2024 Year in Review

In 2024, I traveled to Europe to speak at several events, including the launch of the Spanish translation of Because Internet. I started studying American Sign Language through the Lethbridge Layton Mackay Rehabilitation Centre in Montreal — my first time in a language classroom since university and it’s been really fun! The 2024 lingcomm grants were awarded. And I collaborated with the Crash Course Linguistics team on a research article about the series.

This year the podcast and I got some fun tidbits of pop culture recognition. Lingthusiasm was featured in the New York Times’ list of 5 Podcasts for Word Nerds, and Puzzmo’s daily crossword referenced my book Because Internet.

And speaking of which, Lauren Gawne and I kept making the podcast, along with some new merch featuring rabbits and fun personality quiz. I also started working with Leah Velleman on these update posts and assorted other Lingthusiasm and behind-the-scenes projects. 

Conferences

Most of my conference attendance this year was in a big trip through Europe, where I attended: 

I also went to the centennial Linguistic Society of America annual meeting in New York City.

Writing

A Spanish translation of Because Internet was released, bringing the translations list to four, with Chinese (simplified), Japanese, and Korean. If anyone reads it in several versions and wants to tell me about the linguistic choices the translators made (especially as I don’t speak the latter three languages), feel free to nerd out with me about it on bluesky

In 2020-21, I was a co-writer and script consultant for a project to make 16 videos for Crash Course Linguistics, the first video of which now has over a million views! The team behind these videos has also written an academic article about our process in making them, which appeared this year (yup, that’s how academic publishing goes). It’s called Creating Inclusive Linguistics Communication: Crash Course Linguistics and appears as a chapter in Inclusion in Linguistics (full text), an open-access academic book edited by Anne H. Charity Hudley, Christine Mallinson, and Mary Bucholtz. The other articles in this book and its companion Decolonizing Linguistics are also well worth checking out if you’re on the more academic side of things. 

Interviews 

Lingthusiasm

Lingthusiasm, my podcast with Lauren Gawne, celebrated our seventh anniversary! There were some fun podcast events this year above and beyond the usual episodes. Bethany Gardiner made vowel space plots for me and my cohost Lauren, and you can see more about them and how they were made on github. We created a Highly Scientific™ ‘Which Lingthusiasm episode are you?’ quiz. We put out some new merch, including gavagai shirts, scarves, and stickers to go with our episode on a famous thought experiment about a rabbit. And while we can’t take credit for this one, you can get people gift memberships now, in case there’s a linguistics fan in your life who would like to listen to the bonus episodes.

Lingthusiasm episodes

  1. No such thing as the oldest language
  2. Connecting with oral culture
  3. What visualizing our vowels tells us about who we are
  4. Scoping out the scope of scope
  5. Brunch, gonna, and fozzle — The smooshing episode
  6. How nonbinary and binary people talk — Interview with Jacq Jones
  7. The perfectly imperfect aspect episode
  8. Lo! An undetached collection of meaning-parts!
  9. Welcome back aboard the metaphor train!
  10. OooOooh~~ our possession episode oOooOOoohh 👻
  11. Helping computers decode sentences — Interview with Emily M. Bender
  12. A politeness episode, if you please

Bonus episodes

  1. Themself, Basque ergativity cartoons, and bad swearing ideas — Deleted scenes from Kirby Conrod, Itxaso Rodriguez-Ordoñez, and Jo Walton and Ada Palmer
  2. Are thumbs fingers and which episode of Lingthusiasm are you? — Survey results and a new personality quiz
  3. How we made vowel plots with Bethany Gardner
  4. Inner voice, mental pictures, and other shapes for thoughts
  5. Secret codes and the joy of cryptic word puzzles
  6. Linguistic mixups — spoonerisms, mondegreens, and eggcorns
  7. The best and worst comparatives episode
  8. Don’t you love to do a “do” episode?
  9. Behind the Scenes on the Tom Scott Language Files
  10. Xenolinguistics 👽
  11. Linguistic Travel – Estonia, Mundolingua, and Martha’s Vineyard
  12. Metaphors be with you! Lingthusiasm x Let’s Learn Everything crossover episode

Reading, listening, and other media

Selected social media posts

General linguistics

Fun moments

New favorite linguistic examples

Helpful threads and posts

Missed out on previous years? Here are the summary posts from 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021,2022, and 2023. If you’d like to get a much shorter quarterly highlights newsletter via email, with all sorts of interesting internet linguistics news and links, you can sign up for that at gretchenmcc.substack.com.