The Weirdest Languages

ethiostar

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A short, interesting and fun read on language, that is if you are a bit nerdy like me.

http://idibon.com/the-weirdest-languages/

An excerpt....
This is odd. Is this odd? One of the features that distinguishes languages is how they ask yes/no questions.The vast majority of languages have a special question particle that they tack on somewhere (like the ka at the end of a Japanese question). Of 954 languages coded for this in WALS, 584 of them have question particles. The word order switching that we do in English only happens in 1.4% of the languages. That’s 13 languages total and most of them come from Europe: German, Czech, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Frisian, English, Danish,and Spanish.

But there is an even more unusual way to deal with yes/no questions and that’s what Chalcatongo Mixtec does: which is to do nothing at all. It is the only language surveyed that does not have a particle, a change of word order, a change of intonation…There is absolutely no difference between an interrogative yes/no question and a simple statement. I have spent part of the day imagining a game show in this language.
 
I'm sorry about the all caps title, Mods. I copied and pasted the title from the article and didn't notice it was in all caps.

Can you please fix it for me?

Thanks!
 
I'd have to say English is up there as one of the weirder languages.
 
English doesn't always use the interrogatory to structure a question but neither do most languages I've been exposed to. Mandarin uses ma at the end but things get abbreviated a lot and content and body language are just or more usual.
 

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