see how many facts you can recognize.
We also invite you to share this episode alongside one of your favourite fun facts about linguistics and help more people find Lingthusiasm in honour of our 100th episodiversary! Whether you pick something new that resonates from this episode, or share the fact you were sitting on the edge of your seat hoping we'd mention, we look forward to staying Lingthusiastic with you for the next 100 episodes.
Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here.
Announcements:
In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about some of our favourite deleted bits from recent interviews that we didn't quite have space to share with you! First, we go back to our interview with phonetician Jacq Jones, previously seen talking about how binary and non-binary people talk. Then, we return to computational linguist Emily M. Bender to talk about how Emily's students made a computational model of Lauren's grammar of Lamjung Yolmo and how linguistics is a team sport. Finally, we return to our group interview with the team behind Tom Scott's Language Files to talk about sneaky Icelandic jokes and the unedited behind-the-scenes version of the gif/gif joke.
Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 90+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds.
Here are the links and citations mentioned in the episode:
Wikipedia entry for 'Writing system'
Wikipedia entry for 'Punctuation'
Wikipedia entry for ''Okina'
Wikipedia entry for 'Hamza'
Wikipedia entry for 'Glottal'
'Fneeze' blog post from EtymologyNerd
Etymonline entry for 'kn-' prefix
Calque is a loanword; loanword is a calque on Tom Scott's Language Files
'When You Think About It, Your Past Is in Front of You: How Culture Shapes Spatial Conceptions of Time' by Juanma De la Fuent et al
Wikipedia entry for 'Jabberwocky'
'Sound–meaning association biases evidenced across thousands of languages' by Damián E. Blasi et al
Wikipedia entry for 'Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den'
'Reading Senseless Sentences: Brain Potentials Reflect Semantic Incongruity' by Marta Kutas and Steven A. Hillyard
Wikipedia entry for 'Zeugma and syllepsis'
Pi(e) facts post on Bluesky from Gretchen
Glottolog entry for 'Family: Indo-European'
Glottolog entry for 'Family: Austronesian'
Wikipedia entry for 'Languages of Papua New Guinea'
List of the worlds languages on Glottolog
'How Many Stars Are There in the Sky?' by Megan Garber on The Atlantic
Glottolog entry for 'Pseudo Family: Sign Language'
'Biography of Laurent Clerc' post on Gallaudet University website
'Q&A: How Pro-Tactile American Sign Language — PTASL — is changing the conversation' by Jaimi Lard and Christine Dwyer on Perkins.org
'Feeling the signs: tactile Auslan' post from Australian Institute of Interpreters and Translators Inc
'How do we know if they could speak?' by Fran Dorey for Australian Museum
'If you say thee uh you are describing something hard: The on-line attribution of disfluency during reference comprehension' by J. E. Arnold, C. L. H. Kam. & M. K. Tanenhaus
'The effect of disfluency on memory for what was said' by E. Diachek, & S. Brown-Schmidt
Wikipedia entry for 'Gender Neutrality' and 'Neopronoun'
Wikipedia entry for 'Centum and satem languages'
Wikipedia entry for 'Long hundred'
Lingthusiasm episodes mentioned:
What it means for a language to be official
Writing is a technology
Word Magic
Tea and skyscrapers - When words get borrowed across languages
Colour words around the world and inside your brain
Why do C and G come in hard and soft versions? Palatalization
What words sound spiky across languages? Interview with Suzy Styles
Frogs, pears, and more staples from linguistics example sentences
Bonus episode 'The episode-episode (Reduplication)'
Bonus episode 'When letters have colours and time is a braid - The linguistics of synesthesia'
Speaking a single language won't bring about world peace
How to rebalance a lopsided conversation
Talking and thinking about time
This time it gets tense - The grammar of time
Bonus episode 'Is X a sandwich? Solving the word-meaning argument once and for all'
Bonus episode 'LingthusiASMR - The Harvard Sentences'
Merch mentioned in this episode:
Space Pigeon and Space Babies merch
Little Longitudinal Language Acquisition Project
You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening.
To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list.
You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon.
Lingthusiasm is on Bluesky, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Mastodon, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com
Gretchen is on Bluesky as @GretchenMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic.
Lauren is on Bluesky as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo.
Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our production editor is Sarah Dopierala, our production assistant is Martha Tsutsui Billins, our editorial assistant is Jon Kruk, and our technical editor is Leah Velleman. Our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles. This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).
dude went through itttt