Americans discover the 3000 year old continent spanning nation of 1.4 billion people… might have regional differences. honestly, who knew?

western ignorance is truly a form of exceptionalism

  • TheDrink [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    5 hours ago

    tfw you realize that “this massive continent only has one language” is a belief that directly results from imperialism wiping out the hundreds of other languages that used to be in North America.

    Sometimes people will try to point to the Chinese adoption of Mandarin as an official lingua franca as some kind of equivalent form of colonialism, and it’s just not.

  • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 hours ago

    Every language has accents, dialogs, and so on. Even sign language (and they still won’t know not everything is American Sign Language. There’s British, French, Japanese, etc.) has accents. I’m struggling to think of a language that doesn’t. Maybe Basque? Really it’s a question of geography and time. You drop a canyon in the middle of Rhode Island, wait 1,000 years, and the people on either side won’t be able to understand one another.

  • CliffordBigRedDog [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 hours ago

    bud, in southern China you can travel between neighbouring cities their dialects would not be mutually intelligible with Mandarin or even each other

    the distance between Cantonese and Mandarin is wider than spanish and italian

    and thats not even talking about non-chinese langauges like Mongolian and Uyghur or whatever

    • vovchik_ilich [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      4 hours ago

      As a Spaniard I always found it funny that I can just read Italian and understand like 95% of it. Like, what did the Fr*nch do to their language that fucked it up so bad smh

    • Krem [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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      6 hours ago

      Fujian has Min bei (Sanming, Nanping, Wuyi Mt. I think), Min dong (Fuzhou), Putian, Min nan (Quanzhou, Zhangzhou), Min xi (Longyan), and Hakka. That’s six different, not mutually intelligible, languages.

      Even Zhangzhounese and Quanzhounese, while mostly mutually intelligible, are different enough from each other that they would be called different languages if it was europe (like serbian-croatian, portuguese-galician, czech-slovak, icelandic-faroese, norwegian-swedish etc)

    • baaaaaaaaaaah [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      7 hours ago

      Really doesn’t help that China insists on calling them ‘dialects’ and not ‘languages’, which is what they really are, though the added confusion of them being basically the same when written down muddles things.

  • SuperNovaCouchGuy2 [any]@hexbear.net
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    10 hours ago

    There are already different American accents based on where in America you are, this is what happens when the us mass media depicts an entire country as a non human other.

    • lil_tank [any, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 hours ago

      France has a dozen regional accents and regional languages that still have some speakers for a population of just 75m, and I’m not even talking about their remaining colonial empire, only the core in Europe

  • SpiderFarmer [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 hours ago

    Honestly surprising levels of ignorance, given how Chinese-American restaurants will have several different styles on display. Just based on that and two popular languages in both Mandarin and Cantonese…

    But then until recently I didn’t know shit about Greenland.

    • DeathToBritain [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      11 hours ago

      pretty much all of Europe is like this, as are most non settler parts of the world. I learned Spanish in school from a woman who was raised in the basque country, and could not understand even spanish speakers in barcelona let alone catalan when I went there. those 2 areas are 300 miles apart. America is so much more homogeneous than they realise