Sorry but I have to make a comment on your last remark. I work for a
British company and for my two kopek's worth I am thoroughly amazed at
the different accents from Proper old school British English to a New
Castle Jordie accent. Sometimes we need a translation from English to
English just to understand what our Jordie is even talking about.
America has an excuse for the different accents for exactly the reasons
you stated below, but what is Brit's excuse? There is a different accent
in every other area.
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Anthony Corbett
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 3:33 PM
To: Kirill Galetski; The Moscow Expat List
Subject: Re: Expat List Russians' preoccupation with British English
 
Would you go to Quebec to learn French, or Brazil to learn Portuguese? I
doubt it. Why would you want to learn American English with all its
corruptions and barely understandable slang, originating from
immigration several hundred years ago, when you can learn British
English, the latest form of a language that is constantly refining? In
addition, the UK is considerably closer, unless you live in the Far
East.

Why would you teach both forms of a language? That is like teaching
several dialects of a language at the same time.

My two pence worth!

Anthony
2008/9/2 Kirill Galetski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hi,

Russians' preoccupation with British English and necessarily having a
British is irksome at best, idiotic at worst. As a former English
teacher, I take offence [sic] to it.

The world standard for business is American English, with all of the
trappings thereof. It's not an accident that major non-Anglo
corporations such as German concern Bosch have American English as their
standard for all English-language communications.

To quote Bill Bryson from his book MADE IN AMERICA, An Informal History
of the English Language in the United States,

"To this day it remains a commonplace in England that American English
is a corrupted form of British speech, that the inhabitants of the New
World display a kind of helpless, chronic 'want of refinement' every
time they open their mouths and attempt to issue sounds. In fact, in
several significant ways it is British speech that has become corrupted,
or, to put it in less reactionary terms, has quietly evolved."

Nevertheless, I believe that when English is taught, both the American
and British varieties should be taught in nearly equal measure. This
implies having a teacher that is competent to do both, but it certainly
does not limit the teacher to being only of the British nationality.

Just my two kopeks' worth.

Kirill.


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Date: Tue,  2 Sep 2008 12:03:37 +0400 (MSD)
Subject: Expat Digest, Vol 47, Issue 3

> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 1 Sep 2008 21:37:25 +0400
> From: "Dasha Repina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Expat List English tutor
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], "The Moscow Expat List" <[email protected]>
> Message-ID:
>       <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> Hi John,
>
> thanks a lot for your attention, but the requirement of my boss is
quite
> exact. He wants British teacher.
>
> All of the best, Daria.

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-- 
Anthony Corbett
Head of International M&A
Vimpelcom
4 Krasnoproletarskaya St.
Moscow 127006
Russian Federation

T: +7909 991 7783
M: +7962 942 1682
E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
S: anthonycorbett
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