Typically, people acquire a single language initially—their first language, or native tongue, the language used by those with whom, or by whom, they are brought up from infancy. Subsequent “second” languages are learned to different degrees of competence under various conditions. Complete mastery of two languages is designated as bilingualism; in many cases—such as upbringing by parents using different languages at home or being raised within a multilingual community—children grow up as bilinguals. In traditionally monolingual cultures, the learning, to any extent, of a second or other language is an activity superimposed on the prior mastery of one’s first language and is a different process intellectually.
yofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjndyofnoudpidjfdn jdskdljfkdn snbkjnd
You must log in or register a new account in order to contact the publisher