When you grow up in a family of languages, you develop a kind of casual fluency, so that languages, though differently colored, all seem transparent to experience.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Some languages expand not only your ability to speak to different people but what you're able to think.
People who grow up with two or more languages understand that each can express certain aspects of reality better than the other.
I have an acquired taste for language, yet it is seldom an actual focus of mine.
We've got so many different cultural groups in my family that I've had to learn to accommodate them in different ways. My father speaks different to my mum. My mum speaks different to my grandmother. Everybody speaks different, so you find you start tweaking your language to be more accessible to people.
As basic rules of a language must be practiced continually, and therefore are never fixed, so exercises toward distinct color effects never are done or over. New and different cases will be discovered time and again.
Languages are something of a mess. They evolve over centuries through an unplanned, democratic process that leaves them teeming with irregularities, quirks, and words like 'knight.'
I've never been in any country for more than four years, and I'm learning different languages all the time. It gives you a different attitude.
Language fits over experience like a straight-jacket.
I was always influenced by language.
A different language is a different vision of life.