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Thread: Does the language you speak influence how you think?

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    Default Does the language you speak influence how you think?

    Does the language you speak influence how you think?

    Studies show that our language affects how we experience the world, playing a role in everything from how we save for retirement to the colors we see.



    Suppose a friend said to you in English, "I'm visiting my uncle." From this sentence alone there's little you can glean about this uncle.

    However, if you and your friend spoke Korean and she told you she was visiting her uncle, you'd know several things about him based on what word for "uncle" she used.

    Let's say she informed you she was visiting samchon. This word alone would inform you that her uncle is her father's unmarried younger brother.

    In Korean, as in Chinese, the speaker has no choice but to encode this kind of information into the sentence. The languages require speakers to think about their family relationships when speaking of them.

    Linguistic relativity

    This is an example of linguistic relativity, or the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, which holds that the language we speak shapes how we view the world.

    When Benjamin Lee Whorf presented his idea in a science magazine in 1940, he argued that our mother tongue prevents us from understanding concepts outside our language.

    Whorf's ideas were later rejected based on his claims that if a language has no word for a certain concept, then its speakers won't understand that concept. Our very ability to learn proves this to be false.

    For example, unlike German, the English language doesn't have word meaning "the feeling of being alone in the woods," but we can still grasp the concept of waldeinsamkeit.

    However, research shows that the language we speak does affect how we think and this shapes how we experience the world.

    As linguist Guy Deutscher writes, "Since habits of speech are cultivated from the earliest age, it is only natural that they can settle into habits of mind that go beyond language itself, affecting your experiences, perceptions, associations, feelings, memories and orientation in the world."

    Take a look at just a few of the surprising ways language influences the way we think.

    How we view the future

    When economist Keith Chen analyzed data from 76 countries, he found that speakers of "futureless languages" — those that use the same phrasing to describe events, regardless of whether they're happening now, happened in the past or will happen tomorrow — are more likely to save money and make good health decisions than speakers of "futured languages" like English.

    Chen concluded that speakers of futureless languages, such as Chinese, are more mindful of how their daily decisions affect their futures because they don't speak of the future in a way that's distinct from the past.

    How we orient ourselves

    If you spoke Guugu Yimithirr, the language of an Australian Aboriginal community, you wouldn't refer to an object as being to your left or right — you'd say it was northwest or southeast.

    Speakers of the language don't even use words like "front" or "behind." When it comes to direction or orientation, they speak strictly in cardinal directions.
    According to Stanford professor Lera Boroditsky, about a third of the world's languages discuss space in absolute terms like this rather than the relative ones we use in English.

    To speak such a language, you must be constantly aware of where the cardinal directions are, and research proves that such speakers have an incredible sense of orientation.

    From an early age, speakers of Guugu Yimithirr pay attention to their natural environment, noting the sun's position in the sky and the direction of wind, and they develop a memory of their changing orientation as they move through the world.

    Children in such societies start using geographic directions as early as the age of 2 and master the system by 7 or 8.

    Placing blame

    Here's another way language shapes the way we think. Let's say you broke a glass. Whether you smashed it intentionally or simply broke it by accident, in English we'll often say you broke it — regardless of your intent.

    But Japanese and Spanish speakers typically phrase such an occurrence as "the glass broke itself."

    How the language we speak assigns blame even influences how we remember certain events. One study found that English speakers were more likely to recall who accidentally spilled drinks or popped balloons in a video than Spanish or Japanese speakers.

    The effects of gender

    In English, we can say we spent time with a friend or neighbor without having to identify the sex of that person. However, languages like French, Spanish and German require the speaker to consider the sex of the person they're referring to.

    In addition to assigning a gender to a person, these languages also assign a gender to inanimate objects, and they don’t always agree. In Spanish, table (la mesa) is feminine, but in German, table (der Tisch) is masculine.

    English is actually the odd one out among European languages in that it doesn't mark objects as masculine or feminine.

    Numerous experiments have shown that assigning gender to inanimate objects affects how we view them. In the 1990s, psychologists asked German and Spanish speakers to describe a list of objects.

    Not surprisingly, Spanish speakers deemed clocks and bridges (words preceded by the masculine article "el" instead of the feminine "la") as having manly properties like strength while German speakers, who speak of those same objects in feminine terms, described them as slender and elegant.

    A 2012 study concluded that the effects of grammatical gender may have even greater reach. It found that in countries whose dominant language marks gender, female participation in the workforce drops by 12 percent.

    How we see colors

    Researchers have found that we even perceive colors through the lens of our mother tongue.

    Speakers of the indigenous language Zuni don't differentiate between yellow and orange, and studies show they have trouble telling the two colors apart.

    However, Russian speakers have different words for light blue and dark blue, and they're better than English speakers at picking out varying shades of the hue.

    Essentially, speakers of various languages could view the same painting and experience it differently based on whether their native tongue has a word for the colors the artist used.


    Source: http://www.mnn.com/lifestyle/arts-cu...-how-you-think

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    I think it's the opposite. The way you think influences the way you speak, so people will impose part of their culture and way of thinking into their language. However, I do believe that learning other languages will broaden your perspective as you will learn words and phrases that do not exist in your own language; and the differences will give you another way of looking at something. At least this is what happened to me with English. I'm always fascinated by the differences in expression.

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    Nope, this is pure horseshit.

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    It's weird when some objects have a different gender in other languages.

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    Quote Originally Posted by kkk77 View Post
    It's weird when some objects have a different gender in other languages.
    It is weird some use gender for objects.
    "If the enemy is not attacking from the East it has flanked." Finnish proverb


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu8D9GaQwIs

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    If there are no words meaning something, one cant think it. Language does shape thinking. For example the best words in English are of Latin or French origin.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Ukko View Post
    It is weird some use gender for objects.
    I can't imagine certain objects without a gender.

    Even in English I think of the objects like having the gender that they have on my mother tongue.

    For example, to me an apple, a tongue, a shape, the moon, America, a desk, a chair, a pen, etc, are feminine things and I can't imagine them without gender or as masculine.

    The only problem is with things that have more than one name, with different genders. For example a bird can be translated to masculine "um pássaro" or feminine "uma ave"... But probably I'm most inclined to consider it feminine because most bird names are feminine.

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    Wow,Bulgarian is in that picture?

    Why are we everywhere lately.

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    In Turkish we don't have any gender differences plus we don't have differences for inanimate objects , animals plants

    Pronoun for human , female human , male human , child ,tree , cat , sky , sea ..is same : o
    when you type it with a capital letter "O " it becomes "The creator " or "The One Unites Them All" -macrocosmos.
    so in Turkish all creatures are parts of big universe without a hierarchial order favoring mankind or any gender.
    I love this for being so wholistic and not being human centric.

    Family relations -too many of them
    Little sister or brother also has no gender , only elder ones have special names (ağabey ,abla )
    when it comes to family relations they are plenty ..mother's sister ,father's sister , mother's brother ,father's brother , sister's husband, brothers husband , wifes of two brethen ,a females husband's sister etc..even I confuse most of these relationship terms
    plus every elder females or males in neighborehood is adressed as uncles , aunts or sisters, brothers , sons, daughters etc

    Listen to -->>

    Kam Ata - Tengri Teg -TAMU

    There is no hierarchy in nature, only harmony. No chosen people, no chosen race, no soul slavery. My true beloved ones are Black Earth and Eternal Blue Sky

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