The mother tongue of Lystra was likely Lycaonian, a language spoken in the region of Lystra during ancient times. This language was distinct from Greek and would have been the primary language spoken by the inhabitants of Lystra.
English is her mother tongue. It is due to her place of birth, She was born and raised in London.
The opposite of "mother tongue" is "foreign language," which refers to a language that is not one's native or first language.
Mother tongue is important because it is the first language a person learns and is closely tied to one's cultural identity and sense of belonging. Proficiency in one's mother tongue can also facilitate cognitive development and learning of additional languages. Preserving and promoting the use of mother tongues is essential for maintaining linguistic diversity and preserving heritage.
A mother cat. It grooms itself with its tongue and discipline its kittens by bumping them with its head or licking them roughly to set boundaries.
No, there is no bone in your tongue. The tongue is a muscle, and only a muscle.
Lois was the grandmother of Timothy, and Eunice was his mother (Timothy 1:5) They lived in the town of Lystra. Lystra was about 18 miles from Iconium and Derbe was about 40 miles SE of Lystra. Both were in the Roman province of Galatia, and Lycaonia was the district.
Lystra is 160 cm.
Lystra Gretter was born in 1858.
Lystra Gretter died in 1951.
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Lystra was born on August 25, 1983, in Korea.
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.
Sunil Gavaskar's Mother tongue is Konkani
"The Mother Tongue: English and How It Got That Way" was written by Bill Bryson in 1990.
Yes it is, tongue and mother tongue as a synonym.