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Showing posts from December, 2015

The Evolution of English

A very good piece on how English evolved to the English we know today, using the familiar Lord's Prayer. Answer on @Quora by Scott Mauldin to What happened during the transition between Old English and Modern English? https://www.quora.com/What-happened-during-the-transition-between-Old-English-and-Modern-English/answer/Scott-Mauldin-3?srid=ibaJ&share=a1cfc0cf

When a Teacher's Not a Teacher

This post was originally written during my years in China. It is very interesting how culture comes into play when bridging two different sets of understanding of the same word. One of my Chinese friends was inquiring about teaching jobs in Singapore and she was puzzled when her Singaporean contact told her that a university lecturer is not a teacher. “难道大学教授不是老师吗?” “Isn’t a university professor a teacher too?” I had to explain to her that, to those of us whose primary culture is English, a “teacher” refers to a job that requires a certain degree of pastoral care, because a teacher handles minors (high school and below). On the other hand, a “lecturer” simply lectures, and is not expected to give the same degree of pastoral care that a teacher is expected to give. To those of us who think in English, a teacher is not the same as a lecturer, even if the lecturer teaches as well. I am reminded of another Chinese friend of mine, who was very puzzled because Singaporeans like to say 一百千 (a