Delving into the concept of aspect in linguistics, the hosts explore the shape of actions over time, linguistic repetition in various languages, and the historical aspects of teacup-lake-throwing controversy. They discuss habitual aspects, grammatical nuances in different languages, and the frequentative aspect in language. The episode is filled with linguistic analogies involving embroidery and tapestries.
Different aspects like continuous, habitual, and perfective emphasize various dimensions of events.
Understanding aspects helps in dissecting the nuances of events in different languages.
Deep dives
Understanding Aspects in Linguistics
Aspects in linguistics deal with the shape of events and how they are perceived over time. Different aspects like continuous, habitual, and perfective emphasize various dimensions of events. For instance, the continuous aspect portrays ongoing actions, while the habitual highlights repeated actions. Understanding aspects helps in dissecting the nuances of events in different languages.
Exploring Unique Linguistic Constructs
Languages exhibit unique constructions to express aspects like continuous and habitual actions. For example, some languages utilize reduplication to emphasize ongoing events, as seen in Mokkalees. Additionally, sign languages like ASL demonstrate how repetition can convey plurals or continuous actions, showcasing the diversity in expressing aspects.
Significance of Completed Events
Many languages distinguish between completed and ongoing events through aspectual markers. The perfective-imperfective contrast, prevalent in various languages, highlights the completion status of actions. This distinction plays a crucial role in capturing the temporal dimensions of events across different linguistic structures.
Aspectual Diversity and Language Analysis
Analyzing aspects reveals the intricate diversity in how languages depict events. As languages exhibit varied aspectual categories like inchoative and frequentative, they offer insights into the texture of actions. From completed events to ongoing actions, aspectual distinctions enrich linguistic analysis and highlight the multifaceted nature of language expression.
When we're talking about an activity -- say, throwing teacups in a lake -- we often want to know not just when the action takes place, but also what shape that action looks like. Is this a one-time teacup throwing event (I threw the teacup in the lake) or a repeated or ongoing situation (I was throwing the teacup in the lake)? Both of these actions might have happened at the same time (they're both in the past tense), but this different in shape between them is known as aspect.
In this episode, your hosts Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne get enthusiastic about aspect. We talk about the important aspects of aspect: the most common aspectual meaning across languages (whether an action is completed or not) and the most common ways of forming aspects (repeating some or all of the word, or else grabbing something from somewhere else in the grammar), as well as why English aspect in the present tense went weird a couple centuries ago (Shakespeare could say "I go, my lord" but these days we're far more likely to say "I'm going"). We also talk about our favourite fun aspects of aspect: why there isn't a Thursdititive aspect even though it would be super useful for a certain linguistics podcast (ahem!), the secret etymological frequentative aspect that's hiding in plain sight in English, and the real historical teacup-lake-throwing controversy that could have been solved with more precise use of aspect.
Announcements:
In this month’s bonus episode we get enthusiastic about ways of comparing things to each other! We talk about why comparisons get weird when the groups are too large or too small, the hidden etymological connection between more and most, how we choose between er/est and more/most (and why "funner" is really more logical), and how English has more ways of making comparatives than many other languages. We also talk about strategies that other languages use for making comparatives, and why some words are harder to make comparative. Listen to the episode here: patreon.com/posts/107428007
Join us on Patreon now to get access to this and 80+ other bonus episodes. You’ll also get access to the Lingthusiasm Discord server where you can chat with other language nerds. All this and more at patreon.com/lingthusiasm
Read the transcript here: lingthusiasm.com/post/756390436883546112/transcript-episode-94-aspect
For links to things mentioned in this episode: lingthusiasm.com/post/756390309859098624/lingthusiasm-episode-94-the-perfectly-imperfect
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