Žinutės: 45
Kalba: English
bartlett22183 (Rodyti profilį) 2013 m. gruodis 15 d. 20:13:53
Yes, it may be that English has become the most successful international auxiliary language (just not a constructed one) in world history to date, but that does not mean that even we native English speakers consider it an optimal solution. I am not a fervent E-a finvenkisto, but I do support the ideal of a simplified conIAL, and E-o is "in the lead," whether it is my personal first choice or not.
robbkvasnak (Rodyti profilį) 2013 m. gruodis 15 d. 20:37:08
sudanglo (Rodyti profilį) 2013 m. gruodis 16 d. 12:39:04
As far as I know all our motorways are toll-free here in the UK. So we don't seem to have much use for the idea of a freeway.
A parkway (again in the Queen's English) is an out of town railway station, eg Bristol Parkway (the station in the city is Bristol Temple Meads).
kaŝperanto (Rodyti profilį) 2013 m. gruodis 16 d. 14:43:15
orthohawk:My thoughts exactly. How different would the world be if he, or perhaps Tolkien, had not heard of Esperanto (I believe it was much more popular in their time than ours).
A number of years ago I got a job at a private school teaching, among othrer things, Spanish. There was one student in particular who was a Junior (next to last year) when I first started who had never had any inkling to study a foreign language, just never had any interest. During that first year, he "got the bug" as we say, and now, 20 years later he's a professor in a major university teaching.....................you guessed it: Spanish. We never know what will happen as a result of a "forced" class of Esperanto. Most likely nothing, but maybe there's the next William Auld out there somewhere just waiting to be introduced to our language.
spreecamper:It has nothing to do with lazyness if they do not have a desire to learn some foreign national language. I'm saying that these people would be better off to continue studying Esperanto than to switch to Spanish or French. These "lazy" people will certainly choose classes in Esperanto over another language, because it is several orders of magnitude easier to learn. I would say you are almost guaranteed an A in an Esperanto class if you are capable of even passing a foreign language class at all.kaŝperanto:I also find vocabulary interesting, but not everyone does. Again, I am talking about the "normal/average" person who doesn't want to study language outside of her/his required classes.Those you name 'normal/average' persons and who don't want to learn new root words should stop learning some foreign language because they are to lazy to improve their skills and prefer to keep their own at eternal beginner state.
spreecamper:I'm talking about the United States, where few people not born into a bilingual family will learn a foreign language to any appreciable degree. We already speak the current IAL, so we don't have the economic interest to learn any other language but our own. I would certainly believe, as you say, that many Germans speak a language other than English (did you mean to say German?).
kaŝperanto:I suppose I feel more strongly about these issues because in my country there are VERY few people who can speak a language other than English (if English was their native language), despite having almost a decade of foreign language study in school.I don't agree that there are 'very few' people in Germany who are not capable to speak another language than English.
Miland (Rodyti profilį) 2013 m. gruodis 17 d. 14:43:47
sudanglo:As far as I know all our motorways are toll-free here in the UK.I see you haven't been to the M6 toll in the Midlands. And maybe you're better off avoiding it.
"Freeway" and motorway both seem to mean a controlled access road where the flow of traffic is supposed to be unhindered - though if you drove on the M6 sometimes you might not have thought so.