Second Mother Essays

  • My Second Mother

    894 Words  | 2 Pages

    Throughout the sixteen years of my life, I have heard many stories about certain people and experiences that have changed people and their outlook on life. The people who have told these interesting and attention-grabbing stories, usually my friends and classmates, talked about how these people and experiences had a tremendous impact on them and made them more mature. The recurring theme in each story has been coming out of adolescence as a better person, either emotionally, spiritually, mentally

  • English as a Second Language in Amy Tan's Mother Tongue

    529 Words  | 2 Pages

    being unique under its own conditions. In Tan's “Mother Tongue”, she discusses how her mother's incoherent language is “broken” and “limited” as compared to other native English speakers. When focusing on Amy Tan, she grows noticeably embarrassed with her mother's lack of acuteness in the language, which then influences Tan to “prove her mastery over the English language.” However, she soon learns from herself and -- most importantly -- her mother that a language's purpose is to capture a person's

  • Calpurnia: A Second Mother in To Kill a Mockingbird

    1052 Words  | 3 Pages

    but she takes her role in the children’s life more seriously. She acts as parent; constantly teaching the kids lessons about life and race. She serves as a bridge for Jem and Scout between the white and black communities. Calpurnia could be the mother Jem and Scout never had because she is wise, caring, and patient with the kids. Wise is just one of the many characteristics that describe Calpurnia. Calpurnia explains the difficult parts of life and the complications in the racist county of Maycomb

  • Second Mother Anna Muylaert Analysis

    1339 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Second Mother” is a Brazilian film and is spoken in Portuguese with english subtitles. Anna Muylaert wrote, directed, and helped to produce the film Second Mother. Anna Muylaert is quoted as saying that she wanted to make a film about people who take care of other people’s children referring to it as “sacred work that is very underrated”. Second Mother was made in Brazil and was mainly filmed in Morumbi, a high -class neighborhood

  • Children in Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, Devils, The Brothers Karamazov

    2163 Words  | 5 Pages

    Polenka, must take care of her younger siblings and help her mother with the daily chores. Although she doesn't fully comprehend what is happening around her, she senses that her mother needs support and therefore "always followed her with great wise eyes and drove her utmost to pretend she understood everything"(p.151). She is too young and innocent to understand, but she instinctively sacrifices herself and adopts the role of the second mother in order to take care of her younger siblings. These siblings

  • Personal Narrative Essay: Growing Up As A Second Mother

    2346 Words  | 5 Pages

    Growing up i’ve always been second. Second child to come out of my mother, My father 's second son, second in society, second to my sister. That meaning, I have got everything she had, she did everything first. Although I was second to grow up, I was first in many things. I was first to eat when we had family (immediate and mother 's side) get - togethers because one of my family 's ways, were kids eat first. I was first to finish eating, first to get boy toys, first to play sports, first person

  • How to Conduct a Time Study

    1235 Words  | 3 Pages

    How to Conduct a Time Study Introduction The time study is an act used to measure the amount of time an employee takes to perform a process or a series of processes that are required in their daily work routine. Time studies are not to be confused with the study of motion; as they are strictly a numerical measurement of time usually documented in one-hundredths of an hour. There are other methods in use today, in addition to time studies, which help time analyst’s measure work. They are standard

  • Amy Tan Mother Tongue Summary

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the essay “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan, Tan claims the idea that we speak different languages to communicate with each other and that our intelligence is judged by the way we speak. As a fictional author, Tan is amazed by language and uses it as a part of her work. Tan observes experiences that helped her notice the different type of “englishes” she uses. As child born in a chines culture, tan had to speak to types of languages. One language she used was academic English, which she learned from

  • Max Wilson Woodard Biography

    1499 Words  | 3 Pages

    father was the owner and operator of Woodard Cleaners and his mother, Bubbie, as he called her, was the owner and operator of a beauty shop. 1938-1941 His first dog was an English Shepard named Rex, who was a one man dog and his constant traveling companion. Beginning at about age three, he and his dog Rex had an insatiable desire to explore any place that was outside the house and within walking distance. Since both his mother and dad worked long hours at their respective jobs, he had a daytime

  • Language Acquisition and Acculturation

    1123 Words  | 3 Pages

    because all that people know about their origin is communicated to them using language. In most cases mother tongues are suitable in expressing ones way of life. The native language is the best in expressing basic societal affairs. Language is the key medium of communication and it should be used in its simplest form because the simpler the language the easier the communication (Diyanni 633-639). ‘Mother Tongue’ a story by Amy Tan tries to take us through the different events one should change the manner

  • The Importance of International Schools

    1412 Words  | 3 Pages

    Schools International schools are found all around the world. In most case, international schools use English as the medium of instruction. Originally, they have been created to allow the children of expatriates to receive their education in their mother tongue. They have been also found to create a mutual understanding and peace among people of different cultures. According Hyden (2006), the origin of international schools is debatable. The international schools of Geneva and Yokohama that existed

  • Amy Tan Language Barriers

    957 Words  | 2 Pages

    major effect on the lives of our immigrants and those who are acquiring English as their second language. Language barrier is a barrier to communication resulting from speaking different languages. The immigration population in the United States is growing rapidly. For many immigrants English is not their first language. In America, English is the main spoken language. People who are acquiring English as their second language are expected to embrace English along with customs and culture while at the

  • Search for My Tongue

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    of having both your mother tongue and a second language: "I ask you, what would you do if you had two tongues in your mouth." This quotation emphasises that, for the writer, being able to speak two languages has led to difficulties. "I ask you" involves the reader in her situation, making the reader empathise with Bhatt about speaking a foreign language so much that she fears she is losing her mother tongue. The metaphor of two tongues, her mother tongue and the second language, is extended

  • Explore the ways in which two or three of these poems present the

    1661 Words  | 4 Pages

    causes. The two poems I am choosing are "Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan" and "Search for My Tongue". "Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan" is written by Moniza Alvi, a woman who was born in Pakistan but moved to England at an early age. Her mother was from England and white, her Father was Pakistani and so black. This makes Moniza 'half-caste', as well as the aunts in poem being from her father's side. Her poem begins with a description of the gifts her aunts send her; "They sent me

  • Amy Tan Mother Tongue Summary

    1031 Words  | 3 Pages

    Amrish Patel Comp 110 May 28, 2016 Mother Tongue, by Amy Tan A language can tell many things about a particular person’s identity. Through the medium of language only, a person can define himself to another person. Those immigrants who speak with a Italian,Chinese or Indian accent when he or she speaks English which may be tell that English is a second language for those immigrants and also their grammar may be a little different and people will think that he or she

  • Analysis Of Amy Tan's Mother Tongue

    1460 Words  | 3 Pages

    English, he/she somewhat receives more benefits in studying and working tasks than the ones whose English are limited. In the article “ Mother Tongue,” the author, Amy Tan presents some situations and experiences that she has had throughout her life when her mother is a Chinese-American spoken. She notices her feelings and her thought when she acknowledges her mother language’s limitation. The stories that Tan has experienced with her mother’s language are also the typical stories

  • Moving Between Different Cultures in Poetry

    933 Words  | 2 Pages

    in India in 1956, her family moved to the United States of America in the 1960's and she now lives in Germany. In her poem Search for My Tongue she explains how she feels about having two different languages her birth language, Gujerati and her second language, German. Half-Caste and Search for My Tongue, create very vivid images, which makes it easier for the reader to interpret and understand both the poems and the authors' opinion on the different cultures. Half- Caste creates many images

  • Reflection On Multiilingualism

    1354 Words  | 3 Pages

    reflect, using Gibbs’ Reflective Cycle (1988). During conversation with a Polish mother of a two year old boy (child A) I noticed that the mother is talking to her son in English. When asked why she does not communicate in her mother tongue, she explained that her husband is English and that is how they speak at home. After that she expressed her concerns about her son becoming bilingual as she believes that second language can affect the acquisition of English, leaving her son behind

  • A Rhetorical Analysis Of Mother Tongue By Amy Tan

    662 Words  | 2 Pages

    Amy Tan’s article “Mother Tongue,” was a remarkable eye opener where she subtly informs her readers about cultural racism, and how difficult it can be living in America without the proficient knowledge of American culture and language. She shares different thought-provoking stories of her mother as a Chinese immigrant, being treated unequally because she speaks poor English. Tan is shedding light about the corruption regarding cultural ideals, as well as proving her arguments concerning the power

  • Desire In Introduction To The Reading Of Hegel

    749 Words  | 2 Pages

    the feminine problem. She shows the true nature of women by using her knowledge of the crusade of women in Western society and her existentialist background. Women’s place in society has dependent on other. As a child she depends on her father and mother, as an adult she depends on her husband, and as an old women she depends on her son or male relatives. In now time of her life does she seek to depend on herself. “If women seem to be the inessential