Panglot World Languages

Stanisław Pstrokoński

There are 7,000 languages on planet Earth. Come and explore this hidden world with us. Welcome to Panglot World Languages, a show about all the languages you've never heard of, and the speakers who call these languages their home. Linguists see languages as beautiful abstract structures; speakers see them as an expression of identity, heritage, and soul. Both are right. On this podcast, we nerd out (respectfully) about their unique modes of expression, while also listening to the human stories of those who speak, study, and preserve them. Subscribe to hear the world differently. Cover art: Stanisław Pstrokoński in front of the Temple of the War God in the village of Dabang in central Taiwan, home of the Tsou people.

Episodes

  1. 2 DAYS AGO

    6. Self-help in ancient constructed languages: Sanskrit, Prakrit, and Pali with Dr Alexander O'Neill

    Dr Alexander O'Neill of Musashino University in Tokyo returns to the podcast to explain to us the history, significance, cultural output, and current-day relevance of Sanskrit and its relatives Prakrit and Pali. There was a time when Sanskrit speakers could be found all the way from Central Asia to Indonesia. It was a unifying lingua franca that was the centre of education, that books were written in, and that intellectuals would debate each other in on demand (in verse!). It was like Latin was to Europe, except even more important. Literature in Classical Sanskrit covers a huge range, from religious texts and royal decrees to mathematics, astronomy, so-called mirrors for princes (i.e. self-help books for kings) and, famously, the Kama Sutra. And Vedic Sanskrit is the language of the Vedas, passed down through oral tradition over literally thousands of years. It's the only example I've heard of of a language preserved not through writing, but through generations of memorising ritual speech. Classical Sanskrit also had what we might call "daughter languages" Prakrit and Pali. All of these were constructed languages in the sense that they seem not to have been codifications of a language that was spoken, but a codified adaptation from spoken language (the work "Sanskrit" itself means "constructed" or "perfect"). Each of these has had their own role to play in the culture of Central, South and Southeast Asia, and in particular in the religious traditions, literature, and drama of these regions. There is even a modern movement to revive Sanskrit as a spoken language! Dr O'Neill also shares how reading the original Buddhist texts differs from reading them in translation, and the value of understanding the languages themselves. Enjoy the episode. Find out more about our work at panglotlanguages.com .

    2h 11m
  2. 14 APR

    5. Bringing back Barngarla (Australia) from zero speakers with Prof. Ghil'ad Zuckermann

    In this episode, I have the honour of welcoming Professor Ghil'ad Zuckermann, renowned linguist, language revivalist, academician and public communicator of science, to speak about his work reviving the Barngarla language of Australia. Barngarla is a Pama-Nyungan language which in 2011 had zero living speakers - as Professor Zuckermann puts it, a "sleeping beauty". Starting from a 19th-century dictionary put together by a German missionary, Professor Zuckermann has been working with local people to bring back the language, and has thus far co-published 2 books in the language. He shares with us Barngarla's social and historical context, his process of reviving the language, and some unique features of the language (numbers not going beyond 3, people's names being set according to birth order, "we" pronouns depending on the kin relationship of you and the other person), and gives us a taste of his wider philosophy of language reclamation that he writes about at length in his book Revivalistics: From the Genesis of Israeli to Language Reclamation in Australia and Beyond. Professor Ghil‘ad Zuckermann is listed among Australia's top 30 'living legends of research' by The Australian newspaper (2024). He was elected fellow of the Academy of Oriental Scholars (Shanghai) in 2011 and the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) in 2014, and has been an elected board member of the Foundation for Endangered Lanugages (FEL). Zuckermann is currently Wútóng Distinguished Chair Professor at Beijing Language and Culture University (since 2025); Professor (Level E) at Flinders University (Adelaide) (since 2023); Adjunct Professor at the Institute for Positive Psychology and Education, Australian Catholic University (Sydney) (since 2023); Professorial Scientist and Research Fellow at the Braginsky Center for the Interface between Science and the Humanities, Weizmann Institute of Science (since 2012); and Israel & Ione Massada Fellow at Worcester College, University of Oxford (2026). Enjoy the episode. Prof. Zuckermann's Revivalistics book: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/revivalistics-9780199812790 . Barngarla dictionary app (by WCC LP): Andoid https://bit.ly/42Hs8Lu, iOS https://bit.ly/3NuA0f0 . 50 Words project (University of Melbourne): https://50words.online/languages/Barngarla . Find out more about our work at http://panglotlanguages.com .

    1hr 8min
  3. 10 APR

    4. Evading capture in isiShalambombo (South Africa) with Pule ߔߎ߯ߟߍ

    Pule (in N'Ko script: ߔߎ߯ߟߍ) is an artist-researcher and cultural technologist from Azania (or South Africa) and is working in transdisciplinary peer-learning, while completing a PhD about the isiShalambombo (anti-)language phenomenon and its manifestation as "effugiolexis", where language forms are obfuscated to avoid being understood from the top down. For example, some European-originated traditions with these cryptolectal ("secret" language) roots include Verlan in many Francophone contexts, and Cockney rhyming slang in certain Anglophone ones. This brings us to a discussion about how the idea of a language as a "thing" (which many people implicitly assume) can be seen as only a heuristic, and that in reality language is a relational practice rather than an object that can be defined and bounded. Pule shares how the social infrastructure of the idea of unitary languages is the legacy of the policies of the colonial and Apartheid state in South Africa. Pule has also been very active with IsiBheqe Sohlamvu script, a.k.a. Ditema tsa Dinoko, which is a phonetic adaptation of symbol forms longstanding in endogenous traditions of beadwork, basketry, pottery, and the "umgwalo" mural arts made famous through isiNdebele expression, also known in Sesotho as "litema". I would argue that it is quite likely the most systematic and linguistically sophisticated writing system in the world, a syllabary using triangular bases (amabheqe) whose rotated orientation indicates vowels, and a composable set of lines and marks within the triangle bases each indicate consonant features (such as voicing and aspiration) rather than arbitrarily saying "this shape means this sound". Pule shares the script’s history, background, and cultural significance with us, as well as the goals of the script at a social level. Ultimately the conversation goes much deeper than any of this, bringing forth |Xam philosophy recorded in the 19th century which could be considered as a "classics" for southern Africa in the same way that Plato and Aristotle are for the West, or Confucius and Mencius are for China. Pule shares his view on relational ontology and the need for understanding the role of the second person ("You") in any discussion of ontology, as the foundation of any notion of subjective ("I") and objective ("it"). Listen to this episode also for the beautiful click consonants, and my halting attempts to produce them, all while the philosophical and linguistic back and forth goes unusually deep. It was a very special experience to speak with Pule. Enjoy the episode.

    2h 54m
  4. 25 MAR

    1. Laz (Turkey & Georgia) with Okan Dale

    Laz is a South Caucasian language (i.e. related to Georgian) spoken in northeastern Turkey and southwestern Georgia by around fifty thousand people. Okan Dale grew up in the Laz diaspora in Europe, and is currently based in the US. I failed to mention during the recording that Okan is a polyglot! He speaks German, English, Turkish, Japanese, and Spanish fluently, and also knows French, Laz, Portuguese, and Ojibwe. In this episode, we talk about, among other things: What it means to be a "diaspora in a diaspora" (being seen as Turkish when actually being Laz);Finding oneself in one's heritage language as a teenager;Continuing to research a language that is only partly documented, as a community member rather than a linguist;How linguists should interact with language communities;How the Roman Empire affected Laz;How to teach a language that has significant dialectal variation;How preverbs force you to specify the direction of actions you take (like "I blow the candles out downwards");The long and winding road to getting your language to adopt a writing system;How music can bring a linguistic community a degree of fame and recognition;The pros and cons of linguistic standardisation; andPreserving identity despite external pressures. Enjoy the episode. Panglot's website is panglotlanguages.com. Okan's podcast is called Kutxi - Voices from Endangered Language Communities. You can contact Okan through his website about Laz: lazuri.org.

    1hr 19min

About

There are 7,000 languages on planet Earth. Come and explore this hidden world with us. Welcome to Panglot World Languages, a show about all the languages you've never heard of, and the speakers who call these languages their home. Linguists see languages as beautiful abstract structures; speakers see them as an expression of identity, heritage, and soul. Both are right. On this podcast, we nerd out (respectfully) about their unique modes of expression, while also listening to the human stories of those who speak, study, and preserve them. Subscribe to hear the world differently. Cover art: Stanisław Pstrokoński in front of the Temple of the War God in the village of Dabang in central Taiwan, home of the Tsou people.

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