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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
Some languages tell time through the magnitude of the moment
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Nat Emodi
@emodi
say more
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
languages use specific vocabulary for interpreting the world around us. And with time, there are two general categories with which this is done.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
There is time in terms distance, as in crossing an area, and time in terms of volume as in a space being filled.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
English uses physical distances to express a measure of time. We say β€œa short break” or β€œa long movie.” Describing the passage of time is a measurable distance. Whereas in languages like Greek and Spanish, time is marked with terms that refer to volume. The translation would be: "a small break" or "a big movie
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
A study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology sought to test whether people who think about time with distance or volume measurements have a better sense of how much time has passed.
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isaiahudotong.eth
@isaiah
To measure this, they had one group watch a line grow across a screen and a 2nd group watch a container being filled, the first, a measure of time as distance and the second, a measure of time as volume.
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