What is Language Awareness? The relevance of language awareness for me as a teacher-to -be is that you have to be aware of the language you're teaching. So if you understand every detail and specific of that language, you are able to teach them.
2. Languages come from the need of speaking by people. It is a way of communicating. When you are teaching, you need language to make yourself clear. People will only understand you if you are talking. It is more difficult to express myself when you’re teaching English, because this is not my mother tongue. So possible consequences for L2 teaching could be misunderstand by your pupils, because it is more difficult to explain something if your not a native English speaker.
I think
language, my mother tongue. This maybe will change over the years, because when
you speak all day English for instance, you will easily begin to think in that
language. I think that thinking goes faster, because if you make mistakes while thinking it has less consequences and it is easier to correct yourself than when you are actually speaking .
I dream language, because in my dreams I speak with people. Though this is more different than talking during the day. I use fewer words when I dream, it is more about the action in your dreams. I think blind people use language in their dreams, because they can hear. Deaf people will have their own sort of language, because they cannot imagine how people talk.
3. Dream language is an extra linguistic: the essence of the dream is meaning without communicability. As I already was speaking about, during dreams there is no real verbal communication. The way of speaking is mostly beyond the bounds of language, with fewer constraints than most waking thought. The language you’re taught in school is quite different from what you’re thinking (when you’re dreaming).