Frederick Bodmer
The Loom of Language
An Approach to the Mastery of Many Languages
Edited by Lancelot Hogben
Here is an informative introduction to language: its origins in the past, its growth
through history, and its present use for communication between peoples. It is at
the same time a history of language, a guide to foreign tongues, and a method for
learning them. It shows, through basic vocabularies, family resemblances of languagesTeutonic,
Romance, Greekhelpful tricks of translation, key combinations of roots and phonetic
patterns. It presents by common-sense methods the most helpful approach to the mastery
of many languages; it condenses vocabulary to a minimum of essential words; it simplifies
grammar in an entirely new way; and it teaches a languages as it is actually used
in everyday life.
But this book is more than a guide to foreign languages; it goes deep into the roots
of all knowledge as it explores the history of speech. It lights up the dim pathways
of prehistory and unfolds the story of the slow growth of human expression from
the most primitive signs and sounds to the elaborate variations of the highest cultures.
Without language no knowledge would be possible; here we see how language is at
once the source and the reservoir of all we know.
"Makes language study more hopeful and exciting than anything I have read before."
Lewis Gannett
"Rewarding and delightful . . . for everyone who has the slightest curiosity or
ambition in self expression, this is a book that contains months or years of pleasurable
profit." Christopher Morley
Frederick Bodmer is a distinguished Swiss philologist.
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