
Thursday, April 22, 2010
10 Reasons to Fall in Love with Italian
How well stated.
10 Reasons to Fall in Love with Italian
The Faster Times:Dianne Hales;
April 14, 2010
Innamorarsi
To Fall in Love
Italian embodies its native speakers’
greatest genius: the ability to transform anything — from marble to melody,
from the humble noodle to life itself — into a joyous art While other tongues
do little more than speak, Italian thrills the ear, beguiles the mind,
captivates the heart, and enraptures the soul.
innamoramento
falling in love
There is no English word that quite
captures the sensation of innamoramento, of falling head-over-heels in
love, deeper than infatuation, way beyond bewitched, bothered, and bewildered.
But that’s what I am — an innamorata, enchanted by Italian, fascinated
by its history, tantalized by its adventures, addicted to its sounds, and
ever eager to spend more time in its company.
Why fall in love with this luscious
language? Here are my top ten reasons:
1. Italian is “beautiful, fun and
sexy.” That’s how people perceive Italy and its language, Stephen Brockman,
a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, observes in an essay called
“In Defense of European Languages.” “Why not?” he adds. “I can’t see anything
wrong with that.” Neither can I.
2. No other language is more romantic.
All the Romance languages evolved from the volgare (vernacular) of ancient
Rome Yet none may have so many seductive ways of expressing amore: Ti amo,
mio tesoro (I love you, my darling) for l’amore della tua vita (the love
of your life). Ti voglio bene (for all others). Voglio soltante te (I want
only you). Vieni qui e baciami (Come here and kiss me.) Ti adoro (I adore
you). (Click here for more romantic phrases.) for more romantic phrases.)
3. Everything sounds better in Italian.
An ordinary towel becomes an asciugamano; a handkerchief, a fazzoletto;
a dog leash, a guinzaglio. Garbage isn’t mere trash. In Italian, it’s spazzatura.
Italian’s linguistic pantry is stuffed with words delicious enough to eat,
such as cappellacci di zucca (pumpkin-stuffed pasta shaped like caps),
ciambellone (ring cake), sospiri di monaca (a nun’s sigh), tiramisù
(pick-me-up) and lacrime d’amore (tears of love), candy sugar pearls filled
with sweet syrup.
4. You can use your hands — a lot!
In Italian speaking without gestures is like writing without punctuation.
Hands become commas, exclamation points and question marks. Who even needs
words when a tug at a bottom eyelid translates into “Attenzione!” (”Watch
out! Pay attention!”), a straight line drawn in the air as “Perfetto!”
and fingers flicking upward from the neck past the tip of the chin as “Che
me ne frega” (”I don’t give a *&#@!”). (For more Italian gestures,
click here.)
5. Italian has become the new French.
With only an estimated 60 to 63 million native speakers (compared to a
whopping 1.8 blilion who claim at least a little English), Italian barely
eclipses Urdu, Pakistan’s official language, for nineteenth place as a
spoken tongue. Yet Italian ranks fourth among the most studied languages-after
English, Spanish, and French, which Italian now rivals as a language of
culture and refinement.
6. You can immerse yourself in an
Italian masterpiece. You can’t sculpt like Michelangelo, paint like Leonardo
or design like Armani. But you can read and speak the language that 14th
century poets — Dante first and foremost – crafted from the effervescent
Tuscan vernacular. Handpicked by writers and scholars in the first official
Vocabolario in any Western tongue, Italian words represent “i più
bei fiori” (the most beautiful flowers) in the language.
7. Speaking Italian may be the closest
many of us get to singing. What makes Italian so musical are its vigorous
vocali (vowels): An Italian “a” slides up from the throat into an ecstatic
“aaaah.” Its “e” (pronounced like a hard English “a”) cheers like the hearty
“ay” at the end of hip-hip-hooray. The “i” (which sounds like an English
“e”) glides with the glee of the double e in bee. The “o” (an English “o”
on steroids) is as perfectly round as the red circle Giotto painted in
a single stroke for a pope demanding a sample of his work. The macho “u”
(deeper, stronger and longer than its English counterpart) lunges into
the air like a penalty kick from Italy’s world-champion soccer team, the
Azzurri (Blues).
8. Italian may be our universal mother
tongue. Dating back almost three millennia, its primal sounds-virtually
identical to those that roared through Roman amphitheaters thousands of
years ago-strike a chord in our universal linguistic DNA. According to
some scholars, Italian may come closer than any other idiom to expressing
what it means to be human.
9. You’re never too young — or too
old — to learn Italian. As brain scans have shown, groping for even the
simplest words in a different language sparks new clusters of neurons and
synapses. Within weeks in an all-Italian class, preschoolers understand
everything happening around them. It takes longer as we get older, but
learning a second language later in life provides a different advantage:
It helps stave off dementia.
10. Italians. The more you know of
their language, the more you’ll realize how right the British author E.M.
Forster was when he urged visitors to drop “that awful tourist idea that
Italy’s only a museum of antiquities and art.” His advice: “Love and understand
the Italians for the people are more marvelous than the land.” Indeed they
are. And if you’re of Italian descent, cherish Italy’s language as a marvelous
part of your heritage.
Let me add a bonus reason for falling
in love with Italian: La Bella Lingua: My Love Affair with Italian, the
World’s Most Enchanting Language will be available in paperback on April
20.
Click here to see me explain how
I fell in love with this luscious language.
http://thefastertimes.com/italianlessons/2010/04/
11/10-reasons-to-fall-in-love-with-italian-part-i/
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