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News
April 21, 2022
Due to the Coronavirus pandemic, the winter 2022 FSP had to be shifted to Hawaii instead of New Zealand, but that didn't stop professors and students from learning and having a lot of fun!
November 09, 2021
Research grant awarded to Sally Akevai Nicholas and her colleague Rolando Coto-Solano.
May 27, 2021
Congratulations to the class of 2021! The Linguistics Department is so proud of each of you for your hard work and determination this past...
November 05, 2020
Laura McPherson is Associate Professor of Linguistics at Dartmouth College. Her research is driven by primary fieldwork and in-depth description of tonal languages, primarily in West Africa. Congratulations Laura!
July 01, 2020
Dr. Monica Nesbitt is leading a team of Dartmouth sociolinguistics researchers interviewing Black/African Americans as part of Dartmouth's Linguistics Program's effort to document life and language in New England.
January 20, 2015
Lecture by Mary Hermes, University of Minnesota Monday, January 26, 2015, Reed 104, 4:00 pm please note time change Reception to folllow
September 29, 2014
Exceptions to the Saussurian principle of arbitrariness are relatively limited in language, and several semantic domains have been identified in the scholarly literature as the primary loci of phonetic iconicity. One type of symbolism that has sparked debate regarding the nature of sound symbolism is the association of "smallness" and "nearness" meanings with high acoustic frequency sounds (and, conversely, the association of "largeness" and "distance" meanings with lower frequency sounds). Though this pattern of sound-meaning mappings has been reported in diverse languages worldwide, the universality of a link between acoustic frequencies and magnitudes has stirred some debate. This study looks at data from 120 Australian languages to investigate the occurrence of magnitude-related sound symbolism in these languages, which have been underrepresented in earlier cross-linguistic studies of sound symbolism. Comparisons of phoneme frequencies across size, distance, and basic vocabulary sets provides information about symbolism in these languages and the types of sounds through which it is expressed. By comparing the patterns found across language families/subgroups and geographic areas, these findings are also able to provide evidence about how magnitude sound symbolism arises more generally....
May 29, 2014
The following students have won Fulbright or DAAD fellowships: Abigail Bard ’14, Major: Linguistics; Japanese minor and Gabriela Meade ’14, Major: Cognitive science; human development and education and Hispanic studies minors...