Home of: Prose, Poetry & Contests Prose-n-Poetry

Prose-n-Poetry.com

Email Us [e-mail]
Enter our Poetry Contest and Win a Cash Prize !
Tell your friends! We Pay You to Comment!
Welcome !

Please Sign In
MemberID

password
Save Cookie?  
Get lost password

Join Us

Points Reference

NEW! PnP Contests
Member Contests
Contest Winners

Sailor Moon Home
Games

Members
Moonatics
Gold Writers
Silver Writers
Free Members

Galleries
Sailor Moon

Music
Sailor Moon
Christmas
Read !
Poetry
Stories
Books
Columns
Recipes
MoonNotes
Write !
Poetry
Stories
Books
Recipes
MoonNotes
Workshops
Poetry Workshop
Stories Workshop
Books Workshop
Reference
Poetry Help
Stories Help
F.A.Q

Programs
Sailor Moon Episodes
Banners
Resources

On Line
Raja Sharma
Frank Fields
Glenys Garcia
Adrianne Wadsworth
4 Writers

0 Free Members

4 Members
42 Guests

Master the language
by Ryszard Krasowski
copyright 07-03-2001


Age Rating: 18 to 127

 
I am discovering America!

Using my hands and grimaces on my face wasn't enough to make myself understandable anymore. People got frustrated, listening to my "explanations" and so did I. What's more, my illiteracy had caused me a lot of stupid and funny misunderstandings. I'll give you one example.

Once I got a job as a stock man at the hardware store in Brooklyn. It was a good chance to improve my poor English, because it was an American store and people who visited that store were Americans, too.

Mopping the floor, putting small price labels on new products with the "gun" and filling up the shelves with them, I followed customers with my eyes, hoping that they would ask me for something.

A few days passed by and nothing happened. I didn't have a chance to impress anybody with my English. But one day a feminine voice behind my back diverted my attention from unpacking a new delivery.

"Are you working here?" I couldn't believe my ears! Somebody had spoken to me!

"Yes! May I help you?" I was in seventh heaven, answering the question and offering my help.

"I need an Arm and Hammer." The lady"s request sounded strange to me, but I didn't show any confusion, saying:

"Certainly, could you wait a second, please?"

Going far inside the store, I tried to figure out what she was asking for. But despite "thumbing through" all the pages of the dictionary in my mind, I couldn't solve the puzzle. After a while of being in two minds, I approached "my customer" with a hammer!

She looked at me and I looked at her and we both had been trying to answer the same question: "Why are we staring at each other?" At last the lady broke the tension.

"Where is your boss?" she asked.

"At the counter." I pointed to the place where my boss had been counting money. She took the tool from my hand and twirling it as if it were a sword, proceeded in the indicated direction. Two minutes later she came back to me, showing a box of - baking soda! The only way I could think of to cover up that embarrassing misunderstanding was to say "I am very sorry!" And I did it! But my "sorry" wasn't enough for my boss. I was sent downstairs to the basement with a new order: Clean that whole place!

That "incident" made me think that English was indeed a very difficult language to learn and that I had to take serious steps to master it. At least on the basic level. Studying books that I had bought in order to attain my goal, I cursed people who had invented such a "something" to make others feel miserable. Although I knew that letters were put together to make words, I couldn't read those words. It sounded stupid when I tried to pronounce them the way they were written. Asking somebody who knew English to read them for me, I heard entirely different words.

It was hard for me to understand why, for instance, two letters "D" and "O" were read as "DOO!" And when I had "G" and "O" together I had to pronounce them as "Gou!" The same problem was with "M" and "E." To me the sound should be: "MA," but for the English speaking person it had the sound "MEE!"

Learning the English alphabet by heart, I got mixed up with some of the letters from it. I couldn't figure out why "B" was "bee," "C" was "sea," "R" was "are," "T" was "tea," and "U" was "you."

The difference between spelling and pronunciation of English words made my hair stand on end. If I took a picture of myself, I had a "photograph" instead of "fotograf!" So why was a "face" and not "phace?" I opened the "door," stepping on the fresh clean "floor!" But I hung my coat on the "hook" and I "took" a "look" on the freshly painted "wall!"

There is a Polish saying: "The farther in the deeper!" and probably I went too far in my 'discoveries.'

"Saw eye" have nothing "two ad" except that "eye" now "no" how "two reed" book "end" if "eye" spend an "our" a day, learning a "knew" language, "eye" won't make a "full" of myself anymore. Well, maybe one "our" is "two" little. "To ours" in the morning "end to ours" at "knight" will "B" better. "Eye no" that "for ours" a day is "knot" enough "two" master something "knew," but "U sea eye" have "know" choice. "End eye" think that "eye" have "two meat" more people "two here" the "reel" English. "Two B" honest "Eye knead" their help!

Thank "U."


Spell Check Rhymer Poetry Analyst


Help Us Stop Plagiarism - Nearly all works at PnP are original. However a few people choose to plagiarize. To check, choose a phrase from the work, then either drag and drop to the search box or copy and paste. click on search and works at Google will be shown which match. Just to be sure, please do this before you recommend or rate the work highly...
Google
If you think this work is plagiarized please


Select a Random Work
from Stories


Comments on this Article/Poem:
Click on the commenter's name to see their Author's Page

04-01-2001 Beverley McInnis    

This is excellent and well written. I cannot imagine trying to learn English - it can be confusing enough even when it is your first language! I imagine that you can now laugh over the Arm and Hammer story, although at the time it would be so difficult. Myself, I thought the woman very rude, what is wrong with a bit of patience and understanding? Thank you for sharing this story.



Visitor Reads: 400
Total Reads: 526
Comments: 1

Author's Page

Email the Author

Add a Comment




Favorite of:





Send Page to a Friend
Points Reference Privacy
PnP Terms of Service Contact Us
  SEO Software

Visitors
View Stats