Charles Hockett - 'F' article?Where to find old article on frequency of letters, pairs of letters, triplets and quadruplets in 4 or 5 languages?Where can I find the mentioned More than one Method article?

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Charles Hockett - 'F' article?


Where to find old article on frequency of letters, pairs of letters, triplets and quadruplets in 4 or 5 languages?Where can I find the mentioned More than one Method article?













1















In the Guardian, there is an article on cultural determinants of phonological feature choice. A recent article in Science supposedly supports the hypothesis that the existence of labiodental fricatives, namely 'f' and 'v', appear in languages of societies that favor cooking over raw food (cultivation vs hunter-gatherer). That is, that there are extant linguistic behaviors that are due to "changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic".



The two articles both refer to an article by Charles Hockett around 1984 that sets forth the hypothesis by using an inventory of languages and noticing that those that have an 'f' were from slightly different anthropological situations than those without.



The simple question here is not what is the strength of the evidence, if there are other phonological phenomena with similar cultural determinants, etc etc, but ...




Where can one find this original article by Charles Hockett?




Science is behind a paywall so I can't see the bibliographical reference in the Blasi article in Science. And a google search gives only partial list of Hockett's publications. Is there a list of all publications by author in linguistics?










share|improve this question
























  • I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

    – jknappen
    17 mins ago















1















In the Guardian, there is an article on cultural determinants of phonological feature choice. A recent article in Science supposedly supports the hypothesis that the existence of labiodental fricatives, namely 'f' and 'v', appear in languages of societies that favor cooking over raw food (cultivation vs hunter-gatherer). That is, that there are extant linguistic behaviors that are due to "changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic".



The two articles both refer to an article by Charles Hockett around 1984 that sets forth the hypothesis by using an inventory of languages and noticing that those that have an 'f' were from slightly different anthropological situations than those without.



The simple question here is not what is the strength of the evidence, if there are other phonological phenomena with similar cultural determinants, etc etc, but ...




Where can one find this original article by Charles Hockett?




Science is behind a paywall so I can't see the bibliographical reference in the Blasi article in Science. And a google search gives only partial list of Hockett's publications. Is there a list of all publications by author in linguistics?










share|improve this question
























  • I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

    – jknappen
    17 mins ago













1












1








1


1






In the Guardian, there is an article on cultural determinants of phonological feature choice. A recent article in Science supposedly supports the hypothesis that the existence of labiodental fricatives, namely 'f' and 'v', appear in languages of societies that favor cooking over raw food (cultivation vs hunter-gatherer). That is, that there are extant linguistic behaviors that are due to "changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic".



The two articles both refer to an article by Charles Hockett around 1984 that sets forth the hypothesis by using an inventory of languages and noticing that those that have an 'f' were from slightly different anthropological situations than those without.



The simple question here is not what is the strength of the evidence, if there are other phonological phenomena with similar cultural determinants, etc etc, but ...




Where can one find this original article by Charles Hockett?




Science is behind a paywall so I can't see the bibliographical reference in the Blasi article in Science. And a google search gives only partial list of Hockett's publications. Is there a list of all publications by author in linguistics?










share|improve this question
















In the Guardian, there is an article on cultural determinants of phonological feature choice. A recent article in Science supposedly supports the hypothesis that the existence of labiodental fricatives, namely 'f' and 'v', appear in languages of societies that favor cooking over raw food (cultivation vs hunter-gatherer). That is, that there are extant linguistic behaviors that are due to "changes in dietary and behavioral practices since the Neolithic".



The two articles both refer to an article by Charles Hockett around 1984 that sets forth the hypothesis by using an inventory of languages and noticing that those that have an 'f' were from slightly different anthropological situations than those without.



The simple question here is not what is the strength of the evidence, if there are other phonological phenomena with similar cultural determinants, etc etc, but ...




Where can one find this original article by Charles Hockett?




Science is behind a paywall so I can't see the bibliographical reference in the Blasi article in Science. And a google search gives only partial list of Hockett's publications. Is there a list of all publications by author in linguistics?







phonology reference-request sociolinguistics evolutionary-linguistics






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 27 mins ago









WavesWashSands

2,3561029




2,3561029










asked 2 hours ago









MitchMitch

3,2051534




3,2051534












  • I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

    – jknappen
    17 mins ago

















  • I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

    – jknappen
    17 mins ago
















I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

– jknappen
17 mins ago





I wonder what is left over of this study when one takes the Australian languages out: Not having any fricatives is a regional feature there, ans they were all hunter-gatherers.

– jknappen
17 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














Here's the citation:



Hockett, C. F. (1985). Distinguished lecture: F. American Anthropologist, 87(2), 263-281.



The link is here, but it's also behind a paywall.



Google Scholar profiles, personal webpages and CVs are the most common places where we find publication lists of a certain author, though this doesn't work for Hockett, who passed away in 2000 and presumably didn't put these up on the Internet.






share|improve this answer























  • Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • @Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

    – WavesWashSands
    1 hour ago










Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














Here's the citation:



Hockett, C. F. (1985). Distinguished lecture: F. American Anthropologist, 87(2), 263-281.



The link is here, but it's also behind a paywall.



Google Scholar profiles, personal webpages and CVs are the most common places where we find publication lists of a certain author, though this doesn't work for Hockett, who passed away in 2000 and presumably didn't put these up on the Internet.






share|improve this answer























  • Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • @Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

    – WavesWashSands
    1 hour ago















4














Here's the citation:



Hockett, C. F. (1985). Distinguished lecture: F. American Anthropologist, 87(2), 263-281.



The link is here, but it's also behind a paywall.



Google Scholar profiles, personal webpages and CVs are the most common places where we find publication lists of a certain author, though this doesn't work for Hockett, who passed away in 2000 and presumably didn't put these up on the Internet.






share|improve this answer























  • Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • @Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

    – WavesWashSands
    1 hour ago













4












4








4







Here's the citation:



Hockett, C. F. (1985). Distinguished lecture: F. American Anthropologist, 87(2), 263-281.



The link is here, but it's also behind a paywall.



Google Scholar profiles, personal webpages and CVs are the most common places where we find publication lists of a certain author, though this doesn't work for Hockett, who passed away in 2000 and presumably didn't put these up on the Internet.






share|improve this answer













Here's the citation:



Hockett, C. F. (1985). Distinguished lecture: F. American Anthropologist, 87(2), 263-281.



The link is here, but it's also behind a paywall.



Google Scholar profiles, personal webpages and CVs are the most common places where we find publication lists of a certain author, though this doesn't work for Hockett, who passed away in 2000 and presumably didn't put these up on the Internet.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 1 hour ago









WavesWashSandsWavesWashSands

2,3561029




2,3561029












  • Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • @Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

    – WavesWashSands
    1 hour ago

















  • Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

    – Mitch
    1 hour ago











  • @Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

    – WavesWashSands
    1 hour ago
















Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

– Mitch
1 hour ago





Nice! JSTOR, like the OED, is also available through my local public library (and I'm guessing any US or UK public library) or a university library.

– Mitch
1 hour ago













In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

– Mitch
1 hour ago





In a plain google search I hoped to get a CV of some kind, but for someone as famous as Hockett I only found 'selected' works, mostly swamped by his language universals work and Chomsky debates. Is Google Scholar what you used?

– Mitch
1 hour ago













@Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

– WavesWashSands
1 hour ago





@Mitch I have access to the Science paper, so I just used that.

– WavesWashSands
1 hour ago

















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