It is often said that languages, that the way in which language is configured and words, are the purest reflection of the society itself. Therefore, we could say that few things are as alive and as wonderful as language itself, such as that way of giving voice to a feeling, a gesture, a new or old custom, the way the wind blows or in which court people.
Now, at this point we throw you a simple question...What kind of words do you think predominate most in most languages? Those who designate positive aspects or those who express negative things?
Let's talk about it today, we are sure that this topic will seem like "supercurious"
The bright side of life or the dark side of humanity?
We must admit, in our daily lives we are accustomed to surround ourselves with negative words .In the social networks there is no lack of criticism, contempt and sometimes even insults.In meetings of friends or family, it is not uncommon to hear badly sounding words, or use that rich lexicon that we it serves to criticize, to vent, to express our tiredness, our boredom or our criticism towards those politicians that enervate us day and day too.
We'd almost be tempted to dec go yes, that languages abound with negative words over positive ones.However, we have to tell you that, fortunately , it is not like that.Positive terms abound and there is an almost worldwide tendency to prioritize expressions of affection and affection, above the hurtful or negative.Now, but how have we reached this conclusion?
A study has been published this year.conducted by the University of Vermont , in which, a complex computer system was developed with which to compute millions of words in numerous languages to deduce whether in general, people tend to talk about the good things about life, rather than negative ones.A hypothesis that would make them demonstrate that if this premise is true, there must be more positive than negative words.
And so it was, they were analyzed from songs, to tweets, from Press headlines to novels, where the scientists of the Laboratory of C The University of Vermont, together with the National Science Foundation and the MITRE Corporation, managed to process 10 languages , namely: English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese from Brazil, Korean , Simplified Chinese, Russian, Indonesian and Arabic.
Now, as a curious aspect, we will tell you that it was precisely the Spanish that showed the highest punctuation of positive words, while that the one that obtained a slightly lower average frequency was the Chinese. What could it be due to? Will it be a reflection of the personality of the societies themselves? We will have to wait for another study to deepen the topic.
Meanwhile, we invite you to know how much you know about Spanish in the following test, and also, tell us what your three favorite words are in our language .From our space we leave ours: "wisdom", "friendship" and of course..."curiosity".
Image: Kit, din bcn , Giusi Barbiani
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