“…The debate on the interdependence of language and cognition has been underway for millennia from Plato in the 5 th century BC over Wilhelm von Humboldt in the 19 th century to most famously Whorfian linguistics in the 20 th -ranging from the claim that language is merely a medium for communicating underlying thoughts between cognitive agents (Fodor, 1975), through it being a social tool for keeping track of other people's mental states (Dunbar, 2003;Tylén et al, 2010), through language being a lingua franca between a number of specialized, quasi-modular central systems (Carruthers, 2002), to thoughts being fundamentally linguistic (Carruthers, 1996). In recent decades, many empirical studies have documented how language is closely intertwined with everything we do and modulates most aspects of behavior and cognition, including eye movements (Tanenhaus et al, 1995;Wallentin et al, 2011), perception of color (Maier & Abdel Rahman, 2018;Regier, Kay, & Khetarpal, 2007;Roberson et al, 2005;Winawer et al, 2007), perception of space (Levinson, 2003;Wallentin et al, 2008), respiration (MacLarnon & Hewitt, 1999), posture (Yardley et al, 1999), conditioning (Phelps, et al, 2001), imagery (Stroustrup & Wallentin, 2018;Wallentin, Rocca, & Stroustrup, 2019) and sleep (Petit et al, 2007). Adding to this, it is increasingly being recognized that whenever we are not engaged in overt linguistic exchange, our heads fill with inner speech and dialogue (Alderson-Day & Fernyhough, 2015).…”