Lingua Materna, Lingua Receptiva, Lingua Franca, Multilingua Franca ? The Linguascape of the Polish-Czech Borderland from the Perspective of Sustainable Multilingualism
Published Online: May 29, 2020
Page range: 21 - 38
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/sm-2020-0002
Keywords
© 2020 Magdalena Steciąg et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
As statistical surveys show, both Poland and the neighbouring Czech Republic are single-ethnic and highly monolingual countries. The observation of the linguistic landscape of the Polish-Czech borderland suggests, however, that the display of common natural heritage is conducive to weakening monolingualism and the development of multilingual practices instead. The hypothesis is being checked in a comparative analysis of the linguistic landscape of two picturesque locations - Czech Adršpach and Polish Karłów where a lot of natural sights in the form of rocks can be found. The case study proves that different languages and communication modes are used to describe these attractions: