We spent about 6 or 7 summer holidays in Fenwick Island, De.  I noticed the
change in language as I approached Chesapeake Bay.  I believe it was in
Chrisfield (where the ferry boat leaves) that I began to have problems
understanding what people were saying.

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: William B Ward [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 23, 2003 7:05 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Chinese as the world language? was: Re:
[Futurework] Languages (fwd)


Ray,

What communities were you in on the Eastern Shore?  I spent a lot of time
there in the late 70's, mostly Snow Hill and Ocean City.

Bill


On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 10:20:05 -0400 "Ray Evans Harrell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
writes:
> Several years ago I was singing the Villon Ballades of Claude 
> Debussy.   It
> was in archaic French a language no longer spoken in France.    The 
> first
> time I went to Montreal I found that I could understand some of what 
> they
> were saying because it was like the Francois Villon poetry.   I was
> delighted much as I was when I heard the Shakespeare phonetics on 
> the
> Eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.
> 
> REH
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Ed Weick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Keith Hudson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "pete" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Saturday, August 23, 2003 9:38 AM
> Subject: Re: [Futurework] Chinese as the world language? was: Re:
> [Futurework] Languages (fwd)
> 
> 
> > Keith:
> >
> > > I'm sure you must be right. However, Quebecian French will die 
> in the
> end
> > > if Quebec wants to stay in the mainstream of the developed 
> world. When
> is
> > > another matter. It's interesting that the French Academy have 
> given up
> > > their long-time attempts to exclude American and English word 
> imports.
> > > Almost all middle class Frenchmen, Germans, Italians, Dutch and
> > > what-have-you can speak fairly fluent English because that's 
> the
> language
> > > of modern commerce and science. Almost no middle class 
> Englishmen could
> > put
> > > more than a sentence or two together in another language. Once 
> upon a
> time
> > > I used to be able to read Simenon and Pushkin in their own 
> languages
> > fairly
> > > comfortably -- and  enjoyably, too -- but I could never speak 
> the
> > languages.
> >
> > One has to appreciate that there is a difference between street 
> French and
> > the French spoken by the educated.  My understanding is that the 
> latter
> > speak French, as in France, with perhaps some minor differences.  
> My
> neice's
> > daughter, who attends the French language University of Montreal, 
> is off
> to
> > the Sorbonne next year.  She's already done some of her studies in 
> France
> > and has encountered no problems.
> >
> > It's interesting how languages evolve.  When I was in Jamaica a 
> few years
> > ago, I had to go way back into the hill country to talk to some 
> elderly
> > people who had lived there all their lives.  Though they spoke 
> English, I
> > could barely understand them.  Another generation or so of 
> isolation, and
> I
> > might not be able to.
> >
> > Ed Weick
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > At 10:39 22/08/2003 -0400, Ed Weick wrote:
> > > >(KH)
> > > >But surely, Prof Daniel Abrams' thesis is *not* valid. He is 
> trying to
> > > >maintain that minority languages can be protected.  I 
> originally wrote
> > > >that this is not possible. PW, EW and I have each been saying 
> that once
> a
> > > >new way of life becomes communicable, tradable and 
> geographically
> > > >possible, then minority languages disappear. Prof Abrams would 
> do
> better
> > > >to spend his time and research money in recording as many 
> minority
> > > >languages as possible for future study and analysis, than 
> trying to
> save
> > > >them in the here and now while our present type of economic 
> system is
> > > >still sweeping the world.
> > >
> > > (EW)
> > > >Much would seem to depend on the size, status and power of the
> linguistic
> > > >group.  There is no doubt in my mind that Quebec will maintain 
> French
> and
> > > >do its governing and business in French in the foreseeable 
> future.  The
> > people
> > > >it will deal with in Ottawa will have to be able to use 
> French.
> > >
> > > I'm sure you must be right. However, Quebecian French will die 
> in the
> end
> > > if Quebec wants to stay in the mainstream of the developed 
> world. When
> is
> > > another matter. It's interesting that the French Academy have 
> given up
> > > their long-time attempts to exclude American and English word 
> imports.
> > > Almost all middle class Frenchmen, Germans, Italians, Dutch and
> > > what-have-you can speak fairly fluent English because that's 
> the
> language
> > > of modern commerce and science. Almost no middle class 
> Englishmen could
> > put
> > > more than a sentence or two together in another language. Once 
> upon a
> time
> > > I used to be able to read Simenon and Pushkin in their own 
> languages
> > fairly
> > > comfortably -- and  enjoyably, too -- but I could never speak 
> the
> > languages.
> > >
> > > Although I think that English is a strong candidate as a world 
> language,
> I
> > > wouldn't bet on it. Chinese is a much stronger candidate in the 
> longer
> > > term. It is basically easier to learn than most others. It has 
> lost all
> > the
> > > appendages that other languages still have -- conjugations, 
> declensions,
> > > irregular verbs, subjunctives, ablatives, and so on -- 
> nightmares that
> > > plagues learners of most other languages. Chinese has also lost
> > > inflections, cases, persons, genders, degrees, tenses, voices, 
> moods,
> > > affixes, infinitives, participles, gerunds and articles. It lost 
> all
> these
> > > in the course of several thousand years of a largely unified 
> culture and
> > > literature.  There are no words of more than one syllable and 
> every word
> > > has only one form. It proceeds by means of subject and predicate 
> --
> that's
> > > all -- and explicates by means of metaphors. Thousands of them. 
> Tens of
> > > thousands of them. More poetry has been written in Chinese than 
> in any
> > > other language.
> > >
> > > Chinese is just about the most finely chiselled language in the 
> world --
> > > the most fully developed.  And when China gets to the forefront 
> in
> > science,
> > > technology and commerce I think it will probably whop the 
> confused and
> > > convoluted language that we call English (much as I love it).
> > >
> > > Keith Hudson
> > >
> > >
> > > Keith Hudson, 6 Upper Camden Place, Bath, England,
> > > <www.evolutionary-economics.org>
> > >
> > > _______________________________________________
> > > Futurework mailing list
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> >
> > _______________________________________________
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