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Trista
What's the difference between"native language"and "mother tongue"?
Is there any defference?Or there is something wrong?
7 juin 2010 05:15
Réponses · 3
1
The accepted phrase is mother tongue because of the association of learning your language from your mother/father. Native is usually associated with land and country
7 juin 2010
There is no difference - they mean the same thing. Both are the language you grew up speaking; the one you speak 'perfectly'. In English you can also call it your 'first language'.
My native language/mother tongue/first language is English.
11 juin 2010
yep, mother tongue is the language which a person has grown up speaking from early childhood ^__^ this is the usual word-combination
and another meaning of mother tongue is any ancient language (like Indoeuropean) to which ur language has genetic relation
7 juin 2010
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Trista
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais, Français, Japonais
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Français, Japonais
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