Dreampepper - five bottles of things going wrong
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Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 12:39 am
five bottles of things going wrong

Heisenberg, Goedel, and Chomsky walk into a bar. Heisenberg says, "From the fact that we are all here I can infer that this is a joke, but cannot determine whether or not the joke is funny." Goedel says, "No, we can't tell if the joke is funny because we're inside it, if we could observe ourselves from outside, we would know." and Chomsky just shakes his head sadly. "No, no," he says, "The joke is funny. You're just telling it wrong."

Language source root map.

Crossing the park outside the train station to buy our tickets back east tonight, the night smells like dark, warm grass and marijuana under the broken lights. A man on a park bench to my right sings a snatch of song as I pass, though with a falsetto woman's voice, sweet, light, as if they were secretly a ten year old girl in a ratty disguise of fourty years of hard drinking. Inside the train station, I don't see David, who's to meet me here. The building is mostly empty, the sort of vast space which hushes conversation, forces everyone to talk a little quieter as if our voices might be swallowed by the square footage if we were to speak too loud.

I walk past the bench with a young dreadlock-attractive couple, the sort that are nationally recognized as being from British Columbia. They both look like they should live starring on Folk Festival posters, but a little more tired, a little more worn around the cuffs of their sweaters and indian cotton shirts. The next bench only has a studious young man all in black, with a pair of new wing tip shoes in a box resting next to him. I sit on that bench, after pinning him on my mental map as the least likely to talk to me, and take out my book instead of strike up conversation. David has thirty-five minutes to arrive with our cash, and then the discount on our tickets will vanish.

The clock ticks..

After every page, I look at the clock, trying not to fret, but thankfully, it all works out. David arrives with our money, the man behind the counter apologizes for the flawed website and the terrible help-desk women who hung up on simple questions, explaining that the help desk offices are located in Dallas, Texas, Nova Scotia, and Bangladesh. He is generous, kind, and completely helpful. (Thank you man-behind-the-counter, you're excellent.) We buy our tickets, I shake his hand, and we walk off into the night, three minutes to spare.

Wagons ho, we're going on the 18th.

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Current Music: yma sumac - goomba boomba

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morbid_curious
morbid_curious
Morbid Curiosity
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 08:14 am (UTC)

Nice map. A pity it doesn't have non-Indo-European languages in there as well.

Travel well.


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porphyre
porphyre
Bloody Foxtongue
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 06:27 pm (UTC)

Where do the other languages branch from?


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skonen_blades
skonen_blades
skonen_blades
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 11:51 pm (UTC)

I've heard that Basque is a mystery to Linguists. This is pretty neat, too.

In the Hokkaido islands and the northernmost part of Honshuu, there were the Ainu people. Biological study suggests that the Ainu people are closer to the people who form European nations. Linguistically, the Ainu language has similar syntax structure to Japanese, but differs in the use of pronouns used as verbal prefixes. Some linguists consider the Ainu language as a distant family of the Finno-Ugric subgroup of Ural-Altaic language group. Some archeological findings and anthropological studies suggest that the Ainu people are probably a branch of a group of people who originally came from the North Ural mountains, and spread from Finland to Northeast Siberia between 700 BC to 700 AD. This is from the cultural & religious similarity found in old ruins, but culture can be transfered by contact of people, so the origin of Ainu people is still not known for sure.


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morbid_curious
morbid_curious
Morbid Curiosity
Sat, Sep. 6th, 2008 01:44 am (UTC)

To take a local example here, Maori is language in the Eastern Polynesian subgroup (along with Tahitian, Hawaiian and a few others), which is a small part of the Austronesian family group.

Chinese languages are in the Sino-Tibetan family, and there's other families such as Dravidian (south Indian languages, Tamil), Afro-Asiatic (Egyptian, Berber, Arabic), Niger-Congo (Yoruban, various Bantu languages like Xhosa and Zulu)...


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mishlai
mishlai
mishlai
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 03:57 pm (UTC)

The map is fascinating.

You honor the mundane with your prose. I love it.


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porphyre
porphyre
Bloody Foxtongue
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 06:30 pm (UTC)

Yeah, I was really struck by it too. I'm glad people are clicking on it.


ReplyThread Parent
jasoncm
jasoncm
jasoncm
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 04:04 pm (UTC)

Thanks for the joke!


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porphyre
porphyre
Bloody Foxtongue
Fri, Sep. 5th, 2008 06:31 pm (UTC)

Somewhere a drummer did a rimshot and does not know why..


ReplyThread Parent
morbid_curious
morbid_curious
Morbid Curiosity
Sat, Sep. 6th, 2008 01:46 am (UTC)

I've met some drummers like that.


ReplyThread Parent
osmie
osmie
Gravidyptes Osmia
Sun, Sep. 7th, 2008 05:39 am (UTC)

Wagons ho, we're going on the 18th.

Whee!


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porphyre
porphyre
Bloody Foxtongue
Mon, Sep. 8th, 2008 09:38 pm (UTC)

We almost ended up having to leave the 19th, so this should get us on the same bus.


ReplyThread Parent
osmie
osmie
Gravidyptes Osmia
Mon, Sep. 8th, 2008 10:17 pm (UTC)
0630?

This would be me grinning at your (perfectly opaque) office window. I'm looking forward to the trip very much.

Oh, and I've formulated a new law of nature which states that if a coincidence turns out to involve Jhayne, then it is no longer a coincidence.


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