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We all speak either broken English or broken Spanish or any other languages

2007-04-23 06:28:33 · 18 answers · asked by Elisa O 1 in Society & Culture Languages

18 answers

i t h i n k b r o k e n e n g l i s h i s s o m e t h i n g a b i t l i k e t h i s

2007-04-23 07:02:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Broken English is the newer form of English. English originally came from England, and that's where old English is. Broke English is just another form of English with newer forms of word like America. America is a example of Broken English. Old English is an example of England.

Broken languages are just another form of the original language. Like Spanish and Spaniard. Spanish is from Spain and Spaniard is from Mexico.Spaniard is a broken language, Spanish is the Original. Another example is the French in Canada and France. Canada would have a Broken French because it is different from the French in France.

2007-04-23 06:39:48 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What I consider 'broken English' may not be the correct definition - but if I'm speaking with someone who speaks English as a second language and they are speaking well enough for me to understand, yet often interject a word here or there in their mother tongue, then I consider that to be broken English.

2007-04-23 06:33:19 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Broken English is a term used to describe hesitant or badly structured English, specifically as used by non-native speakers of the language.

2007-04-23 06:31:39 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Not really, most people (NOT ALL but most), are fluent in at least one language usually their first one. Some are fluent in more than one language, and some can just barley get by in the second language and it may be described as broken, you know like your English ain't real good as some peoples is.

2007-04-23 06:35:41 · answer #5 · answered by cj 4 · 0 0

I don't speak broken English. Broken English is English that doesn't adhere to all the rules of grammar, punctuation and pronunciation. It refers to when one is speaking English as a second language as opposed to speaking sloppily because you are uneducated as with ebonics.

2007-04-23 06:33:51 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I artwork as an ESL instructor. I do public conversing for persons who talk English as a 2d Language. What you're speaking approximately is the English that maximum ESL scholars do no longer learn in college. this is in straight forward terms like gaining understanding of Spanish in the college room, the instructor speaks it slowly and fantastically. then you definately bypass out on the line and here Spanish spoken by making use of people on the line and this is rapid and all the close by dialects and this is a blur. "Como esta usted?" they are able to tell you're no longer a close-by Spanish conversing guy or woman in view which you talk it so slowly and fantastically textbook variety devoid of close by accessory which you ought to to boot have the word "Gringo" tattooed on your brow. And the comparable component happens to ESL people. "Excuse me sir, the place is the adult adult males's room?" "Yo budd, the top's downstairs. Bang a appropriate on the tip of the corridor. Shoot over to the left and you're there." What? come back? Bang a appropriate? Shoot over to the left? yet distant places people discover Jerry Springer and his aim audience participants unique and engaging. Granted the objective audience participants are idiots yet they use highway language that may no longer taught in the college room. Why won't be able to the English prepare their toddlers a thank you to talk? See the hyperlink and picture of the morons on Jerry Springer. they could all use few training, do no longer you think of?

2016-10-03 11:00:25 · answer #7 · answered by elzey 4 · 0 0

What? Is this a question, or are you trying to make a point? Read some of the questions on this forum and then tell me some of these people aren't broken.

2007-04-23 06:34:30 · answer #8 · answered by Tim 6 · 1 0

broken english isnt so much slang as it is a misundrstanding and misusage of the language . . . .just an example people who grew up with english might say . . . .i woudl liek to go to the store, whereas someone who learned english as a second language might say . . .i go to store or i want go store . . .somethign of that nature, thats how i understand it anyway

2007-04-23 06:32:07 · answer #9 · answered by woundshurtless 4 · 1 0

Broken English is the term applied to someone spealing english where English is not heir first language. It simplies implies that the speaker is not using English perfectly and correctly.

2007-04-23 06:31:38 · answer #10 · answered by Kerry 7 · 2 2

I thought it was when someone knew enough vocabulary words to speak a language but not enough to speak fluently in full sentences in the language.

2007-04-23 06:32:43 · answer #11 · answered by ersof59 4 · 1 0

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