
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Simon Calder meets speakers of indigenous languages (like Welsh in Britain), of dialects (like Moselfrankish in Germany) and vernaculars (like African-American Vernacular English, in the US). These speakers all use the mainstream language every day, but code-switch to their variants, questioning whether their societies are monolingual. Is there even something sinister and oppressive to the idea of monolingualism?
By BBC World Service4.3
16071,607 ratings
Simon Calder meets speakers of indigenous languages (like Welsh in Britain), of dialects (like Moselfrankish in Germany) and vernaculars (like African-American Vernacular English, in the US). These speakers all use the mainstream language every day, but code-switch to their variants, questioning whether their societies are monolingual. Is there even something sinister and oppressive to the idea of monolingualism?

7,824 Listeners

374 Listeners

1,069 Listeners

5,513 Listeners

964 Listeners

588 Listeners

1,881 Listeners

1,067 Listeners

358 Listeners

601 Listeners

974 Listeners

414 Listeners

416 Listeners

736 Listeners

839 Listeners

364 Listeners

1,024 Listeners

3,204 Listeners

1,071 Listeners

785 Listeners

1,043 Listeners

376 Listeners