The Demopædia Encyclopedia on Population is under heavy modernization and maintenance. Outputs could look bizarre, sorry for the temporary inconvenience

Difference between revisions of "Mother language"

From Demopædia
Jump to: navigation, search
(Eugen Grebenik et al., first edition 1958)
(Eugen Grebenik et al., first edition 1958)
Line 101: Line 101:
 
[[en-I:mother language]] [[ar-I:لغة الأصلية (أصل)]] [[cs-I:mateřský jazyk]] [[de-I:Muttersprache]] [[es-I:lengua materna]] [[fi-I:äidinkieli]] [[fr-I:langue maternelle]] [[it-I:lingua materna]] [[pl-I:język ojczysty]] [[pt-I:LÍNGUA materna]] [[ru-I:Родной язык]]  
 
[[en-I:mother language]] [[ar-I:لغة الأصلية (أصل)]] [[cs-I:mateřský jazyk]] [[de-I:Muttersprache]] [[es-I:lengua materna]] [[fi-I:äidinkieli]] [[fr-I:langue maternelle]] [[it-I:lingua materna]] [[pl-I:język ojczysty]] [[pt-I:LÍNGUA materna]] [[ru-I:Родной язык]]  
 
</noinclude>
 
</noinclude>
 +
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mother language}}
 
<noinclude>
 
<noinclude>
 
[[Category:Term of the first edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]
 
[[Category:Term of the first edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]

Revision as of 16:24, 4 February 2010

Mother language  (MOTHER language)


The population may be classified by the language1 or dialect2 habitually spoken. A distinction is drawn between an individual’s mother language3 or mother tongue3 which is the language spoken in his home in his earliest childhood, and his usual language4, which is the language customarily used by him. The distinction between the two is not always very easy among people who are bilingual5 or multilingual5.

  • 1. language n. — linguistic adj.


More...