Words That Go Ping Chapter Sampler
Words That Go Ping Chapter Sampler
Words That Go Ping Chapter Sampler
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Epilogue185
Acknowledgements187
Notes189
Bibliography193
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Aargh, miaow, ker-ching
Means like it sounds
I t started when I was playing Scrabble in France many
years ago. My French opponent, very pleased with
himself, placed the word han. Not a French word I’d heard
of, and moreover French words starting with a strong
breathy h are rare. I said, ‘Huh?’
Then he said, ‘You know, the han a woodchopper makes
when he brings the axe down.’ Aha! I wouldn’t have been
so confused if the word had been used in context, in the
woods, or with the relevant image in a comic strip or ani
mation—then all would have become clear. That set me
to wondering about words—like han—that mimic sounds
directly. Are they always part of an established language
system and, if so, how free are we to use or interpret them,
or indeed to invent our own? Are there commonalities
across various languages? These questions set me off on
a track that led through a thicket of inquiry and included
how these words come about, the thorny problems involved
in translating them from one language to another, and
the inherent issues of cultural differences and taboos. But
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Words That Go Ping
banged [verb] on the table’, ‘you get more bang [noun] for
your buck’, and so on, but we can also say ‘the motor went
bang when we started it’. A word like bang has a sensory
onomatopoeic element, because it resembles the sound it
describes, and it is also an integral part of a proposition,
where you are telling me what happened. Ultimately it
depends grammatically on the presence of the verb ‘went’
to make sense, and it can be described as a complement to
that verb. On its own it’s simply an onomatopoeic word, and
sometimes classed as an exclamation. Bang!
We imitate animal sounds from an early age. A cat says
miaow and the sound imitation has become a verb: ‘the
cat miaowed’. However, although a dog says (or goes) woof
woof, we don’t normally say it woofed. We say it barked.
(The history of language can give an account of how this
came about.) The word go is sometimes used with sounds
other than those made by living creatures, as in ‘the balloon
went pop’. Here the exhaled air and the movement of the
lips seem to be a natural way to represent the sound of air
escaping. But what about other languages, such as Arabic,
which don’t pronounce p with a burst of air as English
speakers do—how do they express that sound? Are they
hearing what we are hearing? It’s farqa’a in Arabic—no p
sound at all—but nonetheless to Arabic speakers this word
represents the sound of a balloon popping.
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