by Magnus » 23 Sep 2010 16:02
by Archie's penalty » 23 Sep 2010 16:22
by Royal Lady » 23 Sep 2010 17:29
by John Madejski's Wallet » 23 Sep 2010 20:42
by FiNeRaIn » 24 Sep 2010 05:14
by Terminal Boardom » 24 Sep 2010 11:00
by Stranded » 24 Sep 2010 11:02
FiNeRaIn It makes me cringe, I have to turn the sound down. Has he got no idea how stupid he looks?
by Royal Lady » 24 Sep 2010 16:46
StrandedFiNeRaIn It makes me cringe, I have to turn the sound down. Has he got no idea how stupid he looks?
To us in England yes, to the audience he is addressing no. It does actually make you much easier to understand if you emphasise English in the accent of the country you are in. It's a bridging technique whilst you learn the language.
by Harpers So Solid Crew » 24 Sep 2010 16:54
Royal LadyStrandedFiNeRaIn It makes me cringe, I have to turn the sound down. Has he got no idea how stupid he looks?
To us in England yes, to the audience he is addressing no. It does actually make you much easier to understand if you emphasise English in the accent of the country you are in. It's a bridging technique whilst you learn the language.
Rubbish! You can either speak the language or you can't. Speaking it with a foreign accent doesn't help anyone.
by Stranded » 24 Sep 2010 17:14
Royal LadyStrandedFiNeRaIn It makes me cringe, I have to turn the sound down. Has he got no idea how stupid he looks?
To us in England yes, to the audience he is addressing no. It does actually make you much easier to understand if you emphasise English in the accent of the country you are in. It's a bridging technique whilst you learn the language.
Rubbish! You can either speak the language or you can't. Speaking it with a foreign accent doesn't help anyone.
by Ian Herring » 24 Sep 2010 18:23
by jumpers for goalposts » 24 Sep 2010 23:11
Royal Lady Rubbish! You can either speak the language or you can't. Speaking it with a foreign accent doesn't help anyone.
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