Rex Hernández - Language Services
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rexhernandez.bsky.social
Rex Hernández - Language Services
@rexhernandez.bsky.social
Maestro de idiomas online (🇲🇽🇯🇵🇬🇧🇫🇷🇮🇹🇧🇷)
Diseño materiales para la enseñanza del japonés
Creador de contenido sobre lingüística y aprendizaje de idiomas (YT: @RexHdez)
Traductor (🇲🇽🇬🇧🇮🇹🇯🇵🇧🇷) e intérprete (🇲🇽🇬🇧🇮🇹)
Autor en proceso
Pinned
¡Ya comenzamos las inscripciones para el ciclo 2025! Este año se vienen muchos proyectos: conferencias, productos, juegos, shows, videos y muchas otras formas de celebrar y difundir el aprendizaje de idiomas. ¡No se queden fuera, nos vemos en clase! 🇯🇵🀄🎴🌸💮 #japonés #日本語 #clasesonline
Unicode 17: Nuevos idiomas, símbolos y emojis
rexhernandez.notion.site/Unicode-17-N...
#linguistica #unicode #idiomas
September 19, 2025 at 7:03 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
La BBC pone a vuestra disposición su extensa biblioteca de EFECTOS DE SONIDO 🔊, de todo tipo.
Unos 33.000, filtrables según categorías y mezclables.

Es importante que os miréis los términos de las licencias para su empleo.
sound-effects.bbcrewind.co.uk
January 6, 2025 at 1:11 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
For #ManuscriptMonday, here's a page from an edition of 300 Tang Poems that dates to 1893, likely annotated by a Japanese scholar named Itō 伊藤 who was possibly a colonial administrator in Taiwan. Famous lines are highlighted and rewritten in the margins.
January 6, 2025 at 6:20 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
Yeyyy 🥳🥳🥳 Ya tengo mi ejemplar de la integración de la pronunciación en el aula de ELE
¡Qué ilusión! Mil gracias @aplinguista.bsky.social por la oportunidad

Demotivation while learning Spanish Pronunciation. A study about potential factors that discourage students
January 7, 2025 at 3:13 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
Let’s contrast this reaction to the reaction to Selena Gomez using Spanish for an entire movie. Let’s also consider the added irony that Gomez’s most vocal critics have been Mexican actors whose bi/multilingualism would never be applauded in this way either.
January 5, 2025 at 5:56 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
Happy solstice!

Languages have certain things in common because of our human bodies

But they’re also all produced (so far) from the same planet and going through the same fourth dimension: time

This episode: days, months, years, metaphors, and more on how languages measure the passing of time
15: Talking and thinking about time
Lingthusiasm Episode 15:  Talking and thinking about time When we talk about things that languages have in common, we often talk about the physical side, the fact that languages are produced by human bodies, using the same brain and hands and vocal tract. But they’re also all produced (so far) by people from the same planet and going through the same fourth dimension: time.  As the earth revolves around the sun again, each of your Lingthusiasm cohosts is going through another longest (Lauren) or shortest (Gretchen) day, and we’re reflecting on how languages measure the passing of time. This episode of Lingthusiasm is a chance to reflect on the cyclical nature of years and days, the metaphors we use to talk about time in space, from time-space synesthesia to whether the past is behind us or in front of us, and why we measure time in seconds, but not thirds. (We definitely know that tense is also a time-related concept, but it’s such a cool topic that we’re going to give it its very own episode – something to look forward to!)  Click here for a link to this episode in your podcast player of choice or read the transcript here Announcements: Thanks to everyone who has made this year of Lingthusiasm so great! It’s been a year since we made our first episodes live, and we have been so delighted by how many people share our enthusiasm for linguistics. Thanks especially to our patrons, who keep the show running (and ad-free).  This month’s Patreon bonus episode is our first full-length bonus and it’s a question and answer session from our Montreal liveshow! Now you can have the full lingthusiastic liveshow experience with Bonus 8 (the main show) and Bonus 10 (the Q&A). We’ve still got IPA scarves and more in the merch section, but if you’re looking for a gift that doesn’t require postage, why not give someone a gift subscription to bonus episodes on Patreon?  Here are the links mentioned in this episode: A ghost driving a meat coated skeleton ‘Minute’ etymology (Etymonline) Children using time words (All Things Linguistic) When’s a new year? (Superlinguo) Metaphors We Live By The French Revolutionary Calendar (Wikipedia) Chinese/English time metaphors Aymara time metaphors Clinton campaign logo Time-space synesthesia Time-space synesthesia timelords? You can listen to this episode via Lingthusiasm.com, Soundcloud, RSS, Apple Podcasts/iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also download an mp3 via the Soundcloud page for offline listening. To receive an email whenever a new episode drops, sign up for the Lingthusiasm mailing list. You can help keep Lingthusiasm ad-free, get access to bonus content, and more perks by supporting us on Patreon. Lingthusiasm is on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Tumblr. Email us at contact [at] lingthusiasm [dot] com Gretchen is on Twitter as @GretchenAMcC and blogs at All Things Linguistic. Lauren is on Twitter as @superlinguo and blogs at Superlinguo. Lingthusiasm is created by Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne. Our senior producer is Claire Gawne, our editorial producer is Emily Gref, and our music is ‘Ancient City’ by The Triangles. This episode of Lingthusiasm is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license (CC 4.0 BY-NC-SA).
lingthusiasm.com
December 21, 2024 at 5:31 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
As we get into the new year, I'm sure many people out there have resolutions to learn a new language.

But remember: smart, consistent practice is the most important.

Keep your practice at a level of intensity you can maintain.
January 1, 2025 at 9:47 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
Wikipedia editors are so cool
November 25, 2024 at 4:12 AM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
This important question about the role of children in cultural evolution is a less domain-specific version of a question that has long exercised linguists. It's a good example, in fact, of how linguists should be very much engaged in the field of cultural evolution.
Excited to share that our BBS target article — "Children as agents of cultural adaptation" — is online & open for commentary! In it, @sheinalew.bsky.social & I argue that children's peer cultures might play an important & understudied role in cultural adaptation.

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
January 2, 2025 at 4:30 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
in the article of former North Carolina Congressman Patrick McHenry:
January 3, 2025 at 5:05 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
Hoxe en Televigo falando da discriminación lingüística 🤩😊
January 3, 2025 at 4:00 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
When I write historical fiction set in Anahuac (the modern Valley of Mexico, now almost completely covered by Mexico City), I get to add names for characters whom I've created or for whom there is no record of a name.

Over the next few weeks, I'll list my favorite pre-Invasion Nahuatl names.

1/
December 31, 2024 at 4:47 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
I’d recommend a few titles, too: THE PRNCE & THE COYOTE; FEATHERED SERPENT, DARK HEART OF SKY; SECRET OF THE MOON CONCH; THE SONGS OF THE DROWNED series by Anna Stephens; SUN OF BLOOD AND RUIN by Mariela Lares; BLACK SUN by Rebecca Roanhorse
December 31, 2024 at 11:55 PM
January 5, 2025 at 2:20 AM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
As an educational linguist I would add that efforts to linguistically prepare students for ‘the real world’ erase the linguistic heterogeneity of the world by framing language as a static set of rules rather than a creative tool for making sense of the world and our role in it
I don’t want my class to prepare students for ‘the real world.’

I want my class to help students dream of a better world.
December 29, 2024 at 7:33 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
I’m always looking for things that explain a lot but that people have a hard time remembering.

Examples: Air is stuff. Pee comes from blood. All land vertebrates have a single common ancestor. Venus is bright enough to cast visible shadows. Clouds are heavy. Bones are alive.

Any others you know?
December 28, 2024 at 8:06 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
本年、書き収め(まだ何も収まってない)っ!

「先今年無事 芽出度千秋楽」

……元旦から色々あって、とても目出度がれない年ではありましたが、まぁ「無事」ではあったな、と。
December 29, 2024 at 1:16 AM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
December 29, 2024 at 1:35 AM
Best linguistics scam ever.
My God look at this JAJSJAJSJAJ
What.. in.. the.. actual..
December 29, 2024 at 6:05 AM
¡Ya comenzamos las inscripciones para el ciclo 2025! Este año se vienen muchos proyectos: conferencias, productos, juegos, shows, videos y muchas otras formas de celebrar y difundir el aprendizaje de idiomas. ¡No se queden fuera, nos vemos en clase! 🇯🇵🀄🎴🌸💮 #japonés #日本語 #clasesonline
December 27, 2024 at 8:08 PM
Reposted by Rex Hernández - Language Services
I know a lot of linguists who have done this already with their classes and I think it's a great idea!
🐦🐦 #lingwiki
As an instructor, you can have your classes edit #Wikipedia articles as part of their curriculum. (My classes have done this for over a decade).
See Wiki Education to get involved at
wikiedu.org
Wiki Education
Wiki Education engages students and academics to improve Wikipedia
wikiedu.org
December 26, 2024 at 11:39 PM