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"The Yellow Card Question, Episode 4"

5 Comments -

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Anonymous Anonymous said...

wow,sofa! for the first time
i know chinese and english and cantonese and Wu dialect,if the last two can be counted as a formal language. certainly i have to proclaim that some of them(well ,the middle two i think) is far less to be as good as the rest. after today i will pick up my courage and confidence to set off again.and my story will be continued again, it has been abandoned for a long time by me.

3/13/2007 01:27:00 AM

Blogger serapio said...

sofa?
In high school I had an English teacher (this was Mr. Meehan, for those who know him) who would substitute some bizarre words in place of curse words when he was reading out loud from a story that had a lot of colorful language. If I remember right (and I probably don't remember right. Caedmonstia probably remembers better than I do), he started off with the fairly usual "fiddlesticks!" or "jeepers!" but progressed on to things like "tables and chairs and other furniture!" Which is actually the only bizarre one I still remember.

I'm not sure where the best place is to draw the line between languages and dialects here, but I think Hangzhouhua, Putonghua, and Cantonese pretty clearly represent distinct languages. A formal language on the other hand, is something different.

3/13/2007 04:48:00 AM

Blogger slowlane said...

I thought the challenge behind this yellow card question was to choose just one. =)

3/16/2007 04:18:00 PM

Blogger serapio said...

Hmm. That would make it a difficult question indeed. If I could only choose one... Then I'll have to settle for "structural knowledge" of the other languages, and speak jive.

3/16/2007 07:42:00 PM

Blogger serapio said...

videos:
- speak jive[part 1][part 2]
- the click song. Xhosa is the best example I know of a language with tones and clicks. In the song of course, the tones don't stand out. But the clicks do.

3/16/2007 08:20:00 PM

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