Name: Anonymous 2007-11-01 0:03
What up, /lang/
For those of you that speak more than one language fluently but didn't learn the second language well after the 'crucial language' phase in childhood, do you find that your mouth position at rest changes when you speak the language? For instance, when I speak French, the muscles in my cheeks/lips position my mouth into the "dick sucking" position (a little higher than in standard English muscle position).
Can you tell foreigners by simply looking at their mouths? I think that it's possible. Foreigners' mouths look different.
For those of you that speak more than one language fluently but didn't learn the second language well after the 'crucial language' phase in childhood, do you find that your mouth position at rest changes when you speak the language? For instance, when I speak French, the muscles in my cheeks/lips position my mouth into the "dick sucking" position (a little higher than in standard English muscle position).
Can you tell foreigners by simply looking at their mouths? I think that it's possible. Foreigners' mouths look different.