You mean they influenced each other, but still exist as separated languages (assuming, of course, both as separated Minnan languages) in S'pore/M'sia? Or they merged to form a hybrid language (perhaps with Hokkien dominancy)?I esp. like how MY/SG Hokkien has taken in a lot of Teochew and Malay elements. Harry Lee got a kick out of calling Sg Hoklo "an adulterated Hokkien-Teochew mix", but what could be better for Hokkien and Teochew than to adulterate each other and grow?!
Well, Taiwanese people were brainwashed (like everywhere else; time has changed, people is well-educated but still easily manipulated.. if not gov, it's the medias.. okay, end of my disgressing :\) by Japanese once, and then by ROC. Anyway, remaining as a separated nation would of course be benefitial to all Taiwanese languages. Language policy in Taiwan is far from acceptable, but of course, what they've got now is better than nothing. I just feel Taiwanese Government fail to acknowledge Taiwan as a multilingual society, and things don't seem to be going to change. S'pore isn't what I'd call a model of multilingual society, but things there seem to somewhat work (except by the "Speak Mandarin" thing and by government refusal to recognize Hokkien as an official language). I see lots of claims that Taiwanese, Hakka and other minority (I hate the term "aboriginal") languages are being taught at Taiwanese schools for a number of years already, but looking at youngsters in Taiwan, if they -EVER- received any education in mother tongue, it was indeed not effective at all. I don't know what they're doing, but something is really wrong there... [ While I'm writing that, many minority languages in Brazil are also dying out. My grandparents "dialect" is also dying out in Japan. Their state is comparable or even worse than that from many "aboriginal" languages in Taiwan. It's so easy to talk about others while you're probably not doing homework either ]The military: always an interesting element. My guess is that military service has played a HUGE role in the acceptance of Mandarin in Taiwan, and in building tolerance for Hoklo among the 49er Chinese of TW. It's also a powerful indoctrination in ROC identity. Guys who've done their time in the ROC armed forces seem to be unable to relate to China (PRC) wholeheartedly -- there's always this animosity there, this vague, "wanton" desire for revenge.
Okay, but my hope is that somewhere in Hoklosphere, new terms for at least some of these concepts and new things have been coined based on Hokkien native terms. Mandarin loans and calques are as bad as Japanese loans and calques.Maybe. Maybe not. Psychologically, they're very important to some people. Loanwords from JPnese form the backbone of the argument that "TWnese and Banlamese are two different languages". But how many JPnese loans are there in TWnese Hoklo that don't exist side by side with a commonly used native word or Mandarin loan? Of the hundreds or thousands that fit this description, I'd venture to say that most are either pan-Asian-Pacific Sino-Japanese calques OR have to do with 20th cen. technology, such as the parts of a car or motorbike, or the word for MOTORBIKE itself: o·tóbái, or the word for LIGHTER: làità.
I don't know, when I think about minority languages, I just feel so... I don't know, sad? Since nothing is being done in favour of Hokkien by governments, and most speakers seem to just don't care about it (I once looked down at my grandparents' dialect so I know that feeling), I feel powerless, but I know I could do something for them as well instead of whining here. I don't know, I'm just stupid
No idea 'bout that. So if you could briefly comment on that...Also the approach to sex and the sexes.