Page 222 - Use Your Memory
P. 222

USE  YOUR  MEMORY
 the key word is association. In the context of language learning, it is
 well  to  associate  sounds,  images  and  similarities,  using  the  fact
 that certain  languages  are  grouped  in  'families'  and  have words
 that are  related.
 To give you an idea of this linking method, I shall consider a few
 words from English, French, Latin and German. In English, you
 want to remember the word vertigo,  which  means  'dizziness'  or
 'giddiness',  and in which a person feels as if surrounding objects
 were  turning around.  To  imprint  this  word  on  the  memory  you
 associate the sound of it with the phrase where to go? which is the
 kind  of question  you  would  ask  if you  felt  that  all  surrounding
 objects were  rotating about you.
 Two words that many people  confuse  in the  English language
 are acrophobia, which is a morbid fear of heights, and agoraphobia, a
 morbid  fear of open spaces. The  distinction can be firmly estab-
 lished if you associate the aero in acrophobia with acrobat (a person
 who performs at great height) and the agora in agoraphobia with
 agriculture,  bringing  to  mind  images  of open  fields  (though  the
 Greek word agora actually means 'marketplace').
 Foreign  languages  are  more  approachable  when  one  realises
 that  they  form  groups.  Practically  all  European  languages  (with
 the  exception  of Finnish,  Hungarian  and  Basque)  are part of the
 Indo-European  group,  and  consequently they contain  a number
 of words  similar  in  both  sound  and  meaning.  For  example,  the
 words forfather. German,  Voter; Latin,pater; French, pere; Italian
 and Spanish, padre. A knowledge of Latin is of enormous help in
 understanding all  the  Romance languages,  in which many of the
 words are similar. The Latin word for love is amor. Related to love
 in  the  English  language  is  the  word  amorous,  which  means
 'inclined to love; in love; and  of, or pertaining to, love'. The links
 are obvious. Similarly, you have the Latin word for God: Deus. In
 English,  the  words  deity  and  deify  mean,  respectively,  'divine
 status;  a god; the  Creator'  and 'to make  a  god of.
 French  was  derived  from  the  speech  of  the  Roman
 legionnaires,  who  called the  head  testa,  hence  tete,  and the  arm
 brachium, hence bras, etc. About 50 per cent of ordinary English
 speech is derived from Latin (plus Greek) either directly or by way
 of Norman  French,  leading  to  many  direct  similarities  between
 French  and  English.
 In addition to similarities based on language grouping,  foreign
 words can be remembered in a manner not unlike that explained
 for remembering English words. Since we are discussing French,
 the  following two examples are appropriate:  in French, the word
 128
   217   218   219   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227