POLYGLOT

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Dr. Goodword
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POLYGLOT

Postby Dr. Goodword » Mon Dec 05, 2005 12:11 am

• polyglot

Pronunciation: pah-li-glaht • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: A person who speaks more than one language, a multilingual.

Notes: One of the most common responses to being introduced as a linguist is, "And how many languages do you speak?" A linguist is someone who studies language scientifically, something a monolingual person can do. A polyglot could know nothing scientific about language and still speak several languages. If you need an adjective, feel free to use this word as is: there are polyglot nations, like Russia, and polyglot editions of the Bible.

In Play: First and foremost this word refers to someone who is multilingual: "Herschel Swartz is a polyglot who can talk his way out of paying a bill in seven different European languages." It can, however, refer to people in a broader, more indirect sense, "The restaurant had such a polyglot kitchen it was a wonder the dishes that came out of it were edible."

Word History: Today's word is another borrowed, via Latin and French polyglotte, from Greek polyglottos, made up of poly "many" + glotta "tongue, language" plus a suffix. Greek is among those languages whose word for "language" originally meant "tongue," e.g. French langue, Russian iazyk, and Spanish lengua. English is even the mother tongue of some of us. Greek also had a variant of glotta, glossa, with the same meaning, so our words gloss and glossary are also cousins.
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gailr
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Postby gailr » Tue Dec 06, 2005 10:58 pm

Word History: Today's word is another borrowed, via Latin and French polyglotte, from Greek polyglottos, made up of poly "many" + glotta "tongue, language" plus a suffix. Greek is among those languages whose word for "language" originally meant "tongue," e.g. French langue, Russian iazyk, and Spanish lengua. English is even the mother tongue of some of us. Greek also had a variant of glotta, glossa, with the same meaning, so our words gloss and glossary are also cousins.
glossolalia: "speaking in tongues".

portokalos
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Postby portokalos » Thu Dec 08, 2005 3:55 am

In Greece we learn ξένες γλώσσες, we eat people with our tongue γλωσσοφαγία and there are people who have more than one tongue πολύγλωσσοι..
Last edited by portokalos on Thu Dec 08, 2005 4:08 am, edited 2 times in total.
"What is hell?" I maintain that it is the suffering of being unable to love.
Fyodor Dostoevsky-The Brothers Karamazov

portokalos
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Postby portokalos » Thu Dec 08, 2005 4:06 am

In Greece we learn ξένες γλώσσες, we eat people with our tongue γλωσσοφαγία and there are people who havw more than one tongue πολύγλωσσοι.
That seems to me that glossolalia is the speaking (η λαλιά, η ομιλία)) of many foreign languages. Δηλαδή: των γλωσσών η λαλιά
"What is hell?" I maintain that it is the suffering of being unable to love.
Fyodor Dostoevsky-The Brothers Karamazov


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