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bilingual

[ UK /ba‍ɪlˈɪŋɡwə‍l/ ]
[ US /baɪˈɫɪŋɡwəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. using or knowing two languages
    bilingual education
NOUN
  1. a person who speaks two languages fluently

How To Use bilingual In A Sentence

  • To which I responded matter-of-factly, ‘This is a bilingual country.’
  • Figure 1: The figure represents diagrammatically the key factors, as described in the literature review, which influence the reading development of English and Greek bilingual and monolingual children. Reading Development in Two Different Contexts:the Case of the English-greek Bilingual Children in UK and in Cyprus « Articles « Literacy News
  • Growing up bilingual in English and German, Hobsbawm picked up three or four other languages along the way (he reproves monoglot historians for their provincialism).
  • Although most researchers stress the grammaticality of the majority of bilingual utterances, they assume that the grammatical norms of the two languages in isolation provide the basis for determining what is grammatical.
  • BERNARD KALB, HOST: Molly, since we're practicing bilinguality, let me go from chutzpah to maven. CNN Transcript - Reliable Sources: The Real Al Gore and George Bush: Is the Press Getting the Full Story or Falling for the Image? - March 25, 2000
  • Foster parents should be willing to commute, be bilingual and have dual nationality.
  • The federal government has been aggressively promoting bilingualism in the public service since the 1960s. Globe and Mail
  • I believe that was a shot at those of us who criticize bilingual education, but it was hard to tell.
  • She had grown up both bilingual and bicultural, speaking Maidu with her mother and English with her father, a Dutch settler who had come Wisconsin by covered wagon as a child.
  • It would also help unilingual francophones to function as unilinguals outside of Quebec, in so far as official bilingualism insures provision of government services in French.
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