Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #58 March 2023

Did you mean what you just said? Insights on linguistic ambiguities By Valentin Pradelou Quebec Anglophones and Francophones: a (not so charming) Valentine’s day tale By Florencia Flow Monkey See, Monkey Do, Monkey Speak How Yerkish helps us understand primates By Joana Atanasova DoW: Sunday, bloody Manchedi By Arthur Harrison The Sun Never Sets on […]

Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #57 February 2023

Aussie Lingo 101: Oh Naur! Diphthongs in Australian Vowels By Rebekah Bradshaw How to read Japanese characters and why it is so hard and interesting at the same time By Linguipixie Ancient Antagonists – The Victorians By Joana Atanasova Gaels of the world – Lenite! – beginning my journey into Scottish Gaelic By David Carr […]

Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #56 November 2022

From Nonsense To Sense: What Text Actually MeansBy Marcus Ten Low An Etymology of the HolidaysBy Rebekah Bradshaw How to make people think your opinion is the truth? Insights on enunciative fadingBy Valentin Pradelou The evolution of languages in the 21st centuryBy J Bradley Scott Occitan misrepresentation: the French identity conundrumBy Linguipixie

Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #55 January 2023

An overview of g By Steve the vagabond Soothsayer By Steve the vagabond Learning through media By Steve the vagabond Wanted – Latin – Dead or alive By Joana Georgieva Koledari By Joana Atanasova

Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #54 December 2022

Frisian By Steve the vagabond The language before time: The first words of our pre-historic ancestors By Joana Atanasova In search of English “r” By Steve the vagabond Ten Harry Potter Spells with Latin Roots By Andrea Bush The Norse presence in the Cumbrian dialect of English, and an introduction to the Cumbrian dialect By […]

Silly Linguistics Magazine Issue #53 October 2022

“Quality” and “popular” journals: How does it work? By Valentin Pradelou Braille: A Journey By Harris Mowbray The NY Accent: One Dialect or Many By Molly O’Brien Why Understanding Ambiguity in Natural Language Processing Is A Game Changer By Francesca Forza Loving Language By Francesca Forza