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Do non-native speakers speak a language better?
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André in Zuid-Afrika
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 12, 2006 7:55 pm    Post subject: Do non-native speakers speak a language better? Reply with quote

I was in a coffee shop this afternoon, and served by a waiter who spoke Afrikaans. Nothing strange about that, except that his Afrikaans was so perfect that I started to suspect that he's not Afrikaans. Listening to him a bit more, confirmed this when I picked up a slight English accent. I asked him, and he confirmed that Afrikaans was his second language. When I complimented him on his Afrikaans, he said: "Well, I try." Indeed yes, harder than most Afrikaans speakers, who assume (as native speakers tend to do) that they speak their own language well enough not having to try to speak it well.
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Elaine
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 12, 2006 9:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't know if they speak better, but they do tend to speak more formally, at least, from my experience.

We have a lot of Filipinos in my company (and that's another thing... why are there so many Filipinos in Acctg & Finance?), and even though they speak with moderate to strong accents, they are usually well-spoken and speak very formal, by-the-book English.
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Deborah
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 12, 2006 10:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Oui, je parle le francaise beaucoup meilleur que greg. Y hablar espanol mayor que patriccke. :wink:
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greg in noord-frankrijk
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PostPosted: Tue Sep 12, 2006 11:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Elaine wrote:
I don't know if they speak better, but they do tend to speak more formally, at least, from my experience.


True ! Our antiprescriptivist squad (Kirk & Travis :D ) will certainly confirm.

By the way, where is Kirk ?
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patriccke
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 9:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Deborah wrote:
Oui, je parle le francaise beaucoup meilleur que greg. Y hablar espanol mayor que patriccke. :wink:

:D It is be true for the Spanish (each time I am try speak it, words are come in Italish). But I catchup with mine perfect English!!!
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KSa
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 2:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Do you often meet people speaking your language in a way that you don't recognize them as non-native speaker? I think it happens very rarely in case of Polish. Non-natives usually speak it with a noticeable accent or make grammar/spelling mistakes. I don't count language geniuses.
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KSa
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 2:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

To non-native English speakers:

My experience doesn’t always let me judge correctly, but if I didn’t know you and according to your written English had to guess if you’re natives or not I’d place André, Greg and Walker in the native English speaker group. Sometimes in Walker’s messages I find something which would make me suspicious but very rarely. On the other hand, it’d be quite easy for me to guess that Sander is not an English speaker (that I understand him best is a different thing :) ).
It’s only my subjective point of view and maybe the natives here will say something quite different.
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Walker
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 3:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

KSa wrote:
To non-native English speakers:

My experience doesn’t always let me judge correctly, but if I didn’t know you and according to your written English had to guess if you’re natives or not I’d place André, Greg and Walker in the native English speaker group. Sometimes in Walker’s messages I find something which would make me suspicious but very rarely. On the other hand, it’d be quite easy for me to guess that Sander is not an English speaker (that I understand him best is a different thing :) ).
It’s only my subjective point of view and maybe the natives here will say something quite different.


Now you made me curious! Firstly, I think it's fun that you'd put me in the native English speaker group. But what is it about my writing that makes you suspicious? Not that I find it strange at all, I'm just curious to know. But I guess it might be hard to give examples from what I've written.

Speaking of vocabulary I have heard non-native speakers speak better Swedish than native speakers of Swedish. I've met one person whom I first thought was Swedish, but I soon suspected that she wasn't. It was her intonation that gave her away and it turned out she was German. I'm not sure if I ever would've suspected that she was German if she hadn't told me; I just knew she wasn't Swedish. Right, there's also a Turkish girl/woman at work who doesn't have any accent whatsoever, besides her Stockholm accent. Yet her native language isn't Swedish but Turkish. When I found this out I was really surprised. The only thing that gives her away is that sometimes (rarely) she says en instead of ett or the opposite e.g. "an table" or "a apple".
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KSa
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 3:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Walker wrote:
KSa wrote:
To non-native English speakers:

My experience doesn’t always let me judge correctly, but if I didn’t know you and according to your written English had to guess if you’re natives or not I’d place André, Greg and Walker in the native English speaker group. Sometimes in Walker’s messages I find something which would make me suspicious but very rarely. On the other hand, it’d be quite easy for me to guess that Sander is not an English speaker (that I understand him best is a different thing :) ).
It’s only my subjective point of view and maybe the natives here will say something quite different.


Now you made me curious! Firstly, I think it's fun that you'd put me in the native English speaker group. But what is it about my writing that makes you suspicious? Not that I find it strange at all, I'm just curious to know. But I guess it might be hard to give examples from what I've written.

Speaking of vocabulary I have heard non-native speakers speak better Swedish than native speakers of Swedish. I've met one person whom I first thought was Swedish, but I soon suspected that she wasn't. It was her intonation that gave her away and it turned out she was German. I'm not sure if I ever would've suspected that she was German if she hadn't told me; I just knew she wasn't Swedish. Right, there's also a Turkish girl/woman at work who doesn't have any accent whatsoever, besides her Stockholm accent. Yet her native language isn't Swedish but Turkish. When I found this out I was really surprised. The only thing that gives her away is that sometimes (rarely) she says en instead of ett or the opposite e.g. "an table" or "a apple".

It's nothing specific, I think that sometimes the natives would write something in a bit different way. For example, I think (but am not sure, I insist) that in the sentence:

"I'm not sure if I ever would've suspected that she was German if she hadn't told me; I just knew she wasn't Swedish."

the bolded words would've been written differently.
But my general opinion about your (written) English makes me put you close to the top rung of my 'private' classification of the Langcafe non-native speakers.

[/quote]
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Walker
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 3:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well, I'm honored! :)
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Benjamin [inactive]
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 5:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I can second what KSa has said. Essentially, if I didn't know, I'd definitely think that André, Greg and KSa (and also Fredrik, but he's not here) were native speakers of English; I agree with what KSa about Walker as well. As for Sander, I suspect that he's the sort of person who doesn't bother to type properly on the internet, but can actually speak English much better in real life.

Actually, no. There is one thing which makes it absolutely obvious that Greg is not a native English speaker. Despite his extremely high level of English, there is one thing he hasn't learnt: in typed English, one does not generally leave a space before exclamation marks, question marks, colons and semicolons.
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Loic
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 6:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I must say, it is hard for me to identify native and non-native speakers on the Internet. Some people are just careless and pay scant attention to things which they consider to be trivial: orthography, grammar, punctuation, etc.

I may be rhetoric here but it is far easier to identify whether he's writing in British or American English (duh!). That in turn hints to me his origins.
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 10:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

patriccke wrote:
Deborah wrote:
Oui, je parle le francaise beaucoup meilleur que greg. Y hablar espanol mayor que patriccke. :wink:

:D It is be true for the Spanish (each time I am try speak it, words are come in Italish). But I catchup with mine perfect English!!!

El tuo inglaise est vraimente perfecto!
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André in Zuid-Afrika
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 9:46 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

KSa wrote:
Do you often meet people speaking your language in a way that you don't recognize them as non-native speaker?


Many English speakers here speak fluent Afrikaans, without a trace of an English accent. The same applies to many Afrikaans speakers, who speak fluent English without an Afrikaans accent. Generally, Afrikaans speakers speak better English than English speakers speak Afrikaans (older generations at least, younger English speakers are mostly fluent or at least fairly fluent in Afrikaans. You'd also find many Xhosa, Zulu, etc. speakers who speak fluent Afrikaans and/or English (and vice versa).

BTW, thanks for the compliment on my English! :wink: :D
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 2:55 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

André in Zuid-Afrika wrote:
KSa wrote:
Do you often meet people speaking your language in a way that you don't recognize them as non-native speaker?


Many English speakers here speak fluent Afrikaans, without a trace of an English accent. The same applies to many Afrikaans speakers, who speak fluent English without an Afrikaans accent. Generally, Afrikaans speakers speak better English than English speakers speak Afrikaans (older generations at least, younger English speakers are mostly fluent or at least fairly fluent in Afrikaans. You'd also find many Xhosa, Zulu, etc. speakers who speak fluent Afrikaans and/or English (and vice versa).

BTW, thanks for the compliment on my English! :wink: :D


I think it's mainly the case of multilingual/multicultural countries like SA where it's easy to access a language you want to learn (native speakers, newspapers, TV channels etc.). Otherwise it might be harder to master a language which doesn't mean impossible.
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André in Zuid-Afrika
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 3:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

KSa wrote:
André in Zuid-Afrika wrote:
KSa wrote:
Do you often meet people speaking your language in a way that you don't recognize them as non-native speaker?


Many English speakers here speak fluent Afrikaans, without a trace of an English accent. The same applies to many Afrikaans speakers, who speak fluent English without an Afrikaans accent. Generally, Afrikaans speakers speak better English than English speakers speak Afrikaans (older generations at least, younger English speakers are mostly fluent or at least fairly fluent in Afrikaans. You'd also find many Xhosa, Zulu, etc. speakers who speak fluent Afrikaans and/or English (and vice versa).

BTW, thanks for the compliment on my English! :wink: :D


I think it's mainly the case of multilingual/multicultural countries like SA where it's easy to access a language you want to learn (native speakers, newspapers, TV channels etc.). Otherwise it might be harder to master a language which doesn't mean impossible.


I agree. I officially started learning English in school when I was six years old. But by that time I already knew a tiny bit of English (it helped that I had an English speaking uncle). I grew up with my parents reading an English daily newspaper and English magazines along with Afrikaans newspapers, so I started reading English at a fairly early age. You hear, read, write and speak English every day, (or Afrikaans, if you're English), so you pick it up, even if you don't put much effort into learning it.
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greg in noord-frankrijk
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 1:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

KSa wrote:
My experience doesn’t always let me judge correctly, but if I didn’t know you and according to your written English had to guess if you’re natives or not I’d place André, Greg and Walker in the native English speaker group.


Oh that was kind. :D



Benjamin wrote:
There is one thing which makes it absolutely obvious that Greg is not a native English speaker. Despite his extremely high level of English, there is one thing he hasn't learnt: in typed English, one does not generally leave a space before exclamation marks, question marks, colons and semicolons.


Oh that's even kinder ! :lol:
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Benjamin [inactive]
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 1:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

You know, I'm not sure if I've ever seen anyone write 'kinder' before... I'm sure it's still right though!
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Loic
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 5:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Out of curiosity, would you consider Singaporeans to be native English speakers?
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André in Zuid-Afrika
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 8:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

loic wrote:
Out of curiosity, would you consider Singaporeans to be native English speakers?


Hm, interesting question, I don't know. :? I've always thought of you as a native English speaker.



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