RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.

2,237 results for "El Niño" — page 57 of 112

ZG_1_01 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_1_01 — Origin of Language — When Did Humans First Speak?

The origin of human language — the capacity for open-ended, recursive, symbolic communication — remains one of the most debated questions in science, lying at the intersection of linguistics, paleoanthropology, genetics,

language origins protolanguage speech evolution vocal tract FOXP2 gestural theory
ZG_1_09 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_1_09 — Writing Materials — Clay, Papyrus, Parchment, Paper

The history of writing materials is the material history of human knowledge itself — the physical substrates on which civilizations recorded thought, law, literature, science, and commerce determined what could be writte

clay tablet papyrus parchment vellum paper bamboo
ZG_1_07 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_1_07 — Mayan Glyphs — Decipherment and Historical Linguistics

The Maya script — the only Mesoamerican writing system known to fully represent spoken language — is a logosyllabic system combining ~800 distinct signs (logograms for words, syllabograms for syllables, and determinative

Maya glyph decipherment logosyllabic emblem glyph Long Count
ZG_1_02 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_1_02 — Cuneiform — The World's First Writing System

Cuneiform — from Latin cuneus ("wedge") — is the earliest known writing system, invented in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) by the Sumerians circa 3400–3100 BCE in the city of Uruk. It began as a system of pictographi

cuneiform Sumer Uruk writing proto-cuneiform tablet
ZG_4_07 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_07 — Constructed Languages — Esperanto, Tolkien, and Beyond

Constructed languages (conlangs) are languages deliberately designed by individuals or groups rather than having evolved naturally — they range from international auxiliary languages (IALs) designed to facilitate cross-c

constructed language conlang Esperanto Zamenhof Tolkien Elvish
ZG_4_01 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_01 — Whistled and Drummed Languages — Long-Range Communication

Whistled and drummed languages are speech surrogates — communication systems that transpose the phonological or tonal structure of a spoken language into a non-vocal acoustic medium (whistling or drumming) capable of car

whistled language Silbo Gomero drummed language talking drum Mazatec Béarnais
ZG_4_04 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_04 — Rhetoric and Propaganda — The Power of Persuasive Language

Rhetoric — the art of persuasion through language — is one of the oldest disciplines in Western intellectual history, codified by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a systematic teachable art (technē) with principles appli

rhetoric propaganda persuasion Aristotle logos ethos
ZG_4_15 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_15 — Braille: Tactile Literacy, Louis Braille, and Haptic Communication

Braille is a tactile writing system used by blind and visually impaired people to read and write through touch, consisting of patterns of raised dots arranged in rectangular cells of six positions (two columns of three d

Braille Louis Braille tactile literacy haptic communication visual impairment blindness
ZG_4_12 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_12 — Second Language Acquisition: Interlanguage, Critical Period, and SLA

Second Language Acquisition (SLA) — the study of how people learn languages beyond their first (L1) — is a multidisciplinary field drawing on linguistics, psychology, cognitive science, and education. Central questions i

second language acquisition SLA interlanguage Selinker critical period Lenneberg
ZG_4_03 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_4_03 — Alternative Communication — Braille, Morse, Semaphore

Beyond spoken and written language, humans have developed a rich array of alternative communication systems that encode linguistic information into non-standard channels — tactile (Braille), auditory-binary (Morse code),

Braille Louis Braille Morse code Samuel Morse semaphore flag signaling
ZG_3_05 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_05 — Language and Thought: Cognitive Semantics

The relationship between language and thought — whether the language we speak shapes, constrains, or determines how we perceive, categorize, and reason about the world — is one of the oldest and most debated questions in

linguistic relativity Sapir-Whorf hypothesis cognitive semantics Lakoff conceptual metaphor image schema
ZG_3_14 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_14 — Register, Style, and Genre: Variation Across Social Contexts

Every competent language user commands a range of styles or registers — varieties of language associated with particular situations, purposes, and audiences. A doctor does not speak to patients the same way she speaks to

register style genre formality Halliday field
ZG_3_20 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_20 — Pirahã & Universal Grammar Debate

The Pirahã people — a small indigenous group of approximately 400–800 individuals living along the Maici River in the Brazilian Amazon — and their language have become the center of one of the most consequential debates

Pirahã Daniel Everett universal grammar Noam Chomsky recursion immediacy of experience
ZG_3_03 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_03 — Phonetics and the International Phonetic Alphabet

Phonetics is the scientific study of speech sounds — how they are produced by the human vocal tract (articulatory phonetics), how they propagate as acoustic signals (acoustic phonetics), and how they are perceived by the

phonetics phonology IPA International Phonetic Alphabet articulatory phonetics acoustic phonetics
ZG_3_06 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_06 — Typology and Language Universals

Linguistic typology is the systematic study of structural similarities and differences across the world's languages — asking what properties are universal (shared by all or nearly all languages), what properties are vari

linguistic typology language universals Greenberg word order SOV SVO
ZG_3_15 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_15 — Philosophy of Linguistics: Chomsky Debate, Innateness, and Language as Instinct

The philosophy of linguistics investigates the foundational questions that underlie the scientific study of language: What is language? Is it fundamentally a biological organ, a social convention, a cognitive skill, or a

philosophy of linguistics Chomsky Universal Grammar UG nativism innateness
ZG_3_01 Verified Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_01 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis — Does Language Shape Thought?

The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — more precisely, the principle of linguistic relativity — proposes that the structure of a language influences or determines the habitual thought patterns, perception, and worldview of its spe

Sapir-Whorf linguistic relativity linguistic determinism Whorf Sapir Boroditsky
ZG_3_18 Credible Linguistics & Communication

ZG_3_18 — Pragmatics and Speech Act Theory

Pragmatics — the study of how context contributes to meaning beyond what is encoded in the literal words of an utterance — and speech act theory — the analysis of language as a form of action — have been foundational to

pragmatics speech-act-theory john-austin john-searle grice conversational-implicature
J_3_06 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_06 — Megalithic Construction Techniques

The quarrying, transport, and erection of megaliths — large stone blocks ranging from several tons to over 1,000 tons — is one of the most impressive and debated aspects of ancient engineering. Major megalithic achieveme

megalith monolith quarrying transporting stones Stonehenge Easter Island
J_3_01 Ancient Technology

J_3_01 — Roman Engineering — Roads, Aqueducts, and Concrete Chemistry

Roman engineering represents one of the most thoroughly documented technological achievements of the ancient world, encompassing a road network of 85,000+ km, aqueduct systems delivering over one million cubic meters of

Roman concrete opus caementicium self-healing concrete Via Appia aqueducts Pantheon