konto usunięte
Temat: I'd like to have a bilingual child ...
Possible or not?Can a Polish couple raise a bilingual child?
And is it 'safe' for the kid?
What do you think?
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
Lidia K. +
konto usunięte
Kasia Pabianek:
Possible or not?
Can a Polish couple raise a bilingual child?
And is it 'safe' for the kid?
Joj Y.:
Kids developing in a bilingual evnvironment may tend to develop
more "patiently"
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
Andrzej P.:Probably goods genes. I'm bilingual and as dumb as a bag of hammers. :)
Joj Y.:
Kids developing in a bilingual evnvironment may tend to develop
more "patiently"
My kids are bilingual but I haven'y noticed that, I would rather say that they were always ahead of their friends..;)
konto usunięte
Joj Y.:
Andrzej P.:Probably goods genes. I'm bilingual and as dumb as a bag of hammers. :)
Joj Y.:
Kids developing in a bilingual evnvironment may tend to develop
more "patiently"
My kids are bilingual but I haven'y noticed that, I would rather say that they were always ahead of their friends..;)
warren whitmore:
Joj Y.:
Andrzej P.:Probably goods genes. I'm bilingual and as dumb as a bag of hammers. :)
Joj Y.:
Kids developing in a bilingual evnvironment may tend to develop
more "patiently"
My kids are bilingual but I haven'y noticed that, I would rather say that they were always ahead of their friends..;)
Bilingual in which languages?
konto usunięte
Tatiana S.:
Give me one single reason why people would do that. It's only sensible if you're living abroad or with a native speaker of the other language. Otherwise, it's just freaky. My son has picked up a few words and expressions from what he can hear a few times a week, and playing with English-speaking kids (well, twice a year...), but I cannot image speaking English with him, it would be weird; besides, he wouldn't be able to use it, and, being four, he has more important things to learn.
If I was living with an English-speaking partner I guess it would be natural for them to communicate in their own laguage rather than Polish and would make more sense; besides, I'd use English more often too, I guess. But Polish people speaking English to their own child in Poland is sure wack.
konto usunięte
Kasia Pabianek:
Possible or not?
Can a Polish couple raise a bilingual child?
And is it 'safe' for the kid?
What do you think?
Lidia K. +
konto usunięte
Lidia K.:
My aunt and her husband emigrated to the US when their kids were about 7-9. On the day they arrived their father refused to speak to them in Polish anymore, so they'd be motivated to learn English.
Now the kids are in their mid-twenties, fluent in English, and the older one does not speak any Polish, I'm afraid. The younger one speaks a mix of Polish and English when trying to communicate with Poles.
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
Lidia K.:
My aunt and her husband emigrated to the US when their kids were about 7-9. On the day they arrived their father refused to speak to them in Polish anymore, so they'd be motivated to learn English.
konto usunięte
konto usunięte
warren whitmore:>>
I don't believe anyone really loses their ability to speak a language they were once fluent in.That was my outtake on it too, but I have met enough people who were born and raised abroad and for a greater part of their life they have been living in the US and have lost the ability to coherently communicate their thoughts in their native tongue.
Następna dyskusja: