Today's blog is brought to you by the letter R
And today, we're going to talk about the moon
again. A little time ago, a nice man called Peter Shann Ford told us a
story about
the moon. Do you remember? That's right, he told us about the first
thing that was spoken by the first man on the moon, who is called
Neil. He is an astronaut. Peter told us that Neil, who is a nice
astronaut, said "That's one small step for a man, a giant leap for
mankind." What a nice thing to say! And it fits so well here on this
little bloggy thing called Language Log that you're reading, because we
are all about being nice. But hold tight: I have to tell you that some
very bad people, called
cynics, have said that Neil made a slip-up and said "for man" instead
of "for a man." Let's not be bad people. Let's believe what the nice
man called Peter told us that the nice astronaut said.
And let's not fret. There are so many things not to fret about, that it
will be easy. Let's not fret about the fact that the nice man called
Peter did not use the very pretty pictures that bad people called
linguists who are villains like to use to see what someone has said.
They call them "spectrograms" which sounds like a very evil thing that
a very bad villain person would use to take over the world. (Say
"Mwahahahaha! Muhuhahaha! Mwahahaha!" Now you know what crazy bad
villain linguists sound like, so you can be on your guard. Don't *ever*
let a linguist give you sweeties.) And let's not fret about the fact
that there wasn't any more time between "for" and "man" than
there was between "for" and "mankind" when the nice man called Neil
said "for mankind" which was an especially nice thing for Neil to say.
It's nice to do things for mankind. That shows how nice Neil is. And
most of all, let's not fret about how people say "r".
The nice man called Peter said that when people say "r" they put their
tongue up extra high. It's not rude to do that, because it's inside
your head! (No not "upside your head" - I don't even know what that
means. Say "oops upside your head," say "oops upside your head." Wasn't
that fun!) And when people have finished saying a word with an "r" at
the end, Peter said they quickly put their tongue back down again. Do
you know what happens when you put something down quickly, or even
super dooper whooper quickly? Why, it makes a great whoooooshing
noise!!!! And Peter says that after the nice man called Neil finished
saying "for," he still had his mouth open. It wasn't rude to have his
mouth open for three reasons. First, he wasn't eating. Second, he was
wearing a big ol' space helmet, so nobody could see that his mouth was
open. And third - now this is the important one - it was ok for Neil to
have his mouth open because he was trying to say "a." You don't believe
me! Well, I never. OK, boys and girls and journalists: try saying "a"
with your mouth closed. Hah, hah! That wasn't an "a" sound! It sounded
just like "mmmm", or else the noise that a gang of those linguist
villains make when you round them up and duct tape their mouths.
Anyway, you remember that the nice astronaut man called Neil had his tongue
up in the air because he was saying "r" at the end of "for" and then,
keeping his mouth open so as to say "a", he put his tongue down super
dooper whooper quickly, and it made a whooshing noise. But it was only
a little whooshing noise because Neil's tongue is not a very big thing.
And for many, many years nobody noticed that whooshing noise. And then
the nice man called Peter came along and he looked at nice pictures
called "waveforms" showing what Neil had said. And do you know what?
Peter could *see* the whooshing noise on the nice pictures he made. It
looked like a little bumpy bit. And that's how Peter knew that Neil had
been trying to say "a." If Neil hadn't been saying "a" he would
have closed his mouth first, because even with a space helmet on when
you're not eating it might be a little bit rude to keep your mouth
open, and second because he was about to say "m" and everybody knows
you can't say "m" with your mouth open. Let's try it! Naaaah, that
wasn't an "mmm" sound, it sounded like the noise your editor makes
impatiently when your hot science news article has unnecessary details
like references and facts, or like the noise those bad villain
linguists make after you bloody them up just a little bit.
Isn't it amazing! One little drop of a tongue makes a whoosh that means
that lots of bad cynical people were wrong about the nice
astronaut for years and years and years, and the nice astronaut
was right after all! What a nice story the nice man called Peter came
up with! And shame on any wicked linguists who point out that people
don't always lift up their tongues when they say "r" in the way that
the nice man Peter said they did. No, you say - surely it can't be that linguists are so wicked that they would rain on Peter's parade?
Well, you might think nobody would be so
horribly horrible as to do things that might ruin such a very good
story. That's what I would think too. But Mark Tiede at Haskins Lab and
Suzanne Boyce at the University of Cincinnati, which must be bad
places, even though Mark and Suzanne helped me write this blog post for which I'm grateful, have done something very evil called "research" which is what
mad scientists do. You can see what bad people these linguists are if
you look at the pictures underneath, but first try making an "r" sound
in 33 different ways. Isn't it fun! But, seriously, I have to tell you
that the pictures were made using money which
the government took from your mom and
dad. Scary, huh?
Yuuuuuuchhhhhhh. It looks like the wicked linguists working for
evil government people waited until people
were saying "r" and then cut their heads right down the middle. I wish
we had
color.
You know what a wicked linguist would think if the wicked linguist were
here now? The wicked linguist would think that people make the letter
"r" in oh so many ways, like in the pictures, and that when people
finish saying "r" and move their tongue back into a rest position they
might not flick it down quickly in a way that would make a big whoosh
but might just relax it so that the bulge went out of it which might
not make a whoosh at all though nobody really knows until they make
whoosh measurements, and that if that's what the nice astronaut called
Neil does when he's finished saying "r" then it wouldn't make a whoosh
at all, and then the little bumpy bits on the nice man called Peter's
nice waveforms wouldn't really tell us even the tiniest little anything
at all about whether the nice astronaut called Neil was trying to say
"a", and then the whole beautiful story wouldn't be at all like
anything that really happened for real but would just be a fairy tale,
and fairy tales are great but don't really belong in newspapers and on
news websites and on news programs on the radio and on news programs on
TV because fairy tales are not news. Evil people have very long
thoughts, you see. It's called "mania."
But we don't need to listen to what some imaginary evil maniac linguist
would say. We can listen to what the nice astronaut said. A nice
man called Garth Wiebe did a clever thing and then told us about it at
Language Log. He slowed down some of what the nice astronaut said so it
lasts 10 times longer. Try saying it that way yourself, and
bounce up and down slowly like you were on the moon: "ffffffffffoooooooooorrrrrrrrrr aaaaaaaaaa
mmmmmmmmmmaaaaaaaaaannnnnnnnnn. That was super fun!!! Now you can
listen to what a super slow astronaut sounds like - it makes him sound
like a very nice whale!