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saget | 7 years ago

English is also nice in that there is no "baked in" formal or informal use of the language. I think it breaks down barriers in conversations with a superior or a random stranger. I wonder if this has any larger scale effects...

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dsfyu404ed|7 years ago

There is and there isn't. Turning your Northern Alabama up to 11 might not have any impact when in Northern Alabama but sure won't do you any good in front of a SF VC. Likewise if your way of speaking is, ahem, on the "darker and more urban" side.

Koshkin|7 years ago

How many languages have these sub-languages "baked in"?

saget|7 years ago

I don't know about all languages but Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, and Mandarin all have many formal and informal conjugations of words

NihilumExNil|7 years ago

With all due respect, madams and sirs, I beg to differ.

chrisseaton|7 years ago

Those are terms of address, and in English you can just avoid them entirely. In other languages you can't say some quite basic things, such as articles, without explicitly choosing a level of formality, which can be awkward.

jotm|7 years ago

Not in the country of origin, lol

Edit: England, bitch.