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Dialects

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So, I’m reading Foundation and Empire again and I am at a point where two distinct dialects are presented. To me, they sound wholly different and I’m not sure what exactly makes them so different.

Dialect 1:

“Now, sure I meant no harm. I am a stranger here, and it’s been said I am of addled wits; yet there is something in a face that I can read. Behind this lady’s fairness, there is a heart that’s kind, and that would help me in my trouble for all I speak so boldly.”

Dialect 2:

“There’s no use being annoyed at his silly way of talking. That’s just his dialect; and our speech is probably as strange to him.”

“What is your trouble? You’re not worried about the guard, are you? He won’t bother you.”

Dialect 1:

“Oh, no, not he. He’s but a windlet that blows the dust about my ankles. There is another that I flee, and he is a storm that sweeps the worlds aside and throws them plunging at each other. A week ago, I ran away, have slept in city streets, and hid in city crowds. I’ve looked in many faces for help in need. I find it here.”

My wife doesn’t seem to see much of a difference between the two and I’m wondering what exactly makes them so different to me. Dialect 1 is very sing-song to me, very poetic, while Dialect 2 is prosaic and mundane.

Written by rkrush

April 8, 2008 at 5:32 am

Posted in Linguistics

Tagged with , ,