Gaw, you feel wonky today. What the hell happened?! Oh my life! Oh, I don't know if I'm gonna survive this video. Hey! So, today, I want to address a little thing that is kind of, er, annoying. But it's also a little bit confusing. And it's annoying because it's confusing, and it's confusing because it's annoying, and it's just....it's a vicious cycle really. Today I want to try and answer the question what is a polyglot? A polyglot is something that I..It's a word I'd never really heard of to be honest until recently in the past...5 years let's say. And so the fact that I hadn't heard of this word means that a lot of other people also hadn't heard of this word and also still haven't heard of this word. But this word, 'polyglot', is now being used more and more and more within the sort of online language learning community and I feel like for some people, it kind of is, erm, scary, because the think "Oh my goodness! I'm not, I don't speak seventeen languages. Maybe I do speak seventeen languages and I don't speak them to C2 level that means I'm not a polyglot, that means I can't go to these events that have the word 'polyglot' in the title. Oh, what a disaster!". But I just want to say to those people that it's totally ok. See the thing is about the word polyglot - there is no strict definition. Like, if I, if I...where's my phone? Let's do this right now. Ok, let's see, what is a polyglot? Let's check and see what the old er, search engine extraordinaire that begins with a 'G' says. "Are you trilingual? Are you monolingual, bilingual, trilingual, multilingual or a polyglot?" See, there you go multilingual and polyglot are being used separately even though technically 'poly' means multiple, like many, like a polyglot, polyglot, a poly- , polygon! That's a shape with many sides, right? And then 'glot' is language. Kind of like in the term, one of my favourites, 'glottal stop'. But-ter! So, it just means multiple languages. Ok. So it's not 4, 5, 6, 7, 17, 52, 103. It's not to A1, to A2, to B1, to C2, blah blah, to C2. There is no clear definition of what it takes to call yourself a polyglot. Now I actually filmed a video, erm, a few months back before I went to the Polyglot Gathering this year in May in Berlin. And I filmed this video and I never actually edited it. In this video, basically, I was of the opinion that, you know, there is no clear definition, let's all calm down, let's not worry about specifically what a polyglot is. I actually kind of ended it by saying that at the same time, I feel like it's saying "Yes! I am a, er, I'm the best footballer you'll ever find". It's something, there was some kind of arrogance there I felt so I would never have called myself a polyglot. And then I went to the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin. I know it's ironic the name 'polyglot' and I said I wasn't blah, blah, blah! But I went there and I went to one talk with Richard Simcott, who I'm sure you've heard of if you're watching this video, and he outlined that for him, the definition is changing and a polyglot is someone, for him, who actively goes forward and learns languages for no particular reason, just for the pure love of language and the love of learning language and the love of communicating with people via different languages. And I thought this was so beautiful. It's so open, it's so accepting. There is no definition, there is no specific number, specific requirement that you have to, erm, achieve, that you have to attain before you can say, yeah I'm a polyglot. And before you can say, yeah, I'm going to go to the Polyglot Gathering or the Polyglot Conference. No! If you love language and I'm telling you this, like, from the heart 'cause the battery's about to die! If you love language and you actively learn languages and you enjoy that process, and you have no limit to what you want to do and how many languages you want to learn, then you are a polyglot. And I think that that is now becoming the widely accepted definition. And it's something that I myself would, err, would like to believe. I would love, I want, for me, this is the new definition of what a polyglot is. I hope that cleared something up. What do you think? Do you agree with this definition? I've very much taken this definition that I use myself from Richard Simcott so thank you to Richard for, err, for sharing his opinion on this in Berlin. It really helped me personally to kind of get a bigger, much broader perspective of this word, and that's what I want to share with you today. But do you agree? Is this your opinion? Let me know in the comments below. I'd love to get chatting with you about this and to know if you think "no, it should be this set number of languages or it should be a set level" or, whatever you think, please just share in the comments, I'd love to hear some opinions on this. And as usual, if you enjoyed, please subscribe. I hope you enjoyed this video, I hope you found it useful and I hope that it will inspire you to use the word polyglot more confidently, more comfortably, and to perhaps even attend a polyglot event. This isn't like a sponsored video of any of those events! I've been to two events myself, one Polyglot Gathering and one Polyglot Conference in the past year, and I loved them both. The atmosphere is incredible, there's no competition, there's no, err, like peacocking, if you like, of you know, "Well, actually my badge says err, I speak 52 languages, so, you know, come at me!" There's none of that. It's just really friendly, really warm, really open, and just to share some time with people who share that same passion for language learning as you do is a real gem and it's something that I think if you're watching this video, you should probably take advantage of. Ok, thank you.