GalacticCactus Forum
Forums => English & Linguistics => Topic started by: pattyshmack on September 07, 2005, 01:48:31 PM
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My English professor hardly speaks a word of English (she's from India) and today she said,"Blake's poems are full of more sorrowfuller images than people believe."
What the $%@?
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That doesn't sound like "hardly speaks a word" to me, but sadly, it's not really surprising that English fluency apparently isn't a requirement. Of course, she's really a literature professor, so maybe it won't matter so much.
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o_O
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Was that directed at me or her?
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At the thought of an "English Profesor" who speaks so poorly!
I had many math professors like that, but I don't think I ever had an English professor (or teacher, for that matter) who spoke English so poorly. I think it could be argued that ones literature explication skills are suspect in a language one has so little command of. Heck, my Spanish is stronger than that person's English (and I have a degree in Literature), and I wouldn't feel comfortable teaching a Spanish Lit class.
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Yeah. You should be pretty darn fluent in a language if you're going to teach its literature, especially since literature can be so much more complex than spoken language. It's all full of allusions and metaphors and archaisms.
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...I mean she has alot of great ideas and she is really an awesome teacher. It is just awful to try and pick out what she is actually saying. Some students have resorted to saying,"Can you write that on the board?" And she calls me Ree-becca Nee-bocker.
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She might be perfectly fluent in English but just has such a thick accent that her students cannot understand her.
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"Blake's poems are full of more sorrowfuller images than people believe."
:huh:
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Good point.
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I had an American Heritage teacher who was Canadian. :shrug: She did a good job, I thought.
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Dork.
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Two of the best English lit professors I ever had were from India.
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I don't think anyone's saying that "foreigners" can't teach English lit. I have certainly had plenty of Latin English teachers.
All I'm saying is that you should be able to speak English well.
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All I'm saying is that you should be able to speak English well.
Or at the very least, good.
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I'm confused by the people using India and Canada as evidence that foreigners can speak English well. Are people being funny?
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Not that I was doing that, but not all Indians have British accents, you know. I had a couple of Indian math teachers who were pretty freaking hard to understand.
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And she calls me Ree-becca Nee-bocker.
Aahh I hate it when people pronounced Rebecca like that! There was this kid in my karate class who used to call me Ree-becca and it was irritating.
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I'd hate it if somebody called me Ree-becca too.
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My solution to that problem is to only go by Rebecca on official documents, and then refuse to answer to anything but Becky in anything else.
Ni!
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I've never liked the Becky nickname, but I have embraced Becca. I also go by my last name.
And Batman...
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I think "Becky" is cuter than "Becca."
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I always associated it with a bad connotation when I was younger, probably because it was the name my sister called me when she was teasing me. I'm also pretty sure my parents didn't want anyone calling me any deriviatives of Rebecca in class.
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If someone wants to call me Becky I will let them although it is more common to call me Becca. I like Becca better than Becky but at the same time I think of a chicken saying,"Bek-ah!" So, Rebecca is probably the best name to say. I had some friends call me Reba for the longest while and it irritated me beyond belief.
Batman do you get this all the time when meeting new people? "What do you like to be called, Becca, Becky or Rebecca?" I usually just say,"whatever you want," although as a teen I only wanted to be called Beck or Becca. That's changed now I can say....oh man, this name is more complicated than I originally thought!
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Usually however I'm introduced to the new people is what they'll call me. I have some friends who call me Becca, some who call me Rebecca so it depends on who's doing the introducing. I used to get the question a lot more when I was younger, I guess because teachers would ask. Now professors just call me Rebecca because that's what's on my Cornell profile. I don't think I'd ever ask them to call me Becca, it's too familiar.
Oh and I had this one friend who used to run around going Be-Kah Be-Kah like a chicken. It was hysterical.