Find a Sense of Humour in a Foreign Language

Humour is part of everyday life, especially in the UK, and just because you are learning a new language doesn’t mean you can’t continue to enjoy a giggle or even a guffaw. It just takes a tad more care. Jokes often have a linguistic component and many jokes are funny because of a clever play on words – this is where joshing in a different language can cause EFL learners to get unstuck!

It can take quite an advanced knowledge of a language to create a good, witty, linguistically complex joke. But it is still possible to enjoy humour in a foreign language with only a basic grasp of the grammar and vocabulary. Continue reading

False Friends and Borrowed Words: One Big Linguistic Family!

The English language seems to crop up everywhere. Whether you are reading a German newspaper, a Spanish book or watching French TV, English words tend to stick out a mile to our eyes and ears. Weekend, networking, podcast, hot dog, CD, parking, PC, picnic, sandwich, camping – all these words and many more are peppered throughout non-English languages. But is it a good thing that English words are used so widely in other languages? Continue reading

British and American Accents – Two Alien Tongues!

For students of English as a foreign language the differences between British and American accents can add an extra hurdle to reaching fluency. There are so many variations in accent within the same country that there really is no one British accent or one American accent – bad news for language students then! Or is it? Continue reading