LL-L "Language varieties" 2008.11.23 (01) [E]

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 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)

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L O W L A N D S - L - 23 November 2008 - Volume 01
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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

•

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