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Nah, you got it, and I didn't. Joel Send a noteboard - 22/08/2011 08:27:33 PM
It's probably down to demographics more than anything. I didn't even know Luxembourg HAD its own language, and remember my German teacher mentioning something called "Switzerdeutsch" that (IIRC) is some sort of composite of French and German. If you can guarantee an audience of 50 million plus, the media will naturally pursue that market any way they can, but they have less incentive to chase, say, 10 million Belgians IN Belgian, particularly when they can reach practically that entire audience with French, German and/or English programming anyway.

... did you just use the word "Belgian" as referring to a language? I'm amused more than offended, but that is a fairly huge gaffe. :P If I misunderstood you, I do apologize.

In case you did mean that, I guess I'll have to give you a very short synopsis of the Belgian linguistic situation: the northern half of the country (Flanders), with the majority of the population, speaks Dutch, while the southern half (Wallonia) speaks French. In Brussels (surrounded by the Dutch-speaking territory but independent of it, and very close to the French-speaking territory anyway), the primary language is French, but the territory is officially bilingual. And then we have a tiny (about 70k) German-speaking minority in the east. There's a reason why I mentioned "Flanders" and not "Belgium" when talking about regions that speak good English; the Walloons have the dubious distinction of being the only Western-European nation to threaten the French claim to the position of "worst foreign language speakers" (not in the least because more Walloons watch French television than Belgian television...).

I suppose "oops" doesn't quite cover it, eh? :P I plead Americanism, which IS a word, if only because I just made it one. Unilaterally. :|
As for Luxembourgian and Swiss German, both are arguably dialects of German, which, as the old adage goes, are treated as languages just because they have an army (on second thought, Luxembourg doesn't have an army... but you get the point). I don't think describing Swiss German as "a mixture of French and German" makes much sense, though. It's just a German dialect that is notorious for being unintelligible for most Germans and for having a strange predilection for cute-sounding words.

I'll have to take your word for that; I'm going on my twenty year old memories of what a German teacher told her class about when her husband was stationed in Germany. Actually, the story that stuck in my mind was when they were driving from Checkpoint Baker to Checkpoint Charlie, took a wrong turn and got lost in the East German countryside for hours. Ultimately, the East German army found them and were very helpful; they not only escorted them all the way to Checkpoint Charlie but made VERY clear they would go DIRECTLY there without ANY more "wrong turns". ;)
The linguistic situation in Luxembourg is endlessly fascinating and rather complicated - unlike most multilingual countries, it's not so much a matter of various groups of people who each speak a different country, as it is a matter of one group of people who speak different languages (French, German and Luxembourgian) depending on what the context and subject is (to some extent, anyway; obviously most of them still have one native language that they speak better than the other two).

How cosmopolitan, but logical. Frankly, I think living between France and Germany out to be grounds to claim asylum by itself. (8
I'll simply have to redouble my efforts; in the common months my most commonly used phrase will probably be "Kan du snakker langsommere, vær så snill?" *sigh* I guess I'll stick with English for official business where full comprehension is important (e.g. visas :P) and try to make myself use Norwegian the rest of the time.

*nods* Good plan.

Thanks.
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