Word of the day: isogloss
Feb. 15th, 2011 04:17 pmDraw on a map the boundaries between linguistic features in speech, and you have an isogloss. I came across this while reading about how Germans say "quarter past ten" (if they've crossed an isogloss, they might be confused).
There's a similar word for written linguistic boundaries, isograph, but somehow it doesn't sound as much fun.
There's a similar word for written linguistic boundaries, isograph, but somehow it doesn't sound as much fun.