John,

If the IBM 704 had been one of your first few computers, LISP would be
easier for you.

About vocabulary, there are complications.  Speakers of one of the
Latin dialects, French, Italian, Romanian, Spanish, etc., are more
likely to know notionally 'difficult' English words, which have
cognates in their languages, than 'simple' ones.  They may not know
'fish', but they are all but certain to know 'piscatorial'.  (If they
know Grimm's laws, they will be able to guess at 'fish' too; but that
is now often too much to expect.)

Moreover, communication with adult non-native speakers of any language
in that language is much better achieved with redundancy than the use
of a basic vocabulary.  If a non-native speaker does not understand
your first effort, try again and again in different ways with
different examples.  The impact of your doing so will be cumulative.

My experience with my children confirmed these notions.  I never used
a subset of my vocabulary in talking with them, and in the upshot they
acquired my vocabulary early on.

John Gilmore, Ashland, MA 01721 - USA

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