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So let’s talk about signs. When you see
a new sign, you have to figure out what it
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means if you want to follow it. The same thing
happens when you run into a word that you’ve
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never seen before - you just have to work out what
it does. Every one of us takes up new words
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all the time, from infancy onwards, but how
do we actually learn what those words mean?
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I’m Moti Lieberman, and this is the
Ling Space.
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So all of us have tons and tons of words in
our heads, in one language or across many.
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We rarely think about our individual words
when we’re trying to say them - they’re just
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there in our heads, ready for us to express
our thoughts. But at some point, each and
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every one of those words had to be learned.
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This situation is made more complicated by
the fact that the words that we use for things
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don’t usually have anything to do with the
things themselves, except for onomatopoeia
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like plop or achoo. Like, there’s nothing
particularly wall-like about the word “wall”,
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or pie-ish about pies.
This concept is often called the Arbitrariness
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of the Linguistic Sign, and the groundbreaking
linguist Ferdinand de Saussure came up with
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it a century ago.
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The sounds of words just aren’t predictable
based on the information that we have about the
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world. That information needs to be stored
somewhere.
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But where? Well, we can imagine that we have a kind of
mental dictionary in our brains, where we keep all
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information about words.
We call these mental files a Lexical Entry,
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and it contains everything you need to know about a word: how it's pronounced, where it goes, and
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what it means. Let’s look at an example.
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The Lexical Entry for the word “hound”
tells you that it’s a noun that's pronounced like [hawnd],
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and it means “large domesticated canine”.
So for every language you speak, you fill up
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your brain with tens of thousands of these
lexical entries. But how do you manage to
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build that dictionary up? Learning words
is complicated! And in the real world, words
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are flying at you like a flock of ravens.
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The first thing you have to do is separate
that stream of language into
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its component parts.
And that’s hard enough, but even when you do have
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those little chunks, your job’s not over.
You still need to map those phonological forms onto
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their meanings.
But if meanings aren’t predictable from
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the sounds, then how do you even do that?
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Here’s a concrete example, based on the
work of philosopher W.V.O. Quine. So let’s
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say you just happen to be standing around
with a friend of yours, and a rabbit runs
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by. Your friend points at the rabbit and says,
“Hodor!” What does hodor mean? Well, maybe
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it means rabbit. That’s a decent assumption.
But if you think about it a minute, it could
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also mean “run”, or “fast”, or “dinner”,
or “look over there”.
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There’s a huge list of things that hodor
could mean. But you probably thought that
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it meant “rabbit”, right?
Well, fortunately, that’s one of the basic
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assumptions that pretty much everyone makes,
so it’s a natural guess.
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Linguists have figured out four easy tricks that people use to associate arbitrary sounds and symbols
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to meanings in the real world.
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The first of these guidelines is known as the
Whole Object Assumption. Now, this says that every
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new word that you encounter will probably refer
to the whole object, and not one of its parts
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or attributes. So hodor should mean rabbit,
not just the rabbit’s foot, or fluffy.
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We’ve also got the Type Assumption. This
means that a new word refers to a type of
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thing, and not to any particular thing.
So your friend pointing and saying hodor probably
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doesn’t mean, “Look, there’s my pet
rabbit, Hodor!”
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So linguists ran an experiment on 4 and 5
year olds, to test the Type Assumption.
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They showed them a picture of a cow, and said,
“This is a dax. Can you find another dax?”
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And then they showed them two other pictures: one of a pig, and one of milk. Now cows and pigs go together
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by type, like if “dax” meant “barnyard
animal” or something. Cows and milk aren’t
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related by type - there’s a theme there,
but nothing else. So what did kids pick?
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Well, those kids that were told that the cow was a dax picked the pig 65% of
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the time. So they definitely
were preferring to interpret by type! But interestingly,
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when they weren’t given a new label for things, and they just got shown the cow and then told something like,
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“look at this, now can you find another one?”
Kids only picked the pigs a quarter of the time.
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So they were really using that label
to help them group things together.
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Another arrow we have in our word-learning
quiver is the Basic Level Assumption. The
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idea here is that some categories are more
fundamental than others. So, a word like
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“rabbit” is a basic-level category,
whereas words like “mammal” or “animal” are higher
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level categories. We usually assume that a
new word will apply to a basic-level idea:
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so hodor probably doesn’t mean “mammal”.
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We’ve got one more weapon when it comes
to picking up new words.
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Let’s say you managed to learn that hodor
really did mean rabbit. But the next day
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you run into your friend again, and he’s holding his new
pet rabbit, and he says something different,
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like… bodor. Now, will you think that bodor means
rabbit? Not if you follow the Mutual Exclusivity
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Assumption.
This says that objects have just one label.
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So maybe bodor means something like soft, or fluffy, or it could be the rabbit's name, but it won’t just mean rabbit.
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So let's look at an example. Imagine
an experiment where kids get shown
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two things - like, a tree,
and then a shiny, funky new object they’ve never
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seen before. Then you ask them, “Show me the zib”.
They’re not going to point at the tree,
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because they already know that trees are trees.
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They nearly always assign the new label to
the new object, because they assume that terms
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are mutually exclusive. This is so powerful
that it can actually override the other assumptions,
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which we’ll talk about back on our website.
Okay. So that’s the big stuff. But there are
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a few other things that we can use if those four
assumptions don’t give us all the information we need.
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For example, we can use the information we already have about syntax and morphology for our language.
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So, for example, we already know that -s usually gets stuck on nouns to make them plural,
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or that common nouns can get preceded by determiners, like ‘a’ or ‘the’.
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We’ve got some cool experiments about this,
too. So researchers showed some kids who were
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about a year and a half old some dolls. And
the two dolls looked similar, but they only
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talked about one of them, making the other doll really jealous. For some of the kids, they said “This is a zav”,
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with the determiner stuck in there.
Other kids were just told “This is Zav”,
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without the ‘a’. After a while of this,
researchers asked the kid to put some dress-up
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clothes on the doll.
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If they’d been hearing “This is Zav”,
then they were asked to dress Zav, and they only
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went to dress that one particular doll. But
if they’d been hearing “a zav” the
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whole time, then they were asked to dress “a
zav”, and then they would dress either that one
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doll or the other one. Both of them were okay, because
they'd been using that little ‘a’ the whole time.
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Little kids who weren’t even two and had
never studied any grammar already knew that proper
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nouns refer to one individual and don’t
take ‘a’, whereas common nouns refer to a
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type of thing, and do.
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Before we wrap up, let’s go back to our
idea about lexical entries. We already said that they
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have information about pronunciation and meaning
in them, as well as whether they’re a noun or a
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verb or whatever. But now we can add some
more information. Lexical entries include
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facts about what situations a word can show
up in. Like, is a morpheme free to stand
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on its own, or does it have to get bound to
something in order to show up? Does it need to have a
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determiner like ‘a’, or not? Stuff like that.
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Oh, and then, you have to wonder about plurals.
Like, do you have two separate lexical entries
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for “spear” and “spears”? Or do you
have just one?
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Well, the kind of plurals that you make just
by adding an -s use a rule that people store in
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their heads, even little kids. Remember the
Wug Test, that we talked about back in episode 21?
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You show a kid a drawing of some unfamiliar
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critter and tell them it’s a wug. Then, you show them two of them, and ask them what they're called.
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Kids will usually say two wugs, with the -s,
even though they never heard the word wug
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before. So this means that plurals, along with a whole bunch of other things, are stored separately in our
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brains from the mental dictionary. We don’t
need multiple lexical entries for spear and
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spears, or for dragon and dragons. We only have
the one, and our rules take care of the rest.
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So even if Hodor is causing you some problems,
you can use these assumptions to work
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out what your friend is trying to get across.
You build your mental dictionary using these
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strategies, and you solve the problem of what
meanings go where without ever even really thinking
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about it much. That’s just another sign
of how well our minds are built for language.
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So we’ve reached the end of the Ling Space
for this week.
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If you assigned the right meanings to my sounds,
you learned that what words refer to
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isn’t as obvious as you might think;
that we construct our mental dictionaries
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out of lexical entries with information about
pronunciation, usage, and meaning; that we
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use four assumptions to help us guide our task: Whole
Object, Type, Basic Level, and Mutual Exclusivity;
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and that things that are driven by rules sit
outside the lexical entries for the words
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themselves.
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The Ling Space is produced by me, Moti Lieberman.
It’s directed by Adèle-Elise Prévost,
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and it’s written by both of us. Our editor
is Georges Coulombe, our production assistant
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is Stephan Hurtubise, our music and sound
design is by Shane Turner, and our graphics
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team is atelierMUSE.
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We’re down in the comments below, or you
can bring the discussion back over to our
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website, where we have some extra material
on this topic. Check us out on Tumblr, Twitter
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and Facebook, and if you want to keep expanding
your own personal Ling Space, please subscribe.
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And we’ll see you next Wednesday. Hodor!