http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskimo_words_for_snow says that Eskimo-Aleut languages do not have an unusually large number of words for 'snow', but Sami languages do! It gives http://scandinavian.wisc.edu/dubois/Cou ... eToday.pdf as a source. I am unsatisfied. While the source is hosted by a university, it is hosted only by the Scandinavian Studies department, not the Linguistics Department (if one even exists), and the article itself does not seem to be written by a linguist, but by a journalist, whose name I cannot even find in the article.
Am I the only one who thinks this sounds ridiculous? Did they have the same strictness and frequency of safety checks? What about real working conditions? Did the factories produce the same types of products? Did they use similar tools/machines? Were the management styles similar? Hours? Wages? Holidays? Living conditions outside of the factory? Were there really no other variables than one spoke Swedish, and the other Finnish!? And if there really no other (identifiable) variables, what extrapolations and expectations can we make for other countries/cultures and their factories? and how do they turn out?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_relativity#Empirical_research wrote:Another line of study by Frode Strømnes examined why Finnish factories had a higher occurrence of work related accidents than similar Swedish ones. He concluded that cognitive differences between the grammatical usage of Swedish prepositions and Finnish cases could have caused Swedish factories to pay more attention to the work process where Finnish factory organizers paid more attention to the individual worker.
I haven't read the whole Wikipedia article yet, as I don't have the time at the moment.
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Can others point me towards some good sources done by LINGUISTS on this subject? What're your thoughts on it?