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Popular misconceptions about languages?

 Language Learning Forum : Cultural Experiences in Foreign Languages Post Reply
100 messages over 13 pages: << Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... 11 ... 12 13 Next >>
Aleksey Groz
Tetraglot
Newbie
Yugoslavia
Joined 5369 days ago

14 posts - 19 votes
Speaks: Serbo-Croatian*, English, Czech, FrenchB2

 
 Message 81 of 100
29 April 2010 at 11:19pm | IP Logged 
zooplah wrote:
Aleksey Groz wrote:
kieran wrote:
I don't know about you guys, but
one that I frequently come across with
non-linguists and various simpletons is the misconception that Romanian is a Slavic
language and not a Romance language. Can anyone think of any others?


There could be two reasons:
1) as someone already said, many Eastern European languages are/were (wrongly)
considered
as Slavic.
2) 30% of Romanian vocabulary is of Slavic origin! (I think that this could be a real
reason of that misunderstanding)

From what I've seen of Romanian, it doesn't look Romance at all. From the superficial
aspects of it, we'd assume it was Slavic.


Well, yes. Romanian has a lot of Slavic words (more then 1/3 and they are all
surrounded by Slavic nations). And that is enough for one superficial impression. But
Romanian grammar is completely Romance. Only difference between Romanian and other
Romance languages is fact that Romanian also belong and to Balkan Language Union. But, however, that dose not impact on that how Romanian sounds.
1 person has voted this message useful



zooplah
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
zooplah.farvista.net
Joined 6368 days ago

100 posts - 116 votes 
Speaks: English*, Esperanto
Studies: German

 
 Message 82 of 100
02 May 2010 at 4:29am | IP Logged 
Aleksey Groz wrote:
Well, yes. Romanian has a lot of Slavic words (more then 1/3 and they are all
surrounded by Slavic nations). And that is enough for one superficial impression. But
Romanian grammar is completely Romance.

I guess it's kinda like English has a lot of Romance words and people often assume it's a Romance language, but its grammar is definitely Germanic.
1 person has voted this message useful



Al-Irelandi
Senior Member
United Kingdom
Joined 5535 days ago

111 posts - 177 votes 
Speaks: English*

 
 Message 83 of 100
02 May 2010 at 9:15pm | IP Logged 
There has been some strange, not too smart types repeating ad-nauseam fabrications about Arabic, such as:

-Rejection of Arabic speakers doing anything creative with the knowledge they inherited and rejection of any original thought or knowledge taking place in the language.

-That Arabic has no culture and/or has not aided in transmitting any or creating any.

-Arabic has only left us with dialects (despite its classical/literary form still being used) and likewise claiming it destroys cultures.

-What reached pre-Renaissance Europe in terms of higher learning by way of learning in places such as Al-Andalus, Sicily and North Africa would have eventually reached them via old-Persian etc (even though many concepts that were invented or expanded took place within the sphere of higher learning in Arabic universities, that were not available beforehand in the form they reached Western Christendom and only resulted due to the cross-pollination of Persian, Greek, Indian and Chinese knowledge).

This is sometimes spewed out by certain lying hardcore evanglecists and orientalists whos opposition to Islam has also made incursions into their own views towards the language that its revelation was revealed in. Maybe the culminatation of jealousy and doubt in their own beliefs causes one to attack anything related to anothers and to lie.

Edited by Al-Irelandi on 03 May 2010 at 10:08am

5 persons have voted this message useful



ellasevia
Super Polyglot
Winner TAC 2011
Senior Member
Germany
Joined 6142 days ago

2150 posts - 3229 votes 
Speaks: English*, German, Croatian, Greek, French, Spanish, Russian, Swedish, Portuguese, Turkish, Italian
Studies: Catalan, Persian, Mandarin, Japanese, Romanian, Ukrainian

 
 Message 84 of 100
06 May 2010 at 7:29am | IP Logged 
John Smith wrote:
Also, I got aksed whether Italian and Greek are the same language once. lol.

One of my classmates and I were talking about Greece a couple years ago and he was immensely surprised to find, upon his asking, that Greek is in fact the language spoken in Greece. He was under the impression that Italian or English is spoken there. He apparently was also very surprised to learn that Greek is spoken at all (I guess he had never heard of 'Modern Greek').

Similarly, while watching a movie in 7th grade geography, my teacher announced to the class that in a moment there would be a man coming onto the screen speaking Greek (I guess he assumed this because the guy was in Greece speaking about Ancient Greece). When the man appeared and was quite obviously to my ears (since I spoke Spanish and Greek already) not speaking Greek, but Italian, I informed him and he was rather embarrassed. Even several of my classmates noticed that it "strangely" sounded very similar to Spanish.

Finally, just this year I was showing a classmate something I had written in Greek and explaining how different letters were pronounced, and she thought it was "funny" that the Greeks had "adopted" the mathematical pi (π) to represent the 'p' sound!!!
6 persons have voted this message useful



Polyglot_gr
Super Polyglot
Newbie
Greece
Joined 5095 days ago

29 posts - 64 votes 
Speaks: Greek*, FrenchC2, EnglishC2, GermanC2, Italian, SpanishC2, DutchC1, Swedish, PortugueseC1, Romanian, Polish, Catalan, Russian, Hungarian

 
 Message 85 of 100
14 December 2010 at 4:50pm | IP Logged 
The most common misconception about languages in my country is that language borders roughly correspond to state borders. That’s why sometimes people say that Indians speak “Indian”, Pakistanis “Pakistani” and Brazilians “Brazilian”.
1 person has voted this message useful



Kartof
Bilingual Triglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5066 days ago

391 posts - 550 votes 
Speaks: English*, Bulgarian*, Spanish
Studies: Danish

 
 Message 86 of 100
03 March 2011 at 4:26am | IP Logged 
Polyglot_gr wrote:
The most common misconception about languages in my country is that language borders
roughly correspond to state borders. That’s why sometimes people say that Indians speak “Indian”, Pakistanis
“Pakistani” and Brazilians “Brazilian”.


I've heard Indians who speak a couple different languages from northern India refer to it all as Indian.

I don't get how Bulgarian has been unanimously declared the "easiest" of all Slavic languages since it has almost
no cases. With mobile stress and 3000 possible conjugations per verb, I'd say it's at least medium difficulty. In
the beginning, it may be easier for an English speaker to get used to the lack of cases and some conjugations but
the variety of possible verbs builds up quickly and I even struggle to use the correct conjugation occasionally.
However, the "strangeness" of Cyrillic is also a misconception since in Bulgarian each letter corresponds to one
sound (except for when you take into account the dynamic stress which can make some sounds sound like a
different letter should be used). Either way, Bulgarian writing is much easier than its English counterpart.
1 person has voted this message useful



TheMatthias
Diglot
Senior Member
United StatesRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 6246 days ago

105 posts - 124 votes 
Speaks: English*, Spanish
Studies: Mandarin

 
 Message 87 of 100
03 March 2011 at 7:59am | IP Logged 
I have been told vehemently that English is derived from Latin. And the best part is this person claimed to know a
lot about linguistics.
Also he was a native Spanish speaker...(A romance language)
1 person has voted this message useful



RogerK
Triglot
Groupie
Austria
Joined 5075 days ago

92 posts - 181 votes 
Speaks: English*, German, Italian
Studies: Portuguese

 
 Message 88 of 100
03 March 2011 at 11:24am | IP Logged 
TheMatthias wrote:
I have been told vehemently that English is derived from Latin. And the best part is this person claimed to know a
lot about linguistics.
Also he was a native Spanish speaker...(A romance language)


I agree Matthias. As a native English speaker my guess is that English come from Latin. Roughly 60% of the words derive from Latin and are therefore very similar to Italian and French, whereas approximately 30% are Germanic. Also French and Italian grammar are more similar to English grammar than German. The verb order in German is very precise and sentence structure in French/Italian is closer to English than German.

It would be interesting if someone knew some cold hard facts and could fill us in. There is some info on this website I will have to re-read it.


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