Meaning of mother tongue | Babel Free
/ˈmʌð.ə ˌtʌŋ/Definitions
- The language one first learned; the language one grew up with; one's native language.
- The language spoken by one’s ancestors.
- The language spoken by one's mother, when it differs from that spoken by one's father.
- Informal speech, as opposed to educated language.
Equivalents
Ελληνικά
μητρική γλώσσα
Suomi
äidinkieli
Français
langue maternelle
עברית
שפת אם
Bahasa Indonesia
bahasa ibu
Italiano
madrelingua
Polski
język ojczysty
Svenska
modersmål
ไทย
ภาษาแม่
Türkçe
ana dili
Українська
рі́дна мо́ва
Tiếng Việt
tiếng mẹ đẻ
Examples
“His mother tongue is a relatively conservative dialect of Aramaic.”
“One young Tamil teacher had assimilated the sound-system of English so thoroughly to that of his mother-tongue that none of the Chinese and Malay children understood him.”
“Throughout their long history as a minority, Anglo-Indians learned their "father tongue" but were indifferent to their "mother tongue," an indigenous Indian language.”
“A father tongue is a foreign language, therefore English is a foreign language not a mother tongue.”
“Ramanujan has also argued that many Hindu men have both a mother tongue (the everyday language, such as Tamil, spoken by women downstairs, in the back, in the kitchen) and a father tongue (once Sanskrit, more recently English, the literary lingua franca spoken—or at least discussed—by men in the front rooms).”
“In the early Middle Ages, 'mother tongue' was largely 'a pejorative term to describe the unlearned language of women and children' (Haugen 1991: 82). This reflected the low status of women in society and contrasted with Latin, the more prestigious 'father tongue' on the continent.”
“Questions about respondents' place of birth, their parents' place of birth, nativity, and language use (called “mother tongue” and “father tongue”) were added to the Census between 1850 and 1960.”
“Informed by the experience of other parents who had successfully raised their children with more than one language and our own observations, we knew clearly that Léandre and Dominique's mother tongue and father tongue would not have a chance without deliberate 'control' of their linguistic environment.”
“The other is the maturity and experience of that; if that is our mother tongue, this is our father tongue, a reserved and select expression, too significant to be heard by the ear, which we must be born again in order to speak.”
“We learn the father tongue to prove we have outgrown the mother tongue.”
“In each case, we are reborn -- a fact that explains Thoreau's preference here for the father tongue over the mother tongue, as Cavell explains: "A son of man is born of woman; but rebirth, according to our Bible, is the business of the father."”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.