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Olympics According to Languages

  Tags: Olympic Games
 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
45 messages over 6 pages: 1 2 3 4 5
Arekkusu
Hexaglot
Senior Member
Canada
bit.ly/qc_10_lec
Joined 5381 days ago

3971 posts - 7747 votes 
Speaks: English, French*, GermanC1, Spanish, Japanese, Esperanto
Studies: Italian, Norwegian, Mandarin, Romanian, Estonian

 
 Message 41 of 45
08 March 2010 at 2:00am | IP Logged 
Vinlander wrote:
I`m more than happy with Quebec being French only. But the fact that
the rest of the country should be forced to speak both french and English is a bit
much.

You aren't forced to speak French, no more than Québécois are forced to speak English. No
one is forced to speak both official languages. In fact, only a minority of Canadians are
bilingual.
1 person has voted this message useful



canada38
Tetraglot
Senior Member
Canada
Joined 5495 days ago

304 posts - 417 votes 
Speaks: English*, Italian, Spanish, French
Studies: Portuguese, Japanese

 
 Message 42 of 45
08 March 2010 at 5:51pm | IP Logged 
Good point Arekkusu. That's one of the great things about Canada. We're allowed to speak
any language freely whenever we want. I do believe that in the past during war time, one
was not allowed to speak "enemy languages" (German, Italian, Japanese), but other than
this instance, we have always been free to communicate in any tongue. This can be
compared to Franco era Spain, when only Castilian could be used and not the regional
languages and dialects. Forcing the Catalans to use Spanish must have been comparable to
forcing English only in Quebec. It just wouldn't work.
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lichtrausch
Triglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5960 days ago

525 posts - 1072 votes 
Speaks: English*, German, Japanese
Studies: Korean, Mandarin

 
 Message 43 of 45
02 May 2010 at 10:06pm | IP Logged 
Olympia spricht deutsch
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Solfrid Cristin
Heptaglot
Winner TAC 2011 & 2012
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 5334 days ago

4143 posts - 8864 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, Spanish, Swedish, French, English, German, Italian
Studies: Russian

 
 Message 44 of 45
03 May 2010 at 12:06am | IP Logged 
lichtrausch wrote:
*FINAL RESULTS*

Gold medals:
26 - English (U.S., Canada, Australia, U.K.)
20 - German (Germany, Switzerland, Austria)
9 - Norwegian
6 - Korean
5 - Chinese, Swedish
4 - Dutch
3 - Russian
2 - French, Czech
1 - Polish, Italian, Slovak, Belarusian


I see that the sentiments are running high here, so to add a touch of national chauvinism I suggest you take the number of people speaking these languages, and do the math on which language has most gold medals per capita. (Which of course would prove beyond a reasonable doubt the olympic superiority of that particular language) :-) I'll help by telling you that there are 4.5 million Norwegians.
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Mafouz
Diglot
Groupie
Spain
Joined 5325 days ago

56 posts - 64 votes 
Speaks: Spanish*, English
Studies: German, Japanese, French

 
 Message 45 of 45
03 May 2010 at 11:32am | IP Logged 
canada38 wrote:
Good point Arekkusu. That's one of the great things about Canada. We're allowed to speak
any language freely whenever we want. I do believe that in the past during war time, one
was not allowed to speak "enemy languages" (German, Italian, Japanese), but other than
this instance, we have always been free to communicate in any tongue. This can be
compared to Franco era Spain, when only Castilian could be used and not the regional
languages and dialects. Forcing the Catalans to use Spanish must have been comparable to
forcing English only in Quebec. It just wouldn't work.


I am totally with you, and I am not under any circumstance a Franco's linguistic policies (applied basically with guns) supporter. But I would like to point two things just for sake of not promoting another Spanish black legend:

1. Linguistic prohibition is complicated, because the people speaks, after all, his language. In the Spanish case it was applied to public use of the language, not to private use (with caveats). You can speak whatever you speak in your home, and sell your tomatoes in the market shouting in your language. But you can not be represented politically, relate to public administration, receive education or judicial services in your mother tongue, which is serious enough. Compulsory military service was used to supress violently any caprice of monoglotism, at least in male population. Not to speak to public press. As far as I know, these rules were being applied long before the Franco era, with the exception maybe of the vernacular press, and only supressed in the years of the II republic (1931-1936). I am not sure what happened during franco years with some forms of traditional judiciary, like the "tribunal de las aguas" en Valencia (for judging irrigation lawsuits), done in the vernacular language since the middle ages. As far as I know they were left untouched. Publication of books in Catalan or basque was never forbidden, although the forties were really a bad time for this business, as you can imagine. Selection was made on a book by book basis, wich again is serious and violent enoguh.

2. This was not an invention of the Spanish fascism. The idea was imported from practices of widespread use in Europe, and specially (but not only) in France. The difference is that in france it began with the revolution of 1789, and in Spain it began a hundred years later. The result in France was uniformity and really little political defense of other languages but french, the result in Spain was useless suffering and nationalism, that never existed before the final years of the XIX century (despite Patrick O'Brian's novels). Remember that the cultured world in written basque was north of the frontier, well in the XVIII century. But the idea of not allowing to send a telegram in basque (as was the rule) was not local. I also have the impression that it was less systematic in Spain in the sense that depended more on the particular civil servant attending the service, and not on written rules (but I do not have documentation to defend this). Sure some of the catalan speakers in the forum can polish the details.

Those years were terrible in general, not only for the linguistic policy. I think the European experience with language supression should serve as reference for avoiding this kind of nightmare and political puzzles. Excuse me the irruption!




By the way, I strongly support the recalculation of the list, weighting by population (and climate?) proposed by Solfrid!!

Edited for orthography


Edited by Mafouz on 03 May 2010 at 11:41am



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