steepholm: (Default)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2022-11-06 09:05 pm
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In the Stairwell

I'm currently in Antwerp - the first time I've set foot on the continent since 2019, and that was only to change planes. I'm in a hotel near city's impressive basilica of a railway station, with an anchovy-laden pizza decocting quietly in my stomach. It's only a brief visit, though, to give a lecture; tomorrow, back to Birmingham and thence Bristol.

It's really embarrassing a) how little I find I'm able to use French (I never had Flemish) and b) how little it matters, everyone else being fluent in English. I seem to have the kind of brain that can only hold one foreign language at a time, and of course that's currently Japanese. I thought I was doing okay when I arrived at the hotel and introduced myself as Catherine Butler in a half-decent accent, but then heard myself add involuntarily, "desu" - a real confidence knocker.

Actually, most of the French I need is hidden somewhere in my head, but to get at it I need to heave the Japanese out of the way, and more often than not a residual layer of German too - and by then the moment's passed. A few seconds too late, I remember what it was I wanted to say, but now it's no more than a case of l'esprit d'escalier.

The irony isn't lost on me.
heleninwales: (Default)

[personal profile] heleninwales 2022-11-07 11:08 am (UTC)(link)
If you're using more than one (or two) languages all the time, the brain keeps them all current and will happily switch between them. But if you learn them sequentially and only use one non-native language at a time, the previous ones seem to go dormant. Not that I ever could speak French, but it's well buried now, but I'm doing OK learning a bit of Spanish while using Welsh and English every day.