Idioglossia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the play by Mark Handley, see Idioglossia (play).
An idioglossia is an idiosyncratic language invented and spoken by only one person or very few people. Most often, idioglossia refers to the "private languages" of young children, especially twins, the latter being more specifically known as cryptophasia, and commonly referred to as twin talk or twin speech.
Children who are exposed to multiple languages from birth are also inclined to create idioglossias, but these languages usually disappear at a relatively early age, giving way to use of one or more of the languages introduced.
Examples
Case studies
- Sam and Ren McEntee, 17-month-old twins.[1]
- June and Jennifer Gibbons
- Kennedy twins of San Diego, California, who were subjected to intensive study, including an exhaustive analysis of their language. (They named themselves "Poto and Cabengo")
Media
- The 1994 film Nell, starring Jodie Foster, depicts a woman who speaks an idioglossia. The stage play on which it is based is also called Idioglossia.
- The concept album The Perfect Element, part I, by Pain of Salvation, is centered around a song "Idioglossia".
- James Joyce's novel Finnegans Wake was written using an idioglossia.
- Skins Series 3 Episode 9 shows Katie and Emily Fitch using an idioglossia.
- Sherri and Terri on The Simpsons sometimes use an idioglossia.
- The two teenage protagonists of the film Disco Pigs, Darren and Sinéad, use an idioglossia.
- Singer Lisa Gerrard sings many of her songs in an idioglossia that she has developed since the age of twelve.
- Characters Jim and Tim Possible from the Disney Channel series Kim Possible often use twinspeak.
- Twins Marilyn and Carolyn Arnold from The Baby-Sitters Club book series used this early on.
- In the 2005 Law & Order: SVU episode "Identity," teenage twins Logan and Lindsay Stanton (Reiley McClendon) speak to each other in twin language while both are being interrogated in a murder investigation by Detectives Stabler and Benson (Christopher Meloni and Mariska Hargitay, respectively).
- In the 2010 American Dad! episode "Son of Stan," Steve and his temporarily-created clone, Steve-arino (voice of Scott Grimes), were briefly seen using an idioglossia in speaking to each other.
See also
- Home sign, a similar phenomenon among sign languages
- Stanley Unwin, a British comedian who invented his own language, Unwinese
References
- ↑ Moisse, Katie (March 30, 2011). "Babies Learn How Conversation Works Before They Learn Words". ABC News.
Further reading
- Bakker, P. (1987). "Autonomous languages of twins". Acta Geneticae Medicae et Gemellologiae (Roma) 36 (2): 233–238. PMID 3434134.
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