🧩 Linguistic Encoding Game
Translate the English word into the target language.
Languages
Categories
Progress Grid
+ Linguistic Insights
▶ Phonemes
Phonemes are the smallest sound units that distinguish meaning. English, for example, contrasts /p/ and /b/ in pat vs bat.
Examples across languages:
- English: /θ/ as in think, /ð/ as in this
- Spanish: /ɲ/ as in niño
- French: /ʁ/ as in rouge
- Greek: /χ/ as in χαρά (joy)
▶ Syntax
Syntax defines how words combine to form sentences. Languages differ in their structural order, agreement rules, and emphasis.
Examples:
- English: The cat eats fish. → Subject–Verb–Object
- German: Der Hund beißt den Mann. → Subject–Verb–Object
- Japanese: 犬が男を噛む (Inu ga otoko o kamu) → Subject–Object–Verb
▶ Word Order Patterns
Word order shapes rhythm and logic in speech. Common patterns among world languages include:
- SVO (Subject–Verb–Object): English, French, Spanish
- SOV (Subject–Object–Verb): Japanese, Latin (often), Turkish
- VSO (Verb–Subject–Object): Classical Arabic, Welsh
Fun fact: Ancient Indo-European languages often used flexible order due to rich case marking.
🌀 Lexicon Spiral – Indo-European Roots
0 / 10 Roots Connected
