n Pormpuraaw, an Australian Aboriginal community, you wouldn’t refer to
an object as on your “left” or “right,” but rather as “northeast” or
“southwest,” writes Stanford psychology professor Lera Boroditsky (and an expert in linguistic-cultural connections) in the Wall Street Journal.
About a third of the world’s languages discuss space in these kinds of
absolute terms rather than the relative ones we use in English,
according to Boroditsky. “As a result of this constant linguistic
training,” she writes, “speakers of such languages are remarkably good
at staying oriented and keeping track of where they are, even in
unfamiliar landscapes.” On a research trip to Australia, Boroditsky and
her colleague found that Pormpuraawans, who speak Kuuk Thaayorre, not
only knew instinctively in which direction they were facing, but also
always arranged pictures in a temporal progression from east to west.
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