A more apt title for this offering might be
Babble, as this smorgasbord of 20 widely spoken languages is largely a stew of Dorren's (
Lingo: Around Europe in Sixty Languages) impressions and opinions that occasionally serves up delicious bloopers—e.g., nouns are not "conjugated"; verbs are conjugated, nouns are declined. Of the languages selected are those well known (in the West) such as French and Spanish, as well as the lesser-known Punjabi, Swahili, and Tamil. Each chapter offers a chart listing various characteristics of the tongue; it would have been helpful for comparison purposes if the same characteristics were used for each language. For instance, the author claims the subjunctive is a "bugbear" to master in Spanish yet doesn't mention it's equally complex in French. Oh, and English hasn't "borrowed" words from Greek; English has descended from Greek through Latin and French.
VERDICT There's little consistency of presentation in this work from one section to the next, and grammatical terms are often not defined. Readers with a nonacademic interest in global languages might enjoy this buffet. Bon appétit!
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