时间:2018-12-30 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

  AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER: more of our discussion of gesture language.

RS: We don't mean formal sign language taught to deaf people, but the way we use our hands either with spoken language or in place of it. Think of the Olympics. With so many speakers of different languages coming together, hands and arms must really get a workout.

AA: As we said last week, a new study has found evidence that when speakers of different languages have to communicate only with gestures, they naturally follow a subject-object-verb, or S.O.V., word order, regardless of the rules of their spoken language.

RS: We discussed the findings and about gesturing in general with the lead author, University of Chicago psychology 1 professor Susan Goldin-Meadow.

SUSAN GOLDIN-MEADOW: "The lore 2 is that northern Europeans gesture less than southern Europeans. But in fact, when people have done the studies, what they find is that northern Europeans gesture small and southern Europeans gesture big. So they gesture, you know, using their entire bodies and they use all of their hands, not just their fingers, and so it's much more visible.

"They also have more conventional gestures like emblems 3 like an OK or a thumbs-up. But it's not clear that they gesture more than northern Europeans.

"You use gestures along with the structure of your language, and consistently 4 with the structure of your language. And since the language is different structure, the gestures also differ."

AA: "For example?"

SUSAN GOLDIN-MEADOW: "When people talk about the action of rolling down a hill, we say rolling down all in one phrase. And our gesture tends to be a rolling down phrase, so you can move your hand in a circle while moving it down.

"In Turkish, those two bits of information are put in separate phrases and their gestures tend to be separate. So, for example, you might do a little rolling motion -- a sort of round, rotating 5 motion and then do a movement down. So they separate the meanings into two separate gestures."

AA: "Well, it's funny, because that's exactly what Rosanne was doing here in the studio when you said rolling down a hill, she started moving her finger around, but I don't know if you were going down at the same time or not."

SUSAN GOLDIN-MEADOW: "Well, as an English speaker, you're likely to go down at the same time. If you're a Turkish speaker, you're likely to do the rolling and then do the down."

RS: "So are gestures a universal language, or is it 'gesture as a foreign language'?"

SUSAN GOLDIN-MEADOW: "Well, gestures when used with speech are not universal. They look different and they fit with the language that you're using, the speech that you're using. Now what I think we've discovered, in a sense, is that when you take speech away and you force people to gesture, there may then be a universal language.

"We had thought that gesture language that you create when you're forced not to speak would be influenced by the gestures that you produce along with your speech. But at least from our studies it doesn't look like that's true. It looks like the gestures that you produce when you're told not to talk look the same across the globe."

RS: "What do you hope to do with this information and the findings from the study?"

SUSAN GOLDIN-MEADOW: "Well, I think the information that we find out about the deaf children that I study can be used to perhaps educate deaf children, both who are learning sign language and who are learning spoken language.

"It is also possible that this particular order we've discovered could be something that's quite easy to access. So, for example, if a child were having difficulty acquiring language, maybe if we put it in the form -- even if they're learning English, which has an S.V.O. order, maybe if we put their first sentences into an S.O.V. order, maybe it would be easier for them to grasp.

"So I think what we've found is that there's something here that's cognitively 6 really basic, and that maybe you can make use of that in situations where communication is difficult. Either perhaps in a situation like what you're talking about at the Olympics, or in a situation where a child is having trouble learning how to speak."

AA: Susan Goldin-Meadow is a psychology professor at the University of Chicago who focuses on language development in children. Her new study is titled "The Natural Order of Events: How Speakers of Different Languages Represent Events Nonverbally." It was published in the July 1st Proceedings 7 of the National Academy of Sciences.

RS: And that's WORDMASTER for this week. You can find the first part of our interview at voanews.com/wordmaster. And our e-mail address is word@voanews.com. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.



n.心理,心理学,心理状态
  • She has a background in child psychology.她受过儿童心理学的教育。
  • He studied philosophy and psychology at Cambridge.他在剑桥大学学习哲学和心理学。
n.传说;学问,经验,知识
  • I will seek and question him of his lore.我倒要找上他,向他讨教他的渊博的学问。
  • Early peoples passed on plant and animal lore through legend.早期人类通过传说传递有关植物和动物的知识。
n.象征,标记( emblem的名词复数 )
  • His emblems are the spear and the burning torch. 他佩带的徽记是长矛和燃烧着的火炬。 来自辞典例句
  • Crystal prize, Crystal gift, Crystal trophy, Champion cup, Emblems. 水晶奖牌、水晶礼品、水晶纪念品、奖杯、金属奖牌。 来自互联网
ad.一贯地,一直
  • The Ministry of Finance consistently overestimated its budget deficits. 财政部一贯高估预算赤字。
  • The minister has consistently opposed any relaxation in the law. 部长一向反对法律上的任何放宽。
ing. 转动
  • It can be used on rotating machinery and under water. 它可以用于回转式机器,也可以在水下应用。
  • So a separate rotating aerial is used for that purpose. 为此需要用一种单独的旋转天线。
  • Cognitively,man,the subject of cognition,must classify and categorize the objects. 从认知学角度来看 ,作为认知主体的人对于认知对象必须进行分类和范畴化。 来自互联网
  • Cognitively, reference can be studied along with information processing of human mind. 从认知的角度看,要研究人类思维的信息处理过程。 来自互联网
n.进程,过程,议程;诉讼(程序);公报
  • He was released on bail pending committal proceedings. 他交保获释正在候审。
  • to initiate legal proceedings against sb 对某人提起诉讼
学英语单词
Acetamidophenol
aging method
air triangulation
Allium rubens
aquascutums
be in a passion
bellishment
book awards
buchalter
bumwhush
burnish broach
calamity
charge-trapping layer
chongake
communication language
concentration equilibrium constant
continental shelf topographic survey
control registei
craion
cryptocercidaes
cui bono?
cultivated land squandered
darkslides
deflecting glass
dessiatines
district of a forestranger
el muertoes
elecampane
electrical resistivity survey
ferrihemoglobin
fibrohistiocytosarcoma
gorno-altaysk (oirat-tura)
Gravina di Puglia
helical-orbit beta-ray spectrometer
highway maintenance organization
hover pulley
hydrocarbon saturation
improved bound
integrated search plans
intelligible meaning
ledged door
lesser secondary coverts
letovicte
ligurion
like a bear garden
littoral zones
loading racks
low-pressure air stower
magneto exploder
Mass of the Resurrection
mimomyia (mimomyia) chamberlaini metallica
musculus hyoideus
Nakla, Barrage
nephrognephrogram
non-cereal starch
nonconverters
Novestrol
nut making machine
occupational radiation
opening-ups
paper-tape reader control unit
pedestrian safety
photoreflective polarization coupler
plant load demand
plausible reasoning
polymenrism
prion disease
pseudosecret
pulmocutaneous arch
pulsating combustor
record of discussions
relief pressure control valve (pneumatic)
rerunning
robert-kilwardby
running clearance
Sannoisian stage
scavengeable
schedulable variable
Schipbeek
secret algorithm
security structure
self working
seventyfive
single-headed stud
site-site
ski-tows
snowsurfing
soap star
social activism
spaghetti diagram
spectrographic analyses
steering-wheel pointer
teabowl
thermoanalysis technology
tracking point
truss-head screw
unioned
verruca venereal
we the people
wealth management
wing flats