The Borneo Post

New museum lets you play with words

- Vicky Halle

You can talk to exhibits. You have to use your voice and get involved. Ann Friedman

‘FRESHEN UP’. ‘Powder one’s nose’. ‘Tinkle’. Washington, DC’s newest museum has these phrases painted on the restroom walls. It’s po y humour with a purpose: to remind you that there are a bazillion ways to express yourself.

Every room in Planet Word, which opened Thursday, celebrates heeding that other urge - a desire to communicat­e, which turns baby babbles into complex languages that let you deliver punchlines and powerful speeches. Expect it to be kind of noisy, promises founder Ann Friedman. “You can talk to exhibits,” she says. “You have to use your voice and get involved.”

For an interactiv­e light show about the developmen­t of English, you’ll find microphone­s in front of a 20-foot-tall wall covered with 1,000 words. A voice asks questions and flashes responses on the wall based on the words people choose to call out - shout ‘hazard’ to learn how it came from the Arabic for ‘dice’. (Hint: Playing a game of dice can be risky.)

You can get pointers on pronunciat­ion by cha ing via iPad with videos of cheerful language ambassador­s, who coach you through rolling your Rs in Spanish or making the three kinds of clicks in isiZulu, spoken in South Africa. There are more than two-dozen lessons to choose from, including one on how deaf people communicat­e

differentl­y in each country. (That’s right, American Sign Language isn’t the same as British Sign Language.) Friedman thinks kids will particular­ly like talking to Noa, a 12-year-old girl from Israel, who explains the origins of the Hebrew word for ‘ice cream’.

Young people play an important role throughout Planet Word. The ‘ Lend Me Your Ears’ exhibit, which invites visitors to sit in front of a teleprompt­er and practice public speaking, features the Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech by Malala Yousafzai, who was just 17 years old at the time. The 2019 DC youth poet laureate, Gabriela Orozco, is the subject of one of the videos in ‘Words Ma er’, an exhibit about how language can change your life and shape your identity. (Visitors can chime in by writing and recording their own messages.)

“Who experiment­s with words? It’s kids,” says Friedman, a former reading teacher who appreciate­s that children and teens tend to

create vocabulary.

Make-believe and magic swirl around the museum’s ‘Harry Po er’-ish library, where you can place any book on a special desk and an animated film about it appears. Speak to mirrors on the wall, and they reveal miniature 3D interpreta­tions of scenes from ‘The Phantom Tollbooth’ and other beloved novels. And look for the bookshelf that’s actually the door to a secret poetry nook.

There’s more wonder to behold in ‘Word Worlds’, where you can digitally ‘paint’ over a panoramic image of a nature scene and cityscape.

Instead of colors, you dip your brush into adjectives or words used to describe things. So ‘nocturnal’ turns the sky dark and transforms a bird into an owl, while ‘hibernal’ blankets everything in snow.

“Wouldn’t it be cool to go to school here?” Friedman asks. Planet Word’s red brick building - designed by architect Adolf Cluss - was originally a public school for boys and girls when it opened 151 years ago. Just a few years later, telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell tested another idea from the roof: the ‘photophone’, which used light beams to send sound. What was his message? Words, of course. — The Washington Post

 ?? — AFP photos ?? In Word Worlds, an interactiv­e electronic painting exhibit at the museum, visitors use adjective paintbrush­es to change the scene.
— AFP photos In Word Worlds, an interactiv­e electronic painting exhibit at the museum, visitors use adjective paintbrush­es to change the scene.
 ??  ?? A microphone is in front of the 20-foot-tall Talking Word Wall interactiv­e exhibit at Planet Word.
A microphone is in front of the 20-foot-tall Talking Word Wall interactiv­e exhibit at Planet Word.
 ??  ?? This huge, interactiv­e globe is part of the Spoken World exhibit in the museum’s Great Hall.
This huge, interactiv­e globe is part of the Spoken World exhibit in the museum’s Great Hall.
 ??  ?? An exhibit titled First Words features babies from all over the world.
An exhibit titled First Words features babies from all over the world.
 ??  ?? A secret door leads to a reading nook in the library at Planet Word.
A secret door leads to a reading nook in the library at Planet Word.

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