Language Maps Gallery
ohhhhhhhhmmmmyyyyygooooood
艾瑪
warrick davis
helo handsome
meidum pyramid
18mr:Asian Americans: everywhere, actually. - CMSo if you, like me, were a bit confused about the vi
Nonconcatenative morphologyNonconcatenative morphology, also called discontinuous morphology and int
Remember that Slate.com map? Our data wizard partner in crime Karthick Ramakrishnan had a crack at t
land-of-maps:‘Snow’ in European LanguagesCLICK HERE FOR MORE MAPS!
mcdonaldguy:mapsontheweb:“Mother” in European languages.in africa they pronounce it “more maps at ja
mapsontheweb:Number 99: different counting systems.
nuutiainen:jethroq:mapsontheweb:maptitude1:These maps show the regional prevalences of the words ‘br
mapsontheweb:New Zealand: Most Commonly Spoken Language After English and Maori.More language maps &
thelandofmaps:Map of dominant languages spoken in South Africa [809x709]CLICK HERE FOR MORE MAPS!the
IdeophonesIdeophones are a word class (part of speech) that occur independently in some languages, m
Nasal harmonyNasal harmony is a tendency for assimilation of other consonants and vowels to the nasa
land-of-maps:‘Snow’ in European LanguagesCLICK HERE FOR MORE MAPS!
karijote: Language Maps of the US.
Aspirated plosivesAspirations occurs in English in initial onsets like in ‘pat’ [pʰæt], ‘tack’ [’tʰæ
travelingcolors:A Language Family Tree (by Minna Sundberg)Minna Sundberg’s illustration maps the rel
russianwave: Maps of the world from a 1988 Soviet Union Children’s book called мир и человек).
time-for-maps:Linguistic Map of the Altaic, Turkic, and Uralic languagesClick through for full-sizeP
interretialia:Tabula Geographica: Civitates Foederatae AmericaeMap: United States of America(Fons Im
Aspirated plosivesAspirations occurs in English in initial onsets like in ‘pat’ [pʰ
Glottal StopLanguages that have a phonemic glottal stop /ʔ/ - about 40% of all human languages. This
Tenseless languagesLanguage that do not possess the grammatical category of “tense”
Nonconcatenative morphologyNonconcatenative morphology, also called discontinuous morphology and int
Relativization strategiesHow do languages form relative clauses like “the man that ate br
Languages that use “ciao” or a similar version descended from Italian as a greeting
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