Why do foreign languages sound strange?

It’s like hearing someone talk using a new set of toys you’ve never played with before.

Imagine you’re used to playing with red blocks and blue blocks, that’s your language, the one you hear every day at home. But then, one day, you hear someone talking using green blocks and yellow blocks, that’s a foreign language. It sounds strange because it uses different shapes (words) and rules (grammar), just like how the green and yellow blocks stack differently than your red and blue ones.

Like a New Game

Think of learning a foreign language as learning a new game. In your game, you say "I eat apples", but in the new game, they might say "I apples eat." It’s still about eating apples, just played with different rules!

Also, sometimes the sounds are like playing with blocks that look similar but feel different. Like how an “s” sound feels smooth, and a “sh” sound feels a little rougher, it's like touching two different textures.

So, even though foreign languages might feel strange at first, they're just another way to play the same game!

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Examples

  1. A child hears Spanish for the first time and thinks it sounds like a made-up language.
  2. An adult tries to understand French and feels confused by the way people pronounce words.
  3. Someone learning Mandarin is surprised how different it sounds from English.

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