LOG IN
Newsletter
SEARCH
View More Results
Subscribe
Subscribe
Get an update of science stories delivered straight to your inbox.
Get a daily dose of science
Get a weekly Cosmos Catch-up
SEARCH
LOG IN
Weekly
Latest
COVID-19
Climate
Podcasts
Expand
Space
Astrobiology
Astronomy
Astrophysics
Space Exploration
Expand
Tech
AI
Automation
Computing
Materials
Energy
Robotics
Expand
Nature
Animals
Birds
Evolution
Marine life
Plants
Australian Mammal of the Year
Expand
Earth
Sustainability
Water
Earth Sciences
Agriculture
Oceans
Expand
History
Archaeology
Civilisations
Palaeontology
Expand
People
Behaviour
Culture
Ethics
Anthropology
Society
Citizen Science
Expand
Health
Medicine
Body and Mind
Nutrition
Expand
Core Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Mathematics
Physics
Engineering
Search
Newsletter
Account
Expand
Shop
Cart
Subscription
Single Magazine Issue
Audiobooks
Merchandise
eGift Cards
Education Subscriptions
Renew Subscription
Donate
linguistics
Even lawyers hate reading “legalese” – so why do they do it?
Culture
May 30, 2023
Researchers behind largest ever grammar database warn Australian Indigenous languages at risk
People
April 24, 2023
Yes, you probably do know when a person swears in a foreign language
People
December 7, 2022
Does the language we’re born into change our brains?
News
July 27, 2022
Massive public database of over 2,000 languages created to study linguistic diversity and evolution
People
June 16, 2022
A word game that seeks the origin of typology
Culture
February 20, 2022
You may have missed…
History
March 29, 2021
Neanderthals were capable of human speech
Anthropology
March 2, 2021
Conversation
The life and times of a forensic linguist
Behaviour
November 26, 2020
Linguistic feature not unique to humans
Behaviour
June 30, 2020
Sign language grew from five lineages
Anthropology
January 23, 2020
Linguistic diversity begins with our palates
Behaviour
August 19, 2019
1
2
Next