mumusings
Active Member
Hi Fairyprincess,
Thanks. I'm not fussy with street food so instant paste is fine with me. No patience to pound and chop up ingredients - plus I hate laksa leaves and anything of the sort (including basil and herbs). I'm always happy to try out these instant mixes so long as they are without msg.
Hi Tam,
Well, it's never easy picking up a 2nd language (and a totally different and non-related language) after 6. I picked up a few dialects before 4, thanks to our grandparents and multi-racial community. When I was at Isetan Parkway Parade, I asked a China-Chinese saleslady if they sold the "shoe brand Crocs", she stared at me blankly and said, "Thi-se shoe department. Co-se-metic no-te here."
I am fine with hiring of foreign workers from any country but seriously, there IS some disparity between their declared proficiency of English and what they actually can speak/understand most of the time. If they're doing frontline service jobs (bus-drivers, sales, receptionist etc), they MUST be able to effectively comprehend, read, interpret, process thoughts and speak well in English.
I felt very proud of our very young students (Sec 3s I met) during the YOG games. They were able to handle both locals and foreign language speakers well.
Thanks. I'm not fussy with street food so instant paste is fine with me. No patience to pound and chop up ingredients - plus I hate laksa leaves and anything of the sort (including basil and herbs). I'm always happy to try out these instant mixes so long as they are without msg.
Hi Tam,
Well, it's never easy picking up a 2nd language (and a totally different and non-related language) after 6. I picked up a few dialects before 4, thanks to our grandparents and multi-racial community. When I was at Isetan Parkway Parade, I asked a China-Chinese saleslady if they sold the "shoe brand Crocs", she stared at me blankly and said, "Thi-se shoe department. Co-se-metic no-te here."
I am fine with hiring of foreign workers from any country but seriously, there IS some disparity between their declared proficiency of English and what they actually can speak/understand most of the time. If they're doing frontline service jobs (bus-drivers, sales, receptionist etc), they MUST be able to effectively comprehend, read, interpret, process thoughts and speak well in English.
I felt very proud of our very young students (Sec 3s I met) during the YOG games. They were able to handle both locals and foreign language speakers well.