It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by junglejake
There is actually a very interesting article in the march issue of American Scientific which talks about this very phenomenon. They talk about colors(colours for my brittish friends ), but it applies to all aspects of language.
Did you know that most languages have extreamly similar names for colors? And the naming practices effect how we see the world. There's a tribe in Australia who doesn't have words for left or right, they only have the abslouts. For instance, they wouldn't say "there's a fly to the left of your nose", they'd say "there's a fly north of your nose". This effects their whole concept of direction a lot. When an arrow is drawn facing left, and they're asked to reproduce it, they will draw the arrow in it's original direction depending on where they're standing. For instance, if they turned 90 degrees, they would draw the arrow up or down, depending on which way they turned.
But hun sounds a lot more like our one to me, and our language is based on latin. The English didn't even know about the Mayans when their language developed. Some concepts just seem to be hardwired into our brains, and we attribute certain sounds to concepts. Blurrrrfffffoooo. What'd ya think of?
Originally posted by Spiderj
Hmm.
Going off memory here, so we know that's faulty but...
Isn't PAX Latin for Peace?
Isn't PAX the Mayan God of Peace?
Someone know the answer to this?
SPiderj
I do have to say, I'm really glad to see a thread on linguistic psychology here on ATS. I find the concept facinating, but not many others do. way to go, Phoenix!
Originally posted by junglejake
But hun sounds a lot more like our one to me, and our language is based on latin. The English didn't even know about the Mayans when their language developed. Some concepts just seem to be hardwired into our brains, and we attribute certain sounds to concepts. Blurrrrfffffoooo. What'd ya think of?
Originally posted by junglejake
Originally posted by Spiderj
Hmm.
Going off memory here, so we know that's faulty but...
Isn't PAX Latin for Peace?
Isn't PAX the Mayan God of Peace?
Someone know the answer to this?
SPiderj
I actually don't...yet, but I'm reaching for a book...Shoot, it only has Aztec and American Indian Gods, not the mayans.
I do have to say, I'm really glad to see a thread on linguistic psychology here on ATS. I find the concept facinating, but not many others do. way to go, Phoenix!
Quatzequatl brought peace
Pax
(n.) Friendship, or a friend; -- esp. in the phrases to make pax with, to make friends with, to be good pax, to be good friends; also, truce; -- used esp. interjectionally.
(n.) The kiss of peace; also, the embrace in the sanctuary now substituted for it at High Mass in Roman Catholic churches.
n.) A tablet or board, on which is a representation of Christ, of the Virgin Mary, or of some saint and which, in the Mass, was kissed by the priest and then by the people, in mediaeval times; an osculatory. It is still used in communities, confraternities, etc.
Originally posted by phoenix314
I saw a link on the web for a site about "son pax"(The sound of peace, whatever that's supposed to mean). It said that pax was the mayan word for music and peace.