LL-L "Language varieties" 2008.11.23 (01) [E]
Lowlands-L List
lowlands.list at GMAIL.COM
Sun Nov 23 16:08:43 UTC 2008
=======================================================================
L O W L A N D S - L * ISSN 189-5582 * LCSN 96-4226
http://www.lowlands-l.net * lowlands.list at gmail.com
Rules & Guidelines: http://www.lowlands-l.net/rules.php
Posting: lowlands-l at listserv.linguistlist.org - lowlands.list at gmail.com
Commands ("signoff lowlands-l" etc.): listserv at listserv.net
Server Manual: http://www.lsoft.com/manuals/1.8c/userindex.html
Archives: http://listserv.linguistlist.org/archives/lowlands-l.html
Encoding: Unicode (UTF-8) [Please switch your view mode to it.]
Administration: lowlands.list at gmail.com or sassisch at yahoo.com
You have received this because you have been subscribed upon request.
To unsubscribe, please send the command "signoff lowlands-l" as message
text from the same account to listserv at listserv.linguistlist.org or
sign off at http://linguistlist.org/subscribing/sub-lowlands-l.html.
A=Afrikaans Ap=Appalachian B=Brabantish D=Dutch E=English F=Frisian
L=Limburgish LS=Lowlands Saxon (Low German) N=Northumbrian
S=Scots Sh=Shetlandic V=(West) Flemish Z=Zeelandic (Zeeuws)
=======================================================================
===========================================
L O W L A N D S - L - 23 November 2008 - Volume 01
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please set the encoding mode to Unicode (UTF-8).
If viewing this in a web browser, please click on
the html toggle at the bottom of the archived page
and switch your browser's character encoding to Unicode.
===========================================
From: Paul Finlow-Bates <wolf_thunder51 at yahoo.co.uk>
Subject: LL-L "Language varieties" 2008.11.22 (03) [E]
When I first went to South Africa, I met quite a lot of people from the
Netherlands who found it more different than they expected; in fact I
learned Afrikaans more easily than they did. That is the key I think - "than
expected". I find Afrikaans and Dutch pretty similar despite the much more
analytical structure of the former, but my expectations of similarity are
obviously lower.
It's a mind-set thing in the end:
"Zebras are nothing like horses; horses don't have black and white stripes"
"Zebras are just horse, covered in black and white stripes"
Paul
----------
From: Paul Finlow-Bates <wolf_thunder51 at yahoo.co.uk>
Subject: LL-L "Language varieties" 2008.11.22 (03) [E]
When I first went to South Africa, I met quite a lot of people from the
Netherlands who found it more different than they expected; in fact I
learned Afrikaans more easily than they did. That is the key I think - "than
expected". I find Afrikaans and Dutch pretty similar despite the much more
analytical structure of the former, but my expectations of similarity are
obviously lower.
It's a mind-set thing in the end:
"Zebras are nothing like horses; horses don't have black and white stripes"
"Zebras are just horse, covered in black and white stripes"
Paul
==============================END===================================
* Please submit postings to lowlands-l at listserv.linguistlist.org.
* Postings will be displayed unedited in digest form.
* Please display only the relevant parts of quotes in your replies.
* Commands for automated functions (including "signoff lowlands-l")
are to be sent to listserv at listserv.linguistlist.org or at
http://linguistlist.org/subscribing/sub-lowlands-l.html.
*********************************************************************
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/lowlands-l/attachments/20081123/176b8aa0/attachment.htm>
More information about the LOWLANDS-L
mailing list