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Kevin Patton
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Lion Den -> Expeditions -> Travel Tips -> Kevins Tips -> LANGUAGE

Kevin's Travel Tips
Although each of these tips has value, I don't make any claims for their legitimacy or advisability. In other words, I hereby abdicate all responsibility for these tips  --you are on your own!

 
Know some of the local language.   For example, "I'm an unsophisticated American, do you speak English?" in the local language is a good phrase to start with.  Try to also recognize (or even say) the phrases for "toilet," "men's room,"  "women's room," and "I'm lost."  Try this link to learn helpful phrases the slow and easy way: Registration for travlang's Word of the Day by e-mail

 

 

Don't be an ugly American. If you're ugly, that's beside the point.  You may be traveling abroad in foreign lands for that very reason.  What I mean here is to try and avoid the quintessentially American habit of arrogantly expecting everyone in the world to use American English (even if they DO know how, why SHOULD they in their own town?), to accommodate American customs, and so on.  You'll be received MUCH more warmly, and even given some help when you need it, if you simply TRY to be humble and TRY to speak the local language.  I can't tell you how many times my fractured French saved me only because it demonstrated that I was worthy of a Parisian's time and effort to help me in English. 

 

Use pictograms.  Kwikpoint has a handy little laminated pocket cards that have hundreds pictograms suggested by linguists.  You simply pull out a card and point to pictures representing different food items, lodging, transportation, bathrooms, etc.   It's designed to be usable ANYWHERE in the world.  Kwikpoint International Translator

 

Use appropriate gestures.  Don't use your left hand, which is considered unclean, in Africa to accept gifts or business cards or whatever --it's an insult to the giver.  If you act like you are playing an imaginary flute in the air in France, you are indicating that whoever is speaking at the time is long-winded.  How do you know what's right and what's not?  Ask your guide or another local about gestures when you arrive in a new area.  Or try this website:  Web of Culture - [gestures] or this book Gestures : The Do's and Taboos of Body Language Around the World


Let them eat glass. Don't get it?   Click on this site and you'll get it (maybe): http://hcs.harvard.edu/~igp/glass.html

 

 

This page was last edited on 04/01/07

 

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