"They stop speaking English..."
Posted: Tue Apr 06, 2010 6:47 pm
(Triggered by reading something Alasdair linked to on DigitalSpy)
It's more commonly said about Welsh, but it's also said about Gaelic from time to time:
"The locals are so rude. They're speaking in English, but they immediately start speaking Welsh/Gaelic/whatever as soon as I walk into the pub. I know it's true, because I hear them speaking English but when I get closer they start speaking Welsh."
If anyone ever says this to you, don't slap them, just tell them that it's something called "code-switching" and that it's a statistical near-definite that if you spend even a little amount of time in a bilingual area you will hear someone at some point stop speaking English as you approach.
People who speak two languages or dialects (codes) will switch between them in conversations. A sentence of English in a Gaelic conversation. A direct quote in English with "he said" tagged on in Welsh.
It is extremely rare to hear a conversation carried out in 100% Gaelic or Welsh with no English.
So you will hear them switch.
But you don't need to assume it's because of you.
It's more commonly said about Welsh, but it's also said about Gaelic from time to time:
"The locals are so rude. They're speaking in English, but they immediately start speaking Welsh/Gaelic/whatever as soon as I walk into the pub. I know it's true, because I hear them speaking English but when I get closer they start speaking Welsh."
If anyone ever says this to you, don't slap them, just tell them that it's something called "code-switching" and that it's a statistical near-definite that if you spend even a little amount of time in a bilingual area you will hear someone at some point stop speaking English as you approach.
People who speak two languages or dialects (codes) will switch between them in conversations. A sentence of English in a Gaelic conversation. A direct quote in English with "he said" tagged on in Welsh.
It is extremely rare to hear a conversation carried out in 100% Gaelic or Welsh with no English.
So you will hear them switch.
But you don't need to assume it's because of you.