
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In today’s global societies, it isn’t uncommon to grow up in a polyglot environments. More and more children have parents from different parts of the world, speaking different primary languages and only share one common language, such as English. These children grow up with a sense of normalcy for polyglotism.
Embrace your child in the beauty of languages and the multitude of cultures that follow.
Etymology
Borrowed from French polyglotte, from Ancient Greek (polúglōttos, “many-tongued, polyglot”).
@drschwank
@unesurcent
@optimalperformancezurich
By sesschwank5
33 ratings
In today’s global societies, it isn’t uncommon to grow up in a polyglot environments. More and more children have parents from different parts of the world, speaking different primary languages and only share one common language, such as English. These children grow up with a sense of normalcy for polyglotism.
Embrace your child in the beauty of languages and the multitude of cultures that follow.
Etymology
Borrowed from French polyglotte, from Ancient Greek (polúglōttos, “many-tongued, polyglot”).
@drschwank
@unesurcent
@optimalperformancezurich