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Speaking 2 languages may delay getting Alzheimer's

That reminded me of an old joke:

1) What do we call a person who speaks many languages? Multi-lingual. ... Good
2) What do we call a person who speaks three languages? Trilingual. ... Good
3) What do we call a person who speaks two languages? Bilingual. ... Good
4) What do we call a person who speaks one language? Hmm, hmm, ... American!

P.S. Seriously, in my case changing languages had a negative effect on intellectual development. I cannot prove this, but I am certain of it.

Ludwik
.

:lol:
 
"If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it's good enough for Texas schoolchildren."
- credited to Miriam "Ma" Ferguson, Governor of Texas
 
^^^ I thought it was more of a ZING! than an amen,but I could be wrong.:innocent:



"If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it's good enough for Texas schoolchildren."
- credited to Miriam "Ma" Ferguson, Governor of Texas
 
I'd like to smack whoever it was that thought giving nouns three genders was a good idea.

Hmmm, are there any languages out there that have more than three genders for nouns? Like maybe old/young masculine/feminine or soemthing.
 
I'd like to smack whoever it was that thought giving nouns three genders was a good idea.

Hmmm, are there any languages out there that have more than three genders for nouns? Like maybe old/young masculine/feminine or soemthing.

Swedish has four. Masculine, feminine, common, and neutrum. Basically that means we have two different "it" - supposedly one for living things and one for inanimate objects, except that's gotten so messed up by now that people learning the language basically has to guess which one to use.
 
Well, we were talking genders, but I brought up cases just to point out that Finnish is an absolutely insane language.
 
Ah, well yes it is. I can get the gist of Swedish texts as it's a germanic language but Finnish makes no sense to me whatsoever. It's mad.
 
Though according to a study I read a few years ago, at least Finnish kids learn to read quicker than any other Europeans, since Finnish spelling is completely phonetic - so if you somehow manage to speak it, you can always write it. French and Danish kids are the slowest, since their languages sound nothing like how they're written. (It didn't mention the poor Swiss Germans, who speak one language and write another...)
 
Does this mean that those of us who speak three or more languages can actually give someone Alzheimers?

Was going to respond to the OP questions(s).
But after reading back a few posts from here, I guess I won't.
So, nevermind.

But your saying baffles non-Greek me, so I can't comment.

For the rest of what I have read in this thread, I can't bring myself to comment.

It worked!
 
Bilingual people are lucky. They are less likely to forget things, and if they do forget something in one language, maybe they will remember in the other. Do bisexual people get alzheimers disease? I hope not. it is bad enough forgetting who you had sex with, and even worse if you can't remember if it was a man or woman.
 
Bilingual people are lucky. They are less likely to forget things, and if they do forget something in one language, maybe they will remember in the other. Do bisexual people get alzheimers disease? I hope not. it is bad enough forgetting who you had sex with, and even worse if you can't remember if it was a man or woman.

This is true although if you're speaking Spanish and can only remember the German word for milk then it doesn't really help.
 
It's not just learning two languages though that will slow down Alzheimer's, it's being active, mentally, that does the trick. So whether you go and learn a second language and attain near-native proficiency or if you do a lot of Sudoku and crossword puzzles, either will get you the bonus of having a more active, and therefore more resilient, brain when it comes to diseases such as Alzheimer's.

Falcon: where'd you get that from? That bilinguals remember something in one language and forget about it in the other? I doubt that's scientifically proven by Bialystok's research.
 
Depends on whether the dialect is merely a different type of accent or if it's a separate language like the many you have in Spain and Sicilian versus Italian. I'm not sure, I'm not an expert on second language acquisition.
 
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