Jump to content
Linguaholic

Gregor

Members
  • Posts

    83
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Posts posted by Gregor

  1. If universities are cutting back on teaching foreign languages it shows that they place little importance on them. The sciences and computer technology are more in demand, however technology is universal and is internationally developed, each country is not just doing its own thing so the learning of foreign languages is still important but in a different way than it was before.

  2. I don't think anyone believes that they have an accent really - we all think we speak completely normally with no trace of accent but of course that cannot be true. Accent is the way we speak. Even the Queen has an accent. All British people have accents when they speak English, whether it is Scotish (for the time being) Welsh, Northern Irish or English. No-one is sterile.

  3. Several times. I lived in France for a year teaching English. It was difficult especially financially. The up side was that it was Paris we lived in and our first child was born there.

    I also lived in the Netherlands which was difficult from the work perspective, and I lived in Malawi as I child - an idyllic childhood, but then I was a child.

  4. I still prefer to own a physical dictionary and to be able to see it sitting on the shelf. However it's usually easier to look up a word on my iPhone. Paper dictionaries also have a limited life span, each new edition being more up to date. I suppose also it depends on how often you are likely to use a dictionary. If you are studying seriously for a degree it's going to be important. When I studied French I used not an English-French/French-English dictionary, but a plain French dictionary that an ordinary French person would use with no English in it at all.

×
×
  • Create New...