Y Prosiect yn gryno

The Project in Brief

Il Progetto in breve

Co-official, endangered, indigenous, regional and minority languages, usually referred to as Regional Minority Languages (RMLs), have one thing in common: their speakers tend to switch to the dominant language in certain contexts and situations. They do so when there is a speaker of the dominant language around, or when they approach a stranger, or when they go to the shops or to work. Where the minority language is not officially supported the switch can be faster and more frequent.



Why do people switch to the dominant or majority language so quickly in certain situations?


Psychologists have a name for this behaviour: submissiveness. Submissiveness is a spontaneous, self-induced suppression of a certain behaviour in favour of another one by virtue of habit, or of fear of punishment. Linguistic submissiveness happens when somebody stops speaking her or his minority language and switches to the other one, even when no-one has asked for this.


If someone is a speaker of Welsh and when entering a local shop in a Welsh-speaking area where they know that the staff speak Welsh yet they start to speak English, then that person is being linguistically submissive. If two speakers of Irish are having a conversation and then a stranger approaches them and they switch to English before being told anything, then they are being linguistically submissive.
There are many forms of linguistic submissiveness. All of them can create anxiety in the speaker and they often help to induce a sense of failure and helplessness. The good news is that it is a behaviour, and as such, it can be changed.

The LISTEN project is developing a methodology to train speakers of RMLs to modify their behaviour, reduce anxiety, and become confident speakers of their minority language.

With time, practice, and goodwill, anyone can change his or her attitude and increase the frequency of social use of the language.

Languages of the project

Cym

Welsh (Cymraeg) is a Celtic language that shares very few similarities with English making inter-comprehensibility limited to the use of some loan words or codeswitching into English by Welsh speakers.
 
 
 

Fry

West Frisian, or simply Frisian or Frysk, is a West Germanic language spoken mostly in the province of Friesland (Fryslân) in the north of the Netherlands. It is the most widely spoken of the Frisian languages.
 
 
 
 

Gle

Irish (Gaeilge) is one of the oldest and most historical written languages in the world. The earliest evidence of this is on Ogham stones from the 5th century.
 
 
 

Hun

There are 1.25 million Hungarian native speakers in Romania, which represent 6.3% of the population. Most of them live in Transylvania, where there are two regions where they make up the majority of the inhabitants.
 
 
 
Acknowledgment

This project has received funding from the Erasmus+ funding programme under grant agreement no. 2019-1-ES01-KA204-064957