The resurgence of endangered languages means that cultures can regrow and furthermore expand. Currently, the majority of fluent Irish speakers are under the age of 25. This means that at some point, the language was on the way to dying out. However, the adults taught their children the language and managed to begin saving the language. The possible extinction of a language becomes worrying when children no longer speak the language. When this began to happen in New Zealand, the elder Maori speakers made sure to teach the Maori children in order to save the language. The argument is that the loss of a language is loss of cultural identity. So when the number of Irish and Maori speakers decreased, the people knew they should teach the children and save the language. Both languages took this similar approach, meaning that language really does have cultural value, and they cannot have their culture without their language being involved. Timoti Karetu, head of the Maori Languag...
"Thx for the IView! I Wud ♥ to Work 4 U!! ;)" has a lot of valid arguments of which I agree with. The impact of the article on me was the realization of how and when text talk is used. For example, "Then she received the candidate's thank-you note, laced with words like "hiya" and "thanx," along with three exclamation points and a smiley-face emoticon," I reacted negatively to the situation, by thinking that this use of language should not be occurring. Why are students not taught that language should be proper, formal, and professional in places of work and education? This statement, "These incidents typically involve college students and recent graduates, and recruiters say such faux pas can be instant candidacy killers because they hint at immaturity and questionable judgment," reflects my own opinion. Adults using this type of language, from my perspective, does hint at immaturity and questionable judgment due to lack of formal...
Interviewer: And now on the show, we have American, pop-punk band, All Time Low. Hey guys, welcome. All Time Low: Hey/hello/hi/what's up? (in sync) Interviewer: So, let's start with your new album Future Hearts. It's just been released worldwide, how do you feel about that? Alex: Oh man, it's so exciting. I feel like this album really captures who we are as a band, and the direction we want to go in, and our intentions. Jack: Yeah, like, it sounds kinda different to our older records. It's also more meaningful and emotional. Interviewer: Where did your inspiration for this record come from? When you say it's different, do you mean you experimented with your sound more? Rian: We definitely did experiment a lot, yeah. We spent roughly two years in the studio, you know, writing, recording, producing, collaborating, making sure we get the right message across in all our lyrics. I think that since we've worked with so many different people on this al...
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