Julie Sedivy, Discovery Magazine.com
Keith Chen, an economist from Yale, makes a startling claim in an unpublished working paper: people’s fiscal responsibility and healthy lifestyle choices depend in part on the grammar of their language.
[Edward Lucas notes on Twitter regardingt this article: good news for Estonians: languages without future tense make you thrifty & thin]
Here’s the idea: Languages differ in the devices they offer to speakers who want to talk about the future. For some, like Spanish and Greek, you have to tack on a verb ending that explicitly marks future time—so, in Spanish, you would say escribo for the present tense (I write or I’m writing) and escribiré for the future tense (I will write). But other languages like Mandarin don’t require their verbs to be escorted by grammatical markers that convey future time—time is usually obvious from something else in the context. In Mandarin, you would say the equivalent of I write tomorrow, using the same verb form for both present and future.
Continue reading here:
http://blogs.discovermagazine....
( Julie Sedivy is the lead author of Sold on Language: How Advertisers Talk to You And What This Says About You. She contributes regularly to Psychology Today and Language Log. She is an adjunct professor at the University of Calgary, and can be found at juliesedivy.com and on Twitter/soldonlanguage.)
Is Your Language Making You Broke and Fat? How Language Can Shape Thinking and Behavior (and How It Can’t) (2)
Viimased kommentaarid
Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
b.s.? This would be before sedivy one presumes. Language and its understanding, never mind use, is the key to discovering intellect, my dear hiding behind a period person.
This is a large dollop of b.s.
Arvamus
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