| MATTHEW: | Chris, why is it that there are so many different languages , and |
| that in Europe certainly if you travel more than a hundred miles , |
| you're likely to find people speaking a completely different language |
| to your own?
|
| CHRIS: | Well, it's true to say that there are er ... hundreds and hundreds |
| of different languages. It's perhaps um . . . however , more |
| interesting and more informative to say that there are several |
| different groups of languages er . .. Most European languages,with |
| the exception of I think Finnish and er .. . Basque and . . . |
| Hungarian I believe,belong to the Indo-European group of languages, |
| I'm not very sure myself of the . . . the actual details of the |
| history of these languages, but you can be very sure that er ... most
|
| of these languages , say Latin and Greek nd our own language a and |
| er . . . German and er ... French and ... all the others, are |
| connected. The reason why you can travel from one Willage to another |
| in Switzerland and er . . . from one area to another in England |
| and find different dialects, if not different languages spoken, |
| is that um ... several hundred years ago communication was by word |
| of mouth. Word of mouth meant that people had to move ; if people |
| were to move they needed roads and there were no roads.
|
| MATTHEW: | Do you see any chance for a universal language like Esperanto? |
| CHRIS: | Not for an artificial er ... language, no ... I suppose the Roman |
| Catholic Church used Latin. but Latin had a ... a particular |
| religious basis and this is probably why it was therefore chosen. |
| I don't see very much chance for Esperanto; I think it's an awfully |
| good idea but I don't believe that language works like that.I think |
| people will probably er .. . work towards the most convenient |
| language to use.They will not set out to learn a new language. It |
| seems to me that er ... either English,. Russian or Chinese, perhaps |
| Japanese, will be the language of the future er . . . My bet's on |
| English.
|
| [align=right]MATTHEW: | Maggie, why do you think it is that so few English people speak |
| a second language? |
| MAGGIE: | I think when you learn a language at school ...it tends to be |
| rather a dead occupation, and it's very difficult to stimulate any |
| interest among school children. But when you actually go to the |
| country and spend say a month in . . . in an exchange visit when |
| you're a schoolgirl, or a schoolboy um ... then you suddenly become |
| more interested because you ... you want to communicate with poeple
|
| when you're actually abroad, and it's not safe to rely on the fact th |
| that most people speak English when um . . . in foreign countries. |
| Mm . . . I think English people traditionally thought that . . . that |
| foreigners always spoke English, and a lot of foreigners do, but |
| there are people that you meet in the street or you want to take a |
| bus somewhere, then you find that you need to speak the language |
| and'it's very unnerving to be in a situation where you can't |
| communicate with people when you do want to travel around.
|
| MATTHEW: | Have you ever been abroad and learnt er ... a language in the |
| country? |
| MAGGIE: | Yes , well when I was a secretary I er... went and lived in Geneva |
| for two years, and I learnt French at school but I . . . I really |
| didn't speak it at all. I knew it theoretically but I wasn't able to |
| communicate with people. But I was in a situation where if I didn't |
| speak French , then I would not have been able to do my shopping and |
| buy food ,and so I picked the language up and I made friends with
|
| French people ... Swiss French people, and I found that if I wanted |
| to communicate with all . . . all the people that I met , then I |
| had to learn French, and I think it's the best method of learning |
| because you're in the situation. It's very hard at times - you |
| can sit through dinner parties and not understand what ... what's |
| going on and you think everybody thinks you're stupid because you |
| can't communicate with them, but it's ... it's the hard way but I |
| think it's the best way to learn.
|
| MATTHEW: | Elfriede, you come from Austria and yet you've been living in England |
| now for the last three years. Has having to learn and speak another |
| language created great problems? |
| ELFRIEDE: | Um ... At the beginning, yes, it was rather difficult for me to get |
| the right job . . . um. after you've lived here for one or two years |
| you get to know the system and then that's quite good. You know how |
| to use libraries and oh .. . you get to know where to um... call |
| in emergencies; um ... you get to know ... er ...trying to get a |
| radio and understand the radio and all the . . . programmes they |
| have . . . um and when they're on and the little stories.
|
| MATTHEW: | What about English humour on the radio? |
| ELFRIEDE: | Um . . . I think that takes a very very long time to understand and |
| I'm sorry to say that I haven't managed yet to understand it |
| completely, but er... I find it very interesting to speak other |
| languages um ... because English people have different er ...have |
| a different mentality, and have a very different character and a |
| different temperament and it is fascinating for me to talk to them um... |
| and also for myself to be able to express myself in a different |
| language and to communicate with them. |