In the first three months of 2024, I attended the annual meeting of the Linguistic Society of America in New York City — home, as always, of the American Dialect Society’s Word of the Year vote. (The winner? Enshittification!)
I also started taking classes in American Sign Language through a local community ASL 101 class offered at the Lethbridge Layton Mackay Rehabilitation Centre, with Deaf instructor Marc Gervais. It’s my first time back in a language class since my university days and it’s great to be flexing that muscle again and learning more about Deaf culture.
I appeared on an episode of quiz podcast Go Fact Yourself alongside David Wilcox.
I learned whether people visualize words in a specific font (I do!).
And in a personal first, I appeared in a crossword puzzle — Puzzmo’s daily crossword referenced my book Because Internet.

Podcast news
Lingthusiasm created a new and Highly Scientific™ ‘Which Lingthusiasm episode are you?’ quiz based on a game I played last year on bluesky recommending episodes to people by ~vibe, and also three regular episodes and three bonus ones:
- No such thing as the oldest language
- Connecting with oral culture
- What visualizing our vowels tells us about who we are
- Themself, Basque ergativity cartoons, and bad swearing ideas (bonus)
- Are thumbs fingers and Which Lingthusiasm episode are you? (bonus)
- How we made vowel plots with Bethany Gardner (bonus)
For the vowels episode in March, my cohost and I fulfilled a long-time personal dream and commissioned a linguist to map out our respective vowel spaces (based on data from previous Lingthusiasm episodes) so we can see a visual representation of how my Canadian and Lauren’s Australian vowels differ from each other!

Favorite words and sentences
- “Why this poop-propelled ‘headless chicken monster’ is the ninja of the deep sea” (novel sentence)
- “A Medieval French Skeleton Is Rewriting the History of Syphilis” (novel sentence)
- “Fucktangular” (portmanteau word)
- “Mama, my soup is a little too temperature for me” (overextension) and a whole thread of other child language gems
Tweets and blog posts
- “New favorite example of the Stroop test“
- “AI? … That’s so neat! H…how are you verifying it?”
- “If I’ve said this once, I’ve said this a million times…”
- “Today I learned that ‘cone of silence’ isn’t just an idiom”
- Boomer ellipses in hand drawn cartoons
This month’s image is another of the super cool vowel charts that Bethany Gardiner made for Lingthusiasm! Look how different Lauren and I are!


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