The interstices between languages fascinate me more than any other region of academia I have yet encountered. While many people learn new languages primarily because they wish to gain the ability to communicate with native speakers of that language, I study languages because I love to see the differences between them. To me, the inter-linguistic differences are the main point--the ability to actually communicate is just the icing on the cake.
What languages do I speak?
I began studying Spanish in seventh grade and concluded my in-school studies of it in eleventh grade at the end of level five. German, I began freshman year of high school and studied through level five in senior year. I began to study French in my free time near the end of junior year and entered third-level French second semester of senior year.
This year I am beginning first level Chinese and first level Xhosa, a South African click language.
What experiences have I had germane to this class?
I have traveled on exchange programs to
Also, different languages value different parts of speech more than others. The speakers of Spanish, French, and German ascribe a much greater importance to articles than English speakers do. Before a speaker of any of these languages even says a noun, the listener knows the gender and plurality of that noun (from the article) and begins to formulate an idea of what the noun will be. As a non-native speaker of these languages, I require more time to process incoming information because I instead have to wait for the noun to be spoken before my brain begins to engage.
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