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Words and Rules
 
Author: Steven Pinker
Narrator: Steven Pinker
Publisher: MIT World
Running Time: 1 Hr. 9 Min.


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Words and Rules

Words and Rules

The Ingredients of Language

by Steven Pinker




Why does a three year-old say “I went,” then six months later start saying “I goed”? When you first heard the word “fax,” how did you know the past tense is “faxed”? And why is it that a baseball player is said to have “flied out,” but could never have “flown out”?

After fifteen years of studying words in history, in the laboratory, and in everyday speech, Steven Pinker has worked out the dynamic relationship – searching memory vs. following rules – that determines the forms our speech takes. In one of his final lectures at MIT Pinker gives the ultimate lecture on verbs, in a rich mixture of linguistics, cognitive neuroscience, and a surprising amount of humor. If you’ve ever wondered about the plural of Walkman, or why they are called the Toronto Maple Leafs and not Leaves, this lecture provides answers to these and other questions of modern language.



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Words and Rules, December 19, 2006
Reviewer: David McVeigh

Plausible and clear explanation of the origin and persistance of irregular verbs in everyday speech. Surprisingly the verbs which are irregular in English are often irregular in many other languages. Surprisingly none of the new verbs being formed today are irregular, they all follow the standard regular pattern eg I google, I googled.


  • Published: 2002
  • LearnOutLoud.com Product ID: W015586

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This Author: Steven Pinker
This Narrator: Steven Pinker
This Publisher: MIT World
 
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