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No worse in Wales 2

Last updated
五月 22, 2015
Published on
九月 9, 2005

Roger Woods vividly describes the crisis in modern language teaching, but isn't it time to recognise the contact and overlap points between English and other languages?

I recently asked a Norwegian university student: "If I said 'put sneck on t'gyatt', 'there's some barrens laiken ovver theer', 'hoose, coo, hoond, beck'; would you know what I was talking about?"

He replied: "Amazing, how do you come to know words and phrases like these?"

I said: "We've been saying them since we were children."

"That's funny," he replied. "So have we!"

If the traditional language of Cumbria with its Norse roots could be used as a stepping stone for learning Scandinavian tongues, why can't English, with its rich and varied etymology, be used in a similar fashion for learning other languages, such as French?

Alan Butler
Whitehaven, Cumbria

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