Of the queen’s language and my own…

I had written this around a year back, and revisited it today.

Recalled it because of a visit to a nearby pre-nursery that apparently teaches toddlers three languages – English, Arabic and French.

Nice, but doesn’t fit my requirement.

Unfortunately, most kids here in Dubai end up with an accent, and I am trying as much as possible for Rohāmrut to sound Indian. Hopefully, I succeed. But this also means that my search has very narrow filter criteria – an Indian Montessori in Dubai, close to where I live. Ahem. The struggle continues.

Anyways, here is a bit on language:)


Did you know that strozzapreti (a type of pasta) means ‘strangled priests’, or that vermicelli means ‘little worms’?

Or that the Scottish word sgiomlaireachd (yes it’s a mouthful) means ‘the habit of dropping in at mealtimes’?

Of course, you know that German is full of jaw-crunching words like Wirtschaftstreuhandgesellschaft (business trust company), Bundesbahnangestelltenwitwe (a widow of a federal railway employee), and Kriegsgefangenenentschadigungsgesetz (a law pertaining to war reparations)…

If there is one single event that propelled humankind forward, and set us on course to civilization, it is language. No one still knows for sure how it evolved, but language enabled communication, and communication made humans work in groups and working in groups made everything possible, from hunting better kill to building, farming and trade.

The study of languages (linguistics) is fascinating, in the sense that it helps discover and map out parts of history that have no written record. By examining similarities in language, linguists are able to track migration of populations over millennia!

Language is the base of civilization, and India has a lion’s share of the world’s languages and dialects. We have 22 official languages, and we speak the world’s third (Hindi), sixth (Bengali), thirteenth (Punjabi) and seventeenth (Tamil) most spoken languages in the world, besides two of the world’s oldest languages – Sanskrit and Tamil.

Yet, we choose to communicate in English as our first language. Our internet is mainly in English, our phones have English menus and even when we speak to each other, we mostly default to English.

Our excuse usually is that it helps us be globalized. Well, the French mostly speak French, Germans German, Chinese Mandarin…I don’t see them doing too badly:)

I have resolved to teach my child Hindi, Punjabi, Sanskrit and one Dravidian language. English he will learn in school, and learn it well, but the connect with India is through our rich culture and language. I hope that he can learn well and appreciate the diversity in the land that he belongs to, and in turn I would have done my bit in passing it forward.

How many languages do you plan to teach your children? Do let me know:)

See you tomorrow!