How do people lose their native language?
BBC News | 3 June 2014
Sgt
Bowe Bergdahl spoke English for 23 years until he was captured by
Taliban fighters in Afghanistan five years ago. But since his release,
he has trouble speaking it, says his father. How can you lose your
native language, asks Taylor Kate Brown.
Some people have gone decades without speaking or hearing
their first language but they retain the ability to speak it easily,
says Dr Monika Schmid, a linguistics professor at the University of
Essex in the UK. But others begin losing fluency within a few years of
not speaking it.
It's rare to totally lose command of a first language, she
says. Instead people have "language attrition" - trouble recalling
certain words or they use odd grammar structures. Age is a factor. Once
past puberty, Dr Schmid says, your first language is stable and the
effects of attrition can reverse themselves if you are re-immersed. But
children as old as 10 don't necessarily retain the language they were
born into. In a study of French adoptees who left South Korea in
childhood, when asked in their early 30s to identify Korean, they did no
better than native French speakers with no exposure to the language.
The difficulties in recalling
your first language are greater the more immersed you are in a second
language, says Dr Aneta Pavlenko at Temple University in Philadelphia,
because cognitive resources are limited. Despite teaching Russian at
university in the US, she herself returned to her Russian-speaking
community in Kiev to realise she had forgotten how to start a
conversation at the post office.
It's well known that brain injuries can have an impact on
language loss, but emotional trauma can also affect it. Among German
Jews who fled the country during the Holocaust, Dr Schmid says the loss
of language was far more dramatic the greater their trauma.
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