this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2024
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Data is Beautiful

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A place to share and discuss visual representations of data: Graphs, charts, maps, etc.

DataIsBeautiful is for visualizations that effectively convey information. Aesthetics are an important part of information visualization, but pretty pictures are not the sole aim of this subreddit.

A place to share and discuss visual representations of data: Graphs, charts, maps, etc.

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[–] modeler@lemmy.world 11 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Some languages have fewer vowel sounds while others have an insane number (in Europe that would be Danish).

Thai has a lot, so speakers need to speak more slowly so the listener has time to distinguish words. But it also means that you can have more words per syllable.

It's not about efficiency per se - it's data and error correction

[–] modeler@lemmy.world 8 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Just to add - Thai has a tonal system and distinguishes rising, low, medium, high and falling tones. This requires a bit more time to say so that there is time for the tone to change (or not change).

[–] acchariya@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

In practical speech though, the tones get reduced to something like 2-3.

My opinion on why Thai shows up this way is that pronouns and articles are often omitted, and a lot of meaning comes from very short end of sentence particles, and different vocabulary for different registers.