At what point does a comfortable silence turn into an awkward pause?
And what does that mean for us?
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Sunday, December 28, 2008
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Mother Tongue
"We tend to regard other people's languages as we regard their cultures – with ill-hidden disdain. In Japanese, the word for foreigner means 'stinking of foreign hair'. To the Czechs a Hungarian is a 'pimple'. Germans call cockroaches 'Frenchman', while the French call lice 'Spaniards'. We in the English-speaking world take French leave, but Italians and Norwegians talk about departing like an Englishman, and Germans talk of running like a Dutchman. Italians call syphilis 'the French disease', while both French and Italians call con games 'American swindle'. Belgian taxi drivers call a poor tipper 'un Anglais'. To be bored to death in French is 'ĂȘtre de Birmingham', literally 'to be from Birmingham' (which is actually about right).
Mother Tongue, Bill Bryson