Reference/Resource Anon Archived So, anyone ever wonder where terms like "doggo" and "pupper" suddenly sprang up from? It's collectively called "DoggoLingo", and Internet linguists are starting to study it! (npr.org)
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Reference/Resource Anon Archived So, anyone ever wonder where terms like "doggo" and "pupper" suddenly sprang up from? It's collectively called "DoggoLingo", and Internet linguists are starting to study it! (npr.org)
submitted ago by 1872630?
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[–] Empire_of_the_mind 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
interesting topic, but if you can find a non NPR discussion of it we'd be more likely to want to consume the information.
[–] 9175747? [S] 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Sorry to hear that you don't like the source. I still enjoy NPR's more apolitical content, so it's unlikely that I will discontinue its use. Thanks for the recommendation, though, now I know why NPR stuff might not take off.
[–] Empire_of_the_mind 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
a year ago they were passable for non-political stuff but they, like most establishment media, have become suspect. I'd be shocked if i could get through this without some kind of propaganda being inserted. Language topics are much appreciated though, I recommend you dig into the source and find something else on the topic- it's probably better and has more information anyway!