Welcome to WikiProject Linguistics. We are a group of editors collaborating to improve
linguistics articles on Wikipedia. We cover a broad range of subjects within the general field of linguistics, including
theoretical linguistics,
applied linguistics,
etymology, and
phonetics. You will find a number of resources on this page to help you with improving Wikipedia's coverage of linguistics; take your time and have a look around. Please feel free to
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Articles to be created
Question semantics -- This is a huge area of research for semantics, and it seems high time that there be a wiki page on it.
Biktor627 (
talk) 03:26, 31 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Vocalization (currently a disambiguation page), the change of a consonant into a vowel or semivowel, a form of
lenition, in some cases synonymous with approximation. There is an article on
l-vocalization, but nothing on the topic in general. This term needs to be distinguished from several other concepts also called "vocalization", such as
speech production,
voice (phonetics), and
consonant voicing and devoicing, and finding another term for the concept that does not have such ambiguity might be helpful. Or perhaps the concept should be described in the article on lenition. —
Eru·
tuon 23:10, 28 December 2014 (UTC)reply
List of glossing abbreviations - In classroom practice, this page has become a main reference to resolve glossing abbreviations in interlinear glossed text. In Wikipedia, this *should* be the basis for glossing with the templates {{
interlinear}} and {{
Gcl}} and provide input to
Module:Interlinear/data. Originally, this was compiled and extended in an opportunistic fashion. Not all glosses listed there have adequate literature references, yet. For some, no "conventional gloss" (for use within Wikipedia) has been suggested so far, for other glosses, there is need to confirm/review the "conventional gloss". More variants are needed and a discussion of systematic principles of forming abbreviations (e.g., -E or -ESS for essives).
Chiarcos (
talk) 13:18, 16 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Working on it. Additional input would be nice, but I've got another score refs in the wing. —
kwami (
talk) 12:40, 13 June 2021 (UTC)reply
Northern Subject Rule, I have added a large amount of text explaining the Celtic origin hypothesis for this feature, it now needs the Old English and (possibly) Norse theories including for balance. I really don't feel comfortable with doing it myself as I'm pretty useless with Old English. Can anybody help?
Boynamedsue (
talk) 07:36, 25 May 2021 (UTC)reply
Comparative_case - Though this tagged as a high-importance linguistics article, the article is only a stub. The range of uses of "comparative case" needs to be clarified, and there needs to be more examples.
Biktor627 (
talk) 20:16, 29 March 2022 (UTC)reply
Requests for attention
Tamil loanwords in Biblical Hebrew and the related
Tamil loanwords in other languages appear to have some pov issues around tamil nationalism, and the former is of very poor quality (the grammar is spotty, loanwords are cited only transliteration, sometimes unvocalised, and sometimes seemingly inconsistent with the grammar suggested by the translation). Several of the examples also seem to be stretched at best and, one of the cited works also calls several of the examples provided by one of their other sources "highly controversial", something the article does not bring up. I also raised this on the etymology subproject but that appears fairly dead
Tristanjlroberts (
talk) 14:44, 1 December 2020 (UTC)reply
Krishnamurti cites two of the etyma as successful loans without refering to the bible. This would mean Proto-Dravidian, give or take if the dates are uncertain. Dravidian and Tamil are probably cognate ethnonyms, still used as synonyms but distinguished later in linguistic discourse. So the fact that the article leads with "Tamil loanwords" is a sign of a rather local perspective where they may be synonyms. Perhaps it should be moved.
Rhyminreason (
talk) 22:34, 3 July 2022 (UTC)reply
For editors interested in the use of IPA on American English dialect pages, this is a call for further thoughts and contributions on
this discussion. Thanks!
Wolfdog (
talk) 00:56, 17 February 2023 (UTC)reply
I have re-written
Arc Pair Grammar, but I'm a student editor through WikiEdu, and I'd like someone with background in the subject and more experience on Wikipedia to check it over
JeanLackE (
talk) 18:08, 27 January 2019 (UTC)reply
Linguistic Linked Open Data currently very much written from a technical perspective (because this is in the intersection with computer science), but requires a thorough look from the eyes of a linguist to improve readability
Chiarcos (
talk) 13:26, 16 August 2020 (UTC)reply
OntoLex also written from a technical perspective (because this is in the intersection with computer science), but requires a thorough look from the eyes of a linguist to improve readability
Chiarcos (
talk) 13:26, 16 August 2020 (UTC)reply
Synizesis has been vastly expanded. Currently rated stub class, but I would be appreciate if it were considered for reassessment.
Sem2wiki (
talk) 09:48, 9 December 2020 (UTC)reply
I expanded
Relational grammar last month, and I'm curious whether or not it still qualifies as a stub. --
ZeegoTheDeer (
talk) 05:04, 10 March 2022 (UTC)reply
I have recently read
interactional linguistics and am curious as to why it is still considered a stub. I'd probably label it start or C grade article--
Farleigheditor (
talk) 12:28, 30 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I think I have added a bit of length to that article since it was given its stub status, but I don't really know how the quality grading is supposed to be changed and haven't thought about looking into it...
Replayful (
talk) 13:00, 30 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I took a look at the article, and I think it looks to be of sufficient quality and length to qualify as start, so I changed the rating, which, by the way, you can do by going to the talk page of the article and editing the class in the WP Linguistics header at the top. Also, should I remove this thread from here as the article review under question has been completed?
Indigopari (
talk) 08:11, 30 March 2023 (UTC)reply
I wrote horror aequi, but it needs a linguist to look it over, a little more meat to get it beyond a stub, and probably better examples. —
AjaxSmack 19:16, 26 July 2023 (UTC)reply
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GPHemsley (
talk·contribs): native
AmE speaker (with intermediate Spanish skills) interested in syntax, comparative and historical linguistics, constructed languages, IPA, and copyediting—just about anything that has orderly rules or standards that can be adhered to.
Irtapil (
talk·contribs) My formal training and experience is in Evolutionary biology; i'm an enthusiastic novice at linguistics. I'm interested in Arabic, Urdu, Hindi, English, Tok Pisson, and related languages. I'm "learning" about 4 languages, but i'm still only fluent in English so far. I seem to be far more interested in learning about languages than learning how to use them.
Sasuke Sarutobi (
talk·contribs): native
BrE, fairly good German speaker, also currently working on French, Italian, and Polish, among other occasional languages. Primarily focussed on copyediting, reviewing, and standardising.
Joeystanley (
talk·contribs): Working on
Causatives and other valency-related topics,
Guarani, areas related to sociolinguistics, and whatever other smaller languages I happen to read about. Linguistics grad student.
Snow Rise (
talk·contribs): I have some roots in comparative and historical linguistics and phonology, but am generally more interested in language as it relates to cognition, as well as general syntax, semantics and translation studies.
Mcmisher (
talk·contribs) Native American English speaker, who speaks some German and French; Interests include constructing languages and theoretical linguistics. I am a High School graduate of 2014.
Phinumu (
talk·contribs) American; linguistic interests include phonology, sound change, and orthography.
AudiblySilenced (
talk·contribs): Native
AmE speaker, with some Spanish, Latin, Hebrew, Basque, and Esperanto. BA in Linguistics. Interests include phonology, morphology, canonical typology, semantics, constructed languages, and pretty much anything else that isn't syntax.
AlbertBickford (
talk·contribs): professional linguist, current focus on sign languages (especially language identification), past focus on Mexican indigenous languages
Wugapodes (
talk·contribs) Study Linguistics with a focus on sociolinguistics, phonetics, and signed languages
Baloug (
talk·contribs) I like linguistics and language stuff, so I try and improve articles about them whenever I can. I'm not a professional linguist, just a guy who reads books and a lot of Wikipedia... Also, I'm French, I speak fluent English and I know some Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, Esperanto and some basic Irish.
N_Oneemuss (
talk·contribs) Just someone interested in linguistics who uses Wikipedia a lot, and likes to give back to the community whenever possible.
raccoonny (
talk·contribs) BAHons in Linguistics, Spanish, Polish @ University of Toronto. Native Canadian English, intermediate-to-advanced Spanish and Polish. Some Canadian French, Dutch, and Portuguese. Kartvelian, Iroquoian, and Germanic languages. Phonology, historical linguistics, variationalist sociolinguistics.
gdog1102 (
talk·contribs) English speaker and Dutch learner. I plan on studying linguistics in college. I love historical and theoretical linguistics and am an avid conlanger. My dream is to get into MIT. I would be honored to be a part of this project and I love to know that my contributions, no matter how small, are going towards a better wikipedia.
thnidu (
talk·contribs) Native
AmE. Ph.D. in linguistics (
Berkeley, 1981). Dissertation on
American Sign Language. Lifelong language geek and compulsive reader. Hypertrophied vocabulary. Fluent Esperanto; half-decent reading Spanish, French, German; varying skills in Russian, Old and Middle English, and bits and pieces of many others. Was senior linguist at
Dragon Systems, then a research administrator in the
Linguistic Data Consortium at
Penn. Retired since 2013.
Sanmame (
talk·contribs) PhD, lecturer in theoretical linguistics, computational linguist
Melifluo (
talk·contribs) Student linguist, SLA, particularly phonological development in L2 learners. Speaker of Spanish and English.
Noahfgodard (
talk·contribs) Amateur linguist primarily interested in historical & comparitive linguistics. Native American English speaker, learning German and Spanish (and a little Welsh and Korean).
Botterweg14 (
talk·contribs) discourse, dialogue, logic, formal semantics; additional interests in computational linguistics, philosophy of language, Jewish languages, Indo-European prehistory/archaeology, among other topics
Emflazie (
talk·contribs) BA in linguistics, with research in acoustics, phonetics and phonology. Also interested in information organization re:language data.
Iolo ap Rhys (
talk·contribs) Studied a BA in ling., interested in hist. ling., syntax, language technology, phil. of lang., and typology
Mr anonymous username (
talk·contribs) Native English speaker with knowledge/is studying Spanish and French. Interested in Finno-Ugric languages, but has no prior knowledge to these languages.
JungleEntity (
talk·contribs) Linguistics student focused on historical Linguistics (and the history of), Indo-European Languages, and linguistic typology.
Bufobuff (
talk·contribs) Native English speaker, mostly fluent in Spanish, learning Finnish, Classical Greek, and Old English. Interested in phonology and historical linguistics!
AddieWillow (
talk·contribs) - BA Linguistics, research on religious language ideology. focus on socioling, linganth, and phil of lang. interest in etymology, pragmatics, and more.
Doric Loon (
talk·contribs) - Professor of translation, doctorate in Medieval German, interested in Germanic and Indo-European comparative linguistics. Also speaks Gaelic.
UnbiasedBrigade (
talk·contribs) - Fluent in English, near-fluent to fluent in Hindi, has also studied Sanskrit, French, Ancient Greek, Hebrew, and Esperanto. Really interested in comparative, historical, and computational linguistics, and is a conlanger.
ThatADHDperson (
talk·contribs) - Learning French, German, Russian, Spanish and more. Fluent in English.
OrchidFox (
talk·contribs) - Native USA English, strong background in ASL, some Spanish. Decades of amateur fascination with many aspects of linguistics.
Lingprof22 (
talk·contribs) - new to wikipedia, interested in participating in WikiEdu in my class this fall
Alphaw00lf2000 (
talk·contribs) - new to wikipedia. BA in Linguistics and Cognitive Science. Primarily interested in editing psycholinguistics articles, as well as helping to write/contribute to articles on endangered languages.
SilkPyjamas (
talk·contribs) – B.A. in linguistics, professional technical editor, here to work on my Spanish/English translations and make stuff easy to read
Piotr_Gasiorowski (
talk·contribs): native
Polish speaker, primarily a phonologist and historical linguists; a Wikipedia veteran willing to return to active service
Carriearchdale (
talk·contribs) :native in English, but I also do translations to
BrE. I am currently fluent in French, Spanish, and Japanese. I am also of " profissional de Português." tlhIngan Hol jatlh lo'wI'vam. = This user speaks Klingon.
SynConlanger (
talk·contribs): native speaker of Italian, advanced user of English; postdoctoral researcher in phonetics and phonology; interested in phonetics and phonology, graphemics, typology, diachrony, descriptive linguistics.
Tezero (
talk·contribs) Native in American English; intermediate-advanced in Japanese; lesser amounts of a few others like Czech, German, MSA, Classical Nahuatl, and Zulu. Hobbyist linguist; interested mainly in morphology.
Commissaress (
talk·contribs) - Layperson (and aspiring linguist); interested in Slavistics and all sorts of applied linguistics, particularly cognitive linguistics.
SirCattus (
talk·contribs) A lover of linguistics with a focus on cognitive linguistics. Interested in pragmatics, sociolinguistics, construction grammar, and particular linguistic features in general. ;) Avid conlanger.
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