atthew
Youlden speaks nine languages fluently and understands more than a dozen more. He’s
what is known as a polyglot, a member of the multilingual elite who speaks six
or more languages fluently. He’s also a sociolinguist who studies the
revitalization of minority languages. But to see him in action on a daily basis
– deftly and comfortably talking to native-speakers in their own languages –
suggests that he’s more than a polyglot. Matthew, who is originally from
Manchester, England, is a language chameleon: Germans think he’s German,
Spaniards think he’s Spanish, Brazilians think he’s Portuguese (he proudly
speaks the good-old European variety).
By his own account, Matthew has mastered
a staggering number of languages by utilizing abilities that we all possess:
persistence, enthusiasm and open-mindedness. If your classic polyglot is an
über-nerd who studies languages full-time, then Matthew is something different.
His version of multilingualism doesn’t isolate him in an ivory tower; it
connects him to people all over the world. According to Matthew, the more
languages you speak, the more points of view you have:
“I think each language has a certain way
of seeing the world. If you speak one language then you have a different way of
analyzing and interpreting the world than the speaker of another language does.
Even if they’re really closely-related languages such as Spanish and
Portuguese, which are to a certain extent mutually intelligible, they are at
the same time two different worlds – two different mindsets.
“Therefore, having learned other
languages and been surrounded by other languages, I couldn’t possibly choose
only one language because it would mean really renouncing the possibility to be
able to see the world in a different way. Not in one way, but in many different
ways. So the monolingual lifestyle, for me, is the saddest, the loneliest, the
most boring way of seeing the world. There are so many advantages of learning a
language; I really can’t think of any reason not to.”
FROM BABBEL
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