I make no secret of the fact I use the television as our unpaid baby sitter.
When people ask do I have help, as in why don’t you have an au pair, you
silly person? I tell them I do have
help.
I have the TV.
You silly person.
And furthermore, it is essential
to their linguistic skills.
We send our boys to the local
Gael Scoil and they are loving it. In
Ireland, from the day you enter the primary education system at the age of 5,
let’s say, till the day you leave, at the tender age of 17, you learn your native
tongue.
Yet only some of us can actually
speak it. Fluently I mean. I have a few catch phrases along the lines of
the sun is shining and there isn’t a cloud in the sky. (Ironic, I know. It being Ireland and all)
The first line in every single
Irish essay I wrote was always, “suddenly, the dog started barking.” Asking
permission to use the bathroom was drummed into us the very first day of school
and of course, please and thank you are obligatory. That would be about it.
Our two oldest boys on the other
hand are making major and impressive inroads with the language. It is fantastic to hear them seamlessly meld
from Bearla (English) into Gaeilge (Irish) whenever we meet a Muinteoir
(teacher) out and about.
And now, thanks to the unpaid
baby sitter, they can add American-ese to their language skills.
She is teaching them and teaching
them well. Trouble is, I reckon I am
going to need a translator one day.
For the Irish, yes, but
absolutely definitely maybe for the Americanisms.
Some of them are quite
straightforward. They speak for
themselves.
Others get the accent for added
measure. The boys are big fans of that
annoying yellow Sponge and his Bikini Bottom home. They pronounce every other character in their
regular Irish accents but Gary gets called “Gay-ree” in perfect American
brogue.
Their fun and games are often
interrupted with “Back in a sec. I gotta
go pee pee.” I suppose it’s better than
what they could say.
When I was little, apparently I
referred to my sisters as “the lads.” My
boys round each other up with calls of “you guys.”
“Totally awesome” describes
anything from a treat to a piece of rock.
“I don’t feel like that right now,”
is usually in response to meal times or going to bed.
The older two declare “swweeeeeeet” at anything that moves
if they like the look of it.
The other day when I tried to
herd Shy Boy off the couch and away from a totally awesome cartoon, I was given
an incredulous, “you gotta be kiddin’ me!”
Like, oh my god, what do you say to that?
No comments:
Post a Comment