Well, I'll tell you even as an American who's lived in a relatively similar country, culturally, in northwestern Europe (Belgium/Netherlands), where they spoke a related language, good luck trying to learn the local language, especially in the Netherlands, as locals will immediately switch to English rather than having the patience to deal with you. I'd imagine this phenomonon is probably the same in lots of other countries, like the Scandinavian ones and others. So it's not even always that Americans and other English speakers don't want to attempt to learn another language, they're just not really enabled to do so in many places. I'm guessing the situation would be much worse with a language like Japanese, which has fairly isolated usage and a much more difficult structure and writing form, for an English speaker, or a speaker of any European language, for that matter.
Itβs kind of interesting as the NJ accent might be heavy influenced by the original colonization by the Dutch and Swedish because a very fluent Dutch speaker accent reminds me of a soft South Jersey accent.
18
u/SnooPears5432 ILLINOIS ποΈπ¨ 2d ago
Well, I'll tell you even as an American who's lived in a relatively similar country, culturally, in northwestern Europe (Belgium/Netherlands), where they spoke a related language, good luck trying to learn the local language, especially in the Netherlands, as locals will immediately switch to English rather than having the patience to deal with you. I'd imagine this phenomonon is probably the same in lots of other countries, like the Scandinavian ones and others. So it's not even always that Americans and other English speakers don't want to attempt to learn another language, they're just not really enabled to do so in many places. I'm guessing the situation would be much worse with a language like Japanese, which has fairly isolated usage and a much more difficult structure and writing form, for an English speaker, or a speaker of any European language, for that matter.