給小寶寶起名字有諸多影響因素。給孩子取名阿納金(天行者,《星球大戰(zhàn)》中重要人物)或者根據(jù)《權(quán)力的游戲》來(lái)取名是粉絲可能會(huì)做的事情。
But it could be also simply be the way it sounds. According to a new study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, people tend to assign certain names to boys and others to girls based on the first phoneme.
但有時(shí)候可能僅僅因?yàn)榘l(fā)音關(guān)系,《性格與社會(huì)心理學(xué)雜志》發(fā)表的一項(xiàng)新研究稱,根據(jù)頭一個(gè)音素,人們傾向于給男孩子取有些特定的名字,而給女孩子取其它一些特定的名字。
The researchers analyzed 270 million recorded baby names in the US from 1937 and 2013 and found that names typically assigned to boys were voiced and began with a “hard” phoneme, or one that vibrated the vocal cords, while girls had “softer” names.
研究人員分析了美國(guó)自1937年至2013年2.7億記錄在冊(cè)的嬰兒名字,發(fā)覺(jué)分給男孩子的名字通常是濁音發(fā)音,開頭音素”有力“,或者需要震動(dòng)聲帶。而女孩子的名字則”更加輕柔”。
To judge the difference for yourself, say your name and see if the first sound is made purely with your tongue and lips (so a “soft” name) or if you use your throat.
要親自作鑒別,說(shuō)說(shuō)自己的名字,看看第一個(gè)音是不是單純靠舌頭和嘴唇發(fā)出的(這就是“柔和”的名字),還是說(shuō)需要用喉嚨。
Of course, this study isn’t the end of all conversations about names and gender, especially considering how gender can’t be simplified between just two ends of a spectrum. It’s also not a definite identifier of gender, as there are many names that are typically assigned to girls that start with that hard phoneme, such as Jessica, Yvonne, and Ariel.
當(dāng)然,這一研究并不能對(duì)名字和性別一概而論,尤其考慮到性別并不能分化成兩極來(lái)談。這同樣也不能以此絕對(duì)判斷性別,因?yàn)橛行┑湫偷呐⒆用珠_頭音素就頗有力道,如Jessica、Yvonne還有Ariel。
The study provides more insight into how we perceive sounds and the relationships between those sounds and meaning. Why do we find certain words repulsive? Why do others sound moreapproachable? These are questions that can crack open a language and a culture.
這項(xiàng)研究深入研究了我們是如何洞察聲音的、如何看待聲音和意義之間的聯(lián)系的。緣何我們對(duì)有些特定的詞反感,又覺(jué)得有些聲音特別親切?這些問(wèn)題可以打開語(yǔ)言和文化的大門。