"Mother tongue" is the title for the language/languages into which someone is born. Usually it means the language of one's parents.
"Community" is any group of bonded together by commonalities (geography, purpose, set of beliefs, etc.).
Depending on what you mean by "first language", there may be no difference. For most people it implies the language you learned first, which is your mother tongue. But for some it might mean "the language you are most fluent in or use most often" which might not be your mother tongue, if, for example, you emigrated at an early age.
The biggest difference between teaching mother tongue and teaching of a second language in most cases is the age of the person learning and the number of hours learning. When learning your mother tongue you start the first day you are born and you learn for all hours that you are awake. Teaching a second language, you have the added benefit of having a reference point (your mother tongue). You can learn for example that "bonjour" means "hello" which can be very helpful to learn things quickly. When you learn your mother tongue you learn through association only but in most cases you spend more time learning and have more hours of repetition which leads to inevitable fluency.
The difference between a cats tongue and a dogs tongue is that a cats tongue is rough and looks like there is little teeth on the tongue. The dogs tongue is smoother than a cats and is most of the time longer than a cats tongue. Also a dogs tongue can be different colours. It seems to be said also that a dogs tongue can heel a wound.
reaction paper about mother tongue
The Mother Tongue was created in 1990-07.
Her mother tongue is 'Tulu'.
The Mother Tongue has 279 pages.
== In this case tongue means language. It is called mother tongue because it is the language spoken by the mother country in which you were born. In multilingual societies like Nigeria, Ghana and most African countries, mother tongue cannot refer to only the language spoken by the mother country. Mother tongue would mean the language the mother or caretaker passes on to the child. The assumption is that children grow under the eye of their mothers, hence mother tongue.
The rules of my mother tongue may differ in terms of grammar, syntax, sentence structure, and vocabulary from those of the English language. These differences can include variations in verb conjugation, noun gender, word order, and use of articles. It is important to be aware of these distinctions when learning and using both languages.
* Language: Spanish is PR's native tongue, Portuguese is Brazil's native tongue
the blue tailed dosent have a blue tongue and the blue tongue lizard hasn't got a blue tail. :)
Sunil Gavaskar's Mother tongue is Konkani