Learning multiple languages ⏲️ 6 Minute English

80,430 views ・ 2025-04-10

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil and today I'm here with Hannah from BBC podcast What in the World.
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Hello, Hannah. Hi, Neil.
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Hannah and the What in the World team have been investigating
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what it's like to learn multiple languages,
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and she's here to tell us more about it.
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Welcome to 6 Minute English.
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Thank you so much for having me.
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And it's great to have you here.
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Now in this programme we help you improve your English.
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And maybe English is the first language you have ever tried to learn.
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Or maybe you know a lot of languages.
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Well, someone who knows multiple languages is called a polyglot.
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Neil, are you a polyglot?
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I speak a little bit of a few languages, but I couldn't say that I'm a polyglot.
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How about you? I am a polyglot.
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Wow, I feel really impressed and a bit intimidated!
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And now, Hannah, we always start our programme off with a question.
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So, here it goes.
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Which country has the most official languages recognised by their government?
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So is it a) Zimbabwe, b) Switzerland, or c) Bolivia?
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I would guess Zimbabwe.
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Well, we'll find out the answer at the end of the programme.
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Now, Hannah, you've been finding out about some
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of the benefits of being a polyglot.
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Yes, Neil, there's been lots of research
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about how knowing more than one language can change your brain.
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And this might have some health benefits, too.
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At What in the World we spoke to Professor Frederique Liegeois
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who's a cognitive neuroscientist at University College London.
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Babies, even before they speak, have to tune in
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to the languages around them to make sense out of what people say to them.
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And then when children start to speak several languages, they have to focus
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on one language and ignore another one where they're speaking.
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They also have to be able to switch from one language to the other,
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depending on who they're speaking to. Later on in age
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when adults have dementia, they seem to show symptoms
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later when they're bilinguals as opposed to monolinguals.
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We think that juggling several languages has helped
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them really boost this brain efficiency, which is a great advantage.
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It's like a brain workout.
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Frederique explains that babies who grow up learning
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more than one language have to tune into the languages around them.
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They have to listen to each language.
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Over time, they become good at switching languages
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and ignoring the ones they don't need in a conversation.
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Scientists think that juggling several languages is good for you.
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If you juggle several things, that means you deal with all of them
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at the same time.
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Frederique describes being a polyglot as a brain workout.
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This means it's exercise for your brain that can make it stronger.
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Now, Hannah, I don't know about you.
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When I was younger
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and languages just seemed like another subject at school,
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I didn't really care so much. But when I worked abroad later in life,
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I was much more motivated and found it easier. How about you?
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Quite the opposite actually.
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I did find it easier to learn languages at school and university,
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but I didn't have to learn these languages out of necessity.
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But my colleague Victoria Uwonkunda, she's a presenter and a journalist
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on the BBC World Service, she did.
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She speaks five languages and she understands eight.
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And she learnt those languages because her family moved from Rwanda
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to Kenya and then to Norway when she was a teenager.
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Victoria says she was able to pick up Norwegian quite easily.
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If you pick up a skill, it means you learn it, usually by being
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in the environment where that thing happens rather than being taught.
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But Victoria's parents found it much harder to learn Norwegian.
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Let's hear what Vic said on the What in the World podcast.
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First of all, you're having them coming into a new culture completely
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from everything they've ever known.
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The language is new.
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These are people in their 50s, you know, but they soldiered on.
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Because if you want to work, if you want to live there, you have to learn.
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And they did. It wasn't easy.
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But I think also with us kids, we picked it up quite quickly.
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So if they were making a mistake, we were also helping them along the way.
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So it's kind of a way of paying back.
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You helped us get to this, you know, to keep our mother tongue and here
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we are going to help you.
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Victoria's parents found it difficult to learn Norwegian in their 50s,
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but they soldiered on.
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They continued doing something even though it was difficult.
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And I love that the family helped each other with their languages,
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Hannah. Yes.
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So Vic's parents helped them keep their mother tongue Kinyarwanda
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when they had to leave Rwanda.
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And then years later, the children helped their parents learn Norwegian.
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And Hannah, Victoria picked up Norwegian quite easily,
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even after learning four other languages.
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Did Victoria have any tips for learning so many languages?
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Well, one thing she recommended is trying to immerse yourself
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in the language.
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So, she said go to the market or into the street,
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a place where you can listen to people using the language.
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Yes, and some learners might be learning English online,
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and so they don't have the opportunity to go to a market or street
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and hear the language.
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But there are other things that you can do.
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For example, you can listen to 6 Minute English,
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or you could try other BBC podcasts like What in the World too.
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What in the World is the programme that I work on
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and we put out a new episode every weekday.
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We look at stories from around the world covering news
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and trending topics to try to help you make sense of the world.
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Time now for the answer to our quiz question.
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I asked you, which country has the most officially recognised languages?
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I said Zimbabwe.
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And I'm afraid that was the wrong answer.
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It was in fact Bolivia, which recognises 37 languages,
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though of course not everyone speaks all of them.
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06:02
Now let's recap the vocabulary that we have learned, starting with polyglot,
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which is someone who knows lots of languages, like me.
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If you tune in to something, you listen or pay attention to it.
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Juggling several things,
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like languages, means doing several different things at the same time.
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A brain workout is exercise for your brain.
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If you pick up a skill,
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you learn it, usually through practice rather than being taught.
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And if you soldier on, you continue doing something
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even though it's difficult.
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Thanks for listening to 6 Minute English and listen to the full episode
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of What in the World about polyglots and learning languages.
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There's a link in the notes below this program.
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Thank you so much for having me on 6 Minute English.
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Goodbye. Ciao.
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Adios. Até logo.
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Sayonara. Bye!
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