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    How Language Seems To Shape One's View Of The World

    If you learn a new language, you not only learn new words, but often a new view of the world. Languages and culture are deeply connected and it will influence your way of thinking when you open yourself to new cultures, which often goes hand in hand when acquiring a new language or being raised bilingual.

    We found an interesting article about the topic. One of the scientist mentioned in the article, Lera Boroditsky, "once did a simple experiment: She asked people to close their eyes and point southeast. A room of distinguished professors in the U.S. pointed in almost every possible direction, whereas 5-year-old Australian aboriginal girls always got it right. She says the difference lies in language. Boroditsky, an associate professor of cognitive science at the University of California, San Diego, says the Australian aboriginal language doesn't use words like left or right. It uses compass points, so they say things like "that girl to the east of you is my sister." If you want to learn another language and become fluent, you may have to change the way you behave in small but sometimes significant ways, specifically how you sort things into categories and what you notice."

     


    www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2013/12/30/258376009/how-language-seems-to-shape-ones-view-of-the-world/
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