Journal article

Languages Support Efficient Communication about the Environment: Words for Snow Revisited

T Regier, A Carstensen, C Kemp

Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2016

Abstract

The claim that Eskimo languages have words for different types of snow is well-known among the public, but has been greatly exaggerated through popularization and is therefore viewed with skepticism by many scholars of language. Despite the prominence of this claim, to our knowledge the line of reasoning behind it has not been tested broadly across languages. Here, we note that this reasoning is a special case of the more general view that language is shaped by the need for efficient communication, and we empirically test a variant of it against multiple sources of data, including library reference works, Twitter, and large digital collections of linguistic and meteorological data. Consisten..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Science Foundation


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (www.nsf.gov) under grants SBE-1041707 (TR) and DGE-1106400 (AC). Publication was made possible in part by support from the Berkeley Research Impact Initiative (BRII) sponsored by the UC Berkeley Library.