Any students of linguistics here?

Any students of linguistics here?


It's really busting my ass (Pic Related).

???

Linguistics minor

When does this baby shit get hard?

yes? just a freshman tho
it doesn't. the hard part is research itself, field research especially. but of course, you CAN go for easy research too

Nah, but I enjoy thinking about phonology.

I've also studied some German, French, Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit. Latin being the strongest of the bunch.

I have always liked this painting – it being dark and scary and memorable. One in Goya’s series of “Black Paintings,” it was part of a secretive and haunted segment of Goya’s life. The dark image is of a giant – some sort of titan or god consuming a human. The giant’s eyes are wide and insane, making eerie eye contact with the viewer – as if frozen after being caught in his horrendous act. His hair is disheveled, and he is naked and dirty. The giant’s grip on the human is crushing, even though his prey is decapitated, and obviously unable to get away. He reminds me of a wild animal – a mix of a deer in the headlights, and an aggressive dog with a bone. I imagine his next move to drop the body, and reach out to grab me.

The titan is Saturn

Snow Crash (Neal Stephenson) had a super cool viral-lingo component. Highly recommend that book.

Yeah, we think. I don't believe Goya's Black Series were named.
While alive, only the portraits and religious paintings (works commissioned by nobility or the church) of Goya were known. However, hidden within his home was a plethora of other pieces – dark, troubled works which were discovered after his death. Saturn Devouring His Son is one of those pieces. Found painted directly on the walls, it was left without explanation, title or context. The sheer number of horrific images discovered after his death suggests that his darker works were to clear his conscious. The lack of information left behind combined with the pieces being withheld from the public leads me to believe these paintings were highly personal. Their troubling content screams of a tortured soul.

Not in school, but I've been reading a lot about semiotics recently.

I wanted to study linguistics, but I opted to go to community college and get an associates first. Now I can't really continue and I'm about two semesters short of my associates.

In all the time that has past, I have gained a lot of doubts about majoring in it. But the subject is still fascinating to me.

>In all the time that has past, I have gained a lot of doubts about majoring in it. But the subject is still fascinating to me.
Same, my friend. I don't think I'll continue, though.

can any of you see what causes the -gan allomorph to occur? or am i looking at it from a completely wrong angle?

I've had some issues with it in the past, but only because I was unwilling to spend much time studying.

What are some good linguistics books/textbooks you guys could recommend? Looking into doing some studying on my own

-gan is used in vowel-final stems with /e/

Neutral nouns?

Snow Crash: "'Not all languages are the same... Some languages are better at metaphor than others. Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek and Chinese lend themselves to wordplay and have achieved a lasting grip on reality; ... by contrast, other civilizations seem "speechless" or at least, as may have been the case in Egypt, not entirely cognizant of the creative and transformational powers of language.' Lagos believed that Sumerian was an extroidanarly powerful language - at least it was in Sumer five thousand years ago. 'A launguage that lent itself to Enki's neuroliguistic hacking.'"

...It goes into the Tongue of Eden and all sorts of mythology,computer language... it's not academic, but certainly smart.

Does anyone know if you can get a masters in linguistics if you have a ba in english? It seems like I'd have better career options that way but I don't have access to a bachelors in linguistics

no kidding, user: you know how to tell a story.

Other than as a particular policy within your university program, I can't see any reason why you wouldn't be able to.

this is a good point:

Depends too on the kind of emphasis you place on its different branches: morphology, semantics, etc.

oh and, thanks anons for the offered assistance, but I was able to get a grip on myself in time to understand this crap a little better.

>maleke
>valede
>kabire
they too end with /e/ and they get -an
i too thought of that, but i am supposed to work on only the data given to me. i can't outside knowledge to the rule i am going to produce