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I'm an American
My language meme entry reminded me of a joke I heard a couple of weeks ago:
If someone who speaks two languages is bilingual,
and someone who speaks three languages is trilingual,
and someone who speaks more than three language is multi-lingual,
then what do yo call someone who only speaks one language?
They would be called "Americans." (Ouch! The truth hurts sometimes...)
If someone who speaks two languages is bilingual,
and someone who speaks three languages is trilingual,
and someone who speaks more than three language is multi-lingual,
then what do yo call someone who only speaks one language?
They would be called "Americans." (Ouch! The truth hurts sometimes...)
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My wife wants our girls to learn a language now, while they are in elementary school, when they're better able to learn new language skills. Unfortunately, the school is less than cooperative in helping her set up an optional program for langauge instruction. She's even considering having an immigrant friend work with our younger daughter to teach her Spanish. I wish I'd had better opportunities to learn other languages earlier in life.
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You see, when I was in school, every student had to start a language in 5th grade. Usually it was English. But I know of a few schools who also offered Latin and/or french atthat age. You weren't allowed to drop that language until at least the end of grade 11. So at least 7 years of it. In 7th grade a second language was added. Usually French (or in some cases Latin, Spanish, Italian, Greek or Russian, depending on the school and the teachers they had who were able to teach it). If you had chosen any other language than English in 5th grade, then you were supposed to chose English in 7th grade. In grade 9 you can chose between some different subjects. This doesn't have to be a language. It ca nalso be an extra class of biology or whatever but the school I was in offered mostly languages. This you have to keep for at least two years.
If you want to have an high schol diploma, you had to keep at least one language until the end, i.e. grade 13.
Nowadays, and I wish they had done it earlier!, they start with teaching children in 3rd, sometimes even 2nd grade English. And it is mandatory to do English as an exam for the diploma.
si German students usually leave school with at least basic knowledge in at least two langues.
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And standing on a strasse corner learning German from a delightful junge fraulein, well, that was a highlight.
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