![]() ![]() This book is also serious, and it is incredibly interesting. While documenting the native Mayan language of Quiche, she learned that you could not simply remove the equivalent of 'to do' from a sentence with an action, like we might in our own speech.the example she used was "Fanta be tobili ke" which means "Fanta is doing the cooking." Compare this to "Fanta tobili ke" which meant "Fanta is cooking." Literally. ![]() However, the subject of linguistics always reminds me of a little story that a professor of mine once told that aptly demonstrates the importance of understanding the nuts and bolts of how a language works. Doesn't sound very exciting on the face of it, and I'll admit that I-lover of history and archaeology-tend to get a bit glassy-eyed at the idea of linguistic anthropology. ![]() It's about the work that goes into things like determining if a written system is a syllabary or a pictographic one, and whether a language has inflections at the ends of its words or not. Margalit Fox's book is about the decipherment of the Linear B alphabet, and the language it recorded. ![]()
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