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comment by user-inactivated
user-inactivated  ·  3975 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: 5 insane ways words can control your mind

    Does this mean that if I were introduced to more words for more nuanced colors I would literally see the world differently? That's amazing.

As I understand it, rather than certain languages having more words for more nuanced colors, in general most different language families simply break up colors along different places on the color spectrum. For example, I know there are many South American cultures that can't tell the difference at all between our blue and green, because the word they use for that color encompasses that whole area of the spectrum. On the other hand, they break up what we would call maybe just red and dark red into separate colors.

* Source: I'm feeling a bit too lazy to look up references, but I minored in linguistics (and, although I focused more on computer language, I did take a handful of more generalized linguistics classes).

    Makes me think of how the eskimo's apparently have hundreds of words to describe snow. They must also see the world differently, no?

I had a professor whose specialty was American Indian linguistics who insisted that this isn't really true - that they really have about the same number of words for snow that we do in English. He said that their words for snow combined with adjectives (again, the same general adjectives that we would use) are often mistaken for single words.

He never really showed us any data or studies to back this up, so I'm not really sure. I'm mostly comfortable taking his word for it.





elizabeth  ·  3974 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Yes, your professor was right:

    The claim that Eskimo languages have an unusually large number of words for snow is a widespread idea first voiced by Franz Boas and often used as a cliché when writing about how language may keep us more or less alert to the differences of the natural world. In fact, the Eskimo–Aleut languages have about the same number of distinct word roots referring to snow as English does, but the structure of these languages tends to allow more variety as to how those roots can be modified in forming a single word.

from wikipedia

Basically yellow snow would be a compound word like "yellowsnow", so depending on your definition of a word, maybe you could say there are thousands of ways to say snow in Esquimo... but that would not be very accurate and representative of reality.