Super Volatile

Krzysztof Szafranek's link blog

Hi, I'm Krzysztof and I make websites.
When I'm not making websites, I read these.
May 27 / 11:50pm

What Paddington tells us about German v British manners

For their part, the British have what House calls the "etiquette of simulation". The British feign an interest in someone. They pretend to want to meet again when they don't really. They simulate concern.

Saying things like "It's nice to meet you" are rarely meant the way they are said, she says. "It's just words. It's simulating interest in the other person."

From a German perspective, this is uncomfortably close to deceit.

more on bbc.co.uk

On cultural differences between Germans and Britons embedded in the language.

Filed under: culture   germany   languages  
Aug 13 / 11:41pm

A split in linguistic personalities

I had been living in Germany for a year and felt comfortable in the language and culture. But that summer, a Canadian friend came to visit and was shocked at how aggressive I had become, speaking brusquely to slow waiters and queue jumpers.
more on cbc.ca

On not-so-new notion that language influences the way we think.

Filed under: languages   psychology  
Jul 8 / 12:31am

Many English speakers cannot understand basic grammar

"Of course some people are more literate, with a larger vocabulary and greater exposure to highly complex literary constructions. Nevertheless, at a fundamental level, everyone in a linguistic community is supposed to share the same core grammar, in the same way that given normal development we can all walk."

The supposition that everyone in a linguistic community shares the same grammar is a central tenet of Noam Chomsky's theory of universal grammar.

Research showing that people not only are not aware of the grammar, but in fact can't understand it or use it.

Filed under: languages  
May 23 / 1:57pm

Why Chinese Is So Damn Hard

I asked my three friends how to write the character, and to my surprise, all three of them simply shrugged in sheepish embarrassment. Not one of them could correctly produce the character. Now, Peking University is usually considered the "Harvard of China". Can you imagine three Ph.D. students in English at Harvard forgetting how to write the English word "sneeze"?
more on pinyin.info

You know that Chinese is hard. This article will explain why exactly.

Filed under: languages