Question for those in non-English speaking countries
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Question for those in non-English speaking countries
This has been bugging for some time. In the school system of your country, what do they call the study of literary technique? I.e. in America it is usually called "English" (I assume they call it that in Britian and Australia too, but I could be wrong) so in Finland is it called "Finnish"? How does it translate?
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In Germany, it's Germanistik (for German), Anglistik (for English).
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Re: Question for those in non-English speaking countries
In Finland it is called äidinkieli a direct translation would be mother's language (äiti = mother, kieli = language), but it actualy means native language.HemlockGrey wrote:This has been bugging for some time. In the school system of your country, what do they call the study of literary technique? I.e. in America it is usually called "English" (I assume they call it that in Britian and Australia too, but I could be wrong) so in Finland is it called "Finnish"? How does it translate?
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I think he means that when you were in school what did they call the class in which literature/grammar/spelling/your native language was taught?
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Re: Question for those in non-English speaking countries
Same here the name is "Modersmål" Mothers LanguageSir Sirius wrote:In Finland it is called äidinkieli a direct translation would be mother's language (äiti = mother, kieli = language), but it actualy means native language.
Moder="Mother" Mål=in this case it is "language" but if it's seperated from the previous word it means goal.
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And if you are asking what the name is when it's beeing taught in School it is called "Svenska" for Swedish
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Re: Question for those in non-English speaking countries
In finland it's called modersmål in swedish schools aswell, which means mother tounge or native tounge, so pretty much the same.Sir Sirius wrote:In Finland it is called äidinkieli a direct translation would be mother's language (äiti = mother, kieli = language), but it actualy means native language.HemlockGrey wrote:This has been bugging for some time. In the school system of your country, what do they call the study of literary technique? I.e. in America it is usually called "English" (I assume they call it that in Britian and Australia too, but I could be wrong) so in Finland is it called "Finnish"? How does it translate?
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What the hell its not Deutsch?Dahak wrote:In Germany, it's Germanistik (for German), Anglistik (for English).
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Well, the thing you learn in school, grammar, and basic stuff, is called "Deutsch". But he asked for "the study of literary technique", which would be "Germanisitik".Howedar wrote:What the hell its not Deutsch?Dahak wrote:In Germany, it's Germanistik (for German), Anglistik (for English).
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In Taiwan,
"Guo Wen"
國文 (<-- Big5 Traditional Chinese Characters)
Guo for "National"
Wen for "Literature".
If it's elementary school, Wen is substituted with "Yu" (Language).
And the language taught is Mandarin.
"Guo Wen"
國文 (<-- Big5 Traditional Chinese Characters)
Guo for "National"
Wen for "Literature".
If it's elementary school, Wen is substituted with "Yu" (Language).
And the language taught is Mandarin.
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