1. Fans of dance music, mashups, or textual poaching in general: Bootie Magazine has released the new
Best of Bootie, its yearly mashup compilation, which is once again awesome. And it's free! I particularly recommend "Party & Bullshit (In the USA)" and "Shut Up and Take Me Out"; also of note is "It's My Life Confessions, Pt. II", the all-Glee
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Speaking of languages, do you happen to know what an ergative language is? I've read the wikipedia article like five times but still don't really understand it. >.
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So, think about it this way: In English, we treat intransitive verbs and transitive verbs the same way, as in:
I slept (intransitive)
I slapped him (transitive)
In ergative languages, there's a distinction made between the "subjects" of intransitive verbs and transitive verbs. The subject of an intransitive verb is called a subject, but the subject of a transitive verb is called an agent. So:
I(subject) slept
I(agent) slapped him(object)
In English, we mark subjects and agents the same way, but in ergative languages, objects and subjects are marked the same way. So, if English were ergative:
Me(subject) slept
I(agent) slapped him(object)
Or in a real example:
Xatwarik (you slept)
Katinloq'oj (I love you)
Kinaloq'oj (You love me)
That's all ergativity means. It's actually really simple, but people like to complicate it.
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So, in that vein, would "he slept" become "him slept"?
Thanks for explaining it to me! :D I've only ever taken French, which definitely isn't ergative.
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No problem! It's one of those things that makes most people run for the hills, so, like, I'm all set to explain ergativity at all times. :D
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That's so simple. Why do people like to complicate things so much, whyyyyyyyy?
At least biology just has craptons of jargon. I can deal with jargon.
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