LL-L "Language use" 2008.06.12 (04) [E]
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L O W L A N D S - L - 12 June 2008 - Volume 04
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From: Jorge Potter <jorgepot at gmail.com>
Subject: LL-L "Language use" 2008.06.10 (02) [E]
Dear Travis and rest,
You mentioned:
> In the middle you have
> cases like much of Wisconsin, where the population is largely
> assimilated, where the only signs of the language(s) they spoke before
> English are substratum features in their English, but where there is
> still the retention of a distinct identity rather than being
> completely assimilated into Anglo-American society.
>
When I went to work in Neenah WI as a physician in 1964, I had a patient
with a very definite European accent consult me. I asked him, "Where were
you born?"
He answered, "Denmark."
As I tried to compute his medical problem, unconsciously I was off on his
ethnicity. It definitely wasn't Danish. His was a German accent. Eureka!
(remember, still unconscious) He was born in Denmark, Wisconsin, where most
people still spoke German.
QED
Jorge Potter
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