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DSK wrote:
Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: http://www.derose.net/steve/guides/snowwords/ So how many already? Pullum cites several sources on how many words certain Inuit dialects actually have for snow. The two main ones a The Dictionary of the West Greenlandic Eskimo Language (C. W. Schultz-Lorentzen, Copenhagan: Reitzels, 1927) gives just two words: qanik for snowflakes in the air, and aput for snow on the ground. We don't even have that, considering that "snowflakes" is just "snow flakes" pretending to be a single word. English being such a flexible language, we could even make it three words "flakes of snow." 3 + 2 plus your suggested two makes 7 words for snow! The problem is that there is really only one word: "snow" the rest is just creative accounting. As Pullum again points out, anyone concerned about a particular subject has a proportionately detailed vocabulary for it. Sure, that's elementary. For example, there are huge numbers of odd & wonderful words for all the different parts of a boat. Any specialized field of knowledge has it's vocabulary, medicine, computers, etc etc. To know the field one must master the vocabulary. ... There is little surprising or interesting about this, Surprising? Not to smart people, agreed. Interesting? I guess that all depends. .... it doesn't seem to have much affect on communication, realism, or anything else Horse puckey. Try discussing a medical issue with a doctor: 2/3 of the conversation will be him explaining what the words mean. Yet to another medical professional, the communication is efficient and accurate. .... beyond signalling that you are (or aren't) an expert on a precise topic: Yep. Tell me again, how is it that we spot the BS'ers and fakers and wanna-bees in this newsgroup? So if some language(s) did have many words for snow, it should be no more interesting than these other everyday cases. But if you think about it, people who live in ever-snowful lands may perhaps care no more about fine variations of snow, than we in warmer climes care about fine variations of grass or pavement: anything so constant disappears into the background and becomes less interesting. I disagree. We don't make a living from pavement or grass, and they vary considerably less than snow. The Eskimos have a very good reason for their vocabulary, just as your doctor has a good reason for his. Actually there are two reasons, but we don't need to go into the second one just now. Regards Doug King When people are talking about snow and they use the word "powder" is that another word for snow? |
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