John Koenig: Beautiful new words to describe obscure emotions
John Koenig: Mooie nieuwe woorden om obscure gevoelens te beschrijven
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
about the meaning of words,
over de betekenis van woorden,
is a magnificent sponge.
Ik ben blij dat ik ze spreek.
I'm glad that I speak it.
het woord 'lachesisme',
a thunderstorm on the horizon
een onweer ziet aan de horizon
rooting for the storm.
voor de storm supportert.
to feel intensely again
hypothetical conversation
play out in your head.
met jezelf in je hoofd voert.
of course in German,
uiteraard in het Duits,
of getting what you want.
so I know exactly what that feels like.
precies hoe dat voelt.
if I would use any of these words
één van deze woorden
is because I made them up.
is omdat ik ze verzonnen heb.
of Obscure Sorrows,"
'Woordenboek van obscure smarten',
for the last seven years.
in the language of emotion
in de taal van de emotie
about all those human peccadilloes
over al die menselijke kleine kantjes
but may not think to talk about
maar waarover we niet praten
as the main character
als het hoofdpersonage beschouwen
we're all the main character,
allemaal hoofdpersonages zijn
in someone else's story.
in andermans verhaal.
to something I had felt all my life
dat ik al mijn hele leven voel,
in conversations online,
merkte ik het warempel op
in an actual conversation in person.
than making up a word
dan een woord verzinnen
take on a mind of its own.
maar dat komt nog.
for that yet, but I will.
about what makes words real,
over wat een woord ècht maakt,
I got from people is,
I don't really understand."
Ik snap het niet."
are real and what aren't.
welk woord echt is en welk niet?
who described his epiphany
die zijn openbaring beschreef
as we go through the day,
dat de meesten van ons veelal
om te vaak tegen de muur te lopen
bouncing against the walls too much
by people no smarter than you,
van mensen die niet slimmer zijn dan jij,
and touch those walls
the power to change it.
"Are these words real?"
of deze woorden echt zijn,
that I tried out.
Some of them didn't.
if you want it to be real."
als je wil dat het echt is."
because people wanted it to be there.
omdat mensen het daar willen hebben.
campuses all the time.
what people are really asking
wat ze eigenlijk vragen
they're really asking,
een woord echt is, is dit:
will this give me access to?"
a lot of how we look at language.
hoe we taal bekijken.
Dat begint ergens op te lijken.
access to as many brains as you can.
tot zoveel mogelijk breinen.
by this measure is this.
is dit woord het meest echt.
to a master key.
in de buurt van een loper.
het best begrepen wordt,
understood word in the world,
what those two letters stand for.
waar die letters voor staan.
of "all correct," I guess,
kunnen zijn van 'all correct',
but the fact that it doesn't matter
maar het feit dat het niet uitmaakt,
how we add meaning to words.
betekenis geven.
in the words themselves.
that pour ourselves into it.
for meaning in our lives,
naar betekenis in ons leven,
something to do with that.
met woorden te maken.
for the meaning of something,
een goede startplaats.
with patterns and shorthands
en afkortingen hebben bedacht
a way to interpret it
to define ourselves.
om ons te beperken en te definiëren.
All words are made up,
Alle woorden zijn verzonnen.
trapped in our own lexicons
with people who aren't already like us,
met mensen die niet al zijn zoals wij.
a little more every year,
wat meer uit elkaar drijven,
mijn favoriete filosofen,
"Calvin and Hobbes."
van 'Calvin en Hobbes'.
your values and satisfies your soul
en je ziel tevreden stelt,
happier for the trouble."
als je de moeite doet.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
John Koenig - WriterJohn Koenig is writing an original dictionary of made-up words.
Why you should listen
John Koenig has spent the last seven years writing an original dictionary of made-up words, The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows, which fills gaps in the language with hundreds of new terms for emotions. This project seeks to restore sadness to its original meaning (from Latin satis, "fullness") by defining moments of melancholy that we may all feel, but never think to mention -- deepening our understanding of each other by broadening the emotional palette, from avenoir, "the desire to see memories in advance," to zenosyne, "the sense that time keeps going faster."
Each entry is a collage of word roots borrowed from languages all around the world. Some entries are even beginning to enter the language outright:
sonder n. The realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own -- populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness -- an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you'll never know existed, in which you might appear only once, as an extra sipping coffee in the background, as a blur of traffic passing on the highway, as a lighted window at dusk.
His original YouTube series, The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows, which he writes, edits and narrates himself, has drawn acclaim from John Green and Beyoncé to Michael from Vsauce. "Each episode is a soothing meditation on its subject, fortified by a hypnotic soundtrack and Koenig’s twistingly intelligent narration," writes The Daily Dot.
He currently works as a freelance video editor, voice actor, graphic designer, illustrator, photographer, director and writer. His writing has been published in countless tattoos, stories, song titles and band names, but never on paper -- though he is currently working on publishing a book adaptation. Originally from Minnesota and Geneva, Switzerland, John lives in Budapest with his wife.
John Koenig | Speaker | TED.com