Howdy Folks,
From talking with many neurodivergent people throughout life, and finding community among those who have a fascination with linguistics…
Are any of you deeply interested in the subject? If so, what first sparked your curiosity? What abilities did you hope to acquire?
To connect with a wider group of people? To read ancient languages, or perhaps to win your favorite scrabble competition in a tongue you can’t speak?
I’m curious, as it feels like language learners form a spectrum of their own. For me, it helps contextualize so many facets of life, and has widened my world of friends and literacy.
Plus, it’s fun to know what someone may be thinking in their native tongue when speaking your mother language.
Living in a foreign country whose language I spoke for 15+ years from childhood gave me a huge shock, when I realized psychology and phrasing play a larger role in communication than just a daisy chain of words.
Makes me wonder how peculiar my own accent(s) / phrasing sound to their respective natives. One of my favorites it when speaking Spanish, is to accidentally declare that you are pregnant instead of embarrassed… Makes the correction twice as effective! Or when a man in German expressing his love for Hummer cars is not actually professing passion for lobsters 🦞
For those of you whose native language isn’t English… Have you had any mismatched moments like this? What funny things have you heard English learners mismatch?
-G
I speak several languages but I grew up speaking only one.
I like spending time far away from my home country because abroad, people tend to be a lot more accommodating to my strangeness as they just assume I am this way because I am a foreigner. I can always ask for clarification, I am never pressured to understand everything right away, and I am never expected to be "a part" of the group. I am allowed - no - I am presumed to be different. Which takes away so much of the burden of masking.