Book 7. (1 results) Captive of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
7
349
Knowing no English themselves, they had no choice but to teach me a living language, in life, as practical and concrete as a tool, as expressive and beautiful as flowers and clouds.
Knowing no English themselves, they had no choice but to teach me a living language, in life, as practical and concrete as a tool, as expressive and beautiful as flowers and clouds.
- (Captive of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #349)
Book 7. (7 results) Captive of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
7
346
I was taught the language as a child is taught, who has no language at his disposal.
7
347
Accordingly I learned the language directly and immediately, fluidly, not as an architecture of grammatical cases and a series of vocabulary lists, in which foreign terms stood matched with English terms.
7
348
Ute and Inge, not knowing English, could not have presented me with an abstract structure of transformations and linguistic equations if they had wished.
7
349
Knowing no English themselves, they had no choice but to teach me a living language, in life, as practical and concrete as a tool, as expressive and beautiful as flowers and clouds.
7
350
It was not long before I caught myself, upon occasion, thinking in Gorean.
7
351
And, only some ten days after my lessons had begun, I had my first dream in which intelligible Gorean was spoken to me and I responded, spontaneously, without thinking, in the same tongue.
7
352
Interestingly, it was a dream in which I had managed to steal a candy and blame Lana, and she was beaten for it.
I was taught the language as a child is taught, who has no language at his disposal.
Accordingly I learned the language directly and immediately, fluidly, not as an architecture of grammatical cases and a series of vocabulary lists, in which foreign terms stood matched with English terms.
Ute and Inge, not knowing English, could not have presented me with an abstract structure of transformations and linguistic equations if they had wished.
Knowing no English themselves, they had no choice but to teach me a living language, in life, as practical and concrete as a tool, as expressive and beautiful as flowers and clouds.
It was not long before I caught myself, upon occasion, thinking in Gorean.
And, only some ten days after my lessons had begun, I had my first dream in which intelligible Gorean was spoken to me and I responded, spontaneously, without thinking, in the same tongue.
Interestingly, it was a dream in which I had managed to steal a candy and blame Lana, and she was beaten for it.
- (Captive of Gor, Chapter 7)