March 29, 2007

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My 7-year-old son Parker asked me this good question last night: how many words are there in the world? I started by saying, well, it’s not an infinite number (he understands about infinity), and I happen to know (from a really fun project for my work) that one source, Ethnologue, lists about 14,000 existing languages. If you assume that most of those languages have far fewer than the 1 million sometimes attributed to English, and you assume some rate of language extinction over the last 30,000 years, you wind up with a SWAG of maybe 100,000 languages in human history, with 100,000 words, each, or 10^10 — that’s 10 billion words — that have ever existed. Then, of course, new words are already being created.

Such is the power of synchronicity in life that no sooner had I gone through this calculation than I got an email from my alma mater, Swarthmore College, mentioning that a professor there is an expert on language extinction. So I thought I would ask him for his opinion on the question: how many words are there in the world?

Swarthmore College | News | Swarthmore Linguist Calls Attention to Dying Languages

Speakers of thousands of the world’s languages are now abandoning their ancestral tongues at an unprecedented rate. What is lost when a language dies? And what are the implications?

“Languages are the repository of thousands of years of a people’s science and art - from observations of ecological patterns to creation myths,” says Swarthmore College linguist K. David Harrison (right),

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BBC NEWS | Business | US ‘no longer technology king’

The US has lost its position as the world’s primary engine of technology innovation, according to a report by the World Economic Forum.

The US is now ranked seventh in the body’s league table measuring the impact of technology on the development of nations.

A deterioration of the political and regulatory environment in the US prompted the fall, the report said.

Let’s take a closer look:

1: Denmark
2: Sweden
3: Singapore
4: Finland
5: Switzerland
6: Netherlands
7: US
8: Iceland
9: UK
10: Norway

Aside from the skepticism-inducing source of the report (what does a rich people’s thinktank know about technology innovation?), these are all little tiny countries. Scale matters.

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Ace Books (2003), Hardcover, 576 pages

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Del Rey Books (1988), Mass Market Paperback

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wfzimmerman's review: "Enjoyable for the reunion with Bran-Tse Mallory and Truzenzuzex, the archaeology setting, and the character of Ab (who fooled me on first time reading at age of 16!)"
Del Rey Books (1988), Mass Market Paperback
tags: collecting humanx novels, collecting author highlights, collecting Commonwealth novels

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