An old folk belief in Ireland held that there are 12 different winds and each has its own colour

Also (from a different source) pigs can see the wind

https://archive.org/details/smallersocialhis00joycuoft/page/528/mode/2up
#folklore #IrishFolklore #wind #nature #Ireland #mastodaoine #pigs

A smaller social history of ancient Ireland : treating of the government, military system, and law ; religion, learning, and art ; trades, industries, and commerce ; manners, customs, and domestic life, of the ancient Irish people : Joyce, P. W. (Patrick Weston), 1827-1914 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

26 31

Internet Archive

@stancarey Wow. And the colours listed there remind me of the Himba of Namibia, who don't see the sky as blue, likely due to their language (as opposed to perception of colour).

#Language #Colour #Perception #Namibia #Ireland #MastoDaoine

@clickhere Yes, that's a linguistic rather than a perceptual thing. Blue is one of the later colour terms to join the basic sequence in a given vocabulary
@stancarey That's amazing, thank you!
@clickhere Guy Deutscher, whose book on linguistic relativity looks in depth at colour words, tried a little experiment on his daughter to see if she would identify the sky as blue without being prompted to: https://stancarey.wordpress.com/2017/05/16/the-linguistics-of-colour-names/#comment-142152
The linguistics of colour names

The news website Vox has produced some good videos on linguistic topics, which can be found amidst their many other clips. Its latest one looks at the vexed question of colour names and categories …

Sentence first

@stancarey Oh wow! Ha, that reminds me of my friend's niece years ago, of a similar age (around 4 years), who one day asked him directly:

"Why is blue?"

(I'm not sure he's ever had an answer for her.)

@clickhere @stancarey When I was expecting my firstborn, I looked this up and science says it is cos of the nitrogen which makes up aprox 70% of our atmosphere and the blue is from light bouncing off it. This is called Rayleigh scattering.

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/atmos/blusky.html

I've never forgotten

Blue Sky and Rayleigh Scattering

@Sharr0w @stancarey I wish he'd told her that on the Luas that day. But, alas, neither of them will ever know: "Why is blue?"