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Good evening, I’m Elizabeth and I live in Cornwall
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I’m Cornish and I speak the Cornish language. I’m a Cornish speaker.
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My mother was learning Cornish at evening classes
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and she came home and taught me and my brother to speak the language.
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Then my father learnt it too.
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And we all spoke the language together at home
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when we were eating together and so on, ‘pass me the salt’ etc.
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And we went to lots of events together, like Cornish Language Weekends
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These events were for people who wanted to learn Cornish
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and I remember going there with my brother
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and playing with all the other children who were learning Cornish.
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There was a large group of us in those days,
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and all those children have now grown up, like me
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and some of them are having children of their own now
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so that’s the next generation of people learning Cornish as children
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from their childhood. So that’s very good.
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The language did die out, about two hundred years ago,
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but after a hundred years of nobody speaking it as a community language
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people began to revive it
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and over the last century more and more people have learnt it.
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well, I wanted to return to Cornwall and do something, I didn’t know what
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but I was in the right place at the right time
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and in 2002 Cornish was recognised as an official language
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under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages,
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and for the first time ever
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there was funding, some money for the language.
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And because of that there were some new jobs, to do things with the language,
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and I was the second person to get a job developing the language.
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So I was a language officer.
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But now, well, I live in Truro, here.
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I don’t work with the language any more
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I don’t earn my living from it, but I still do things like this. (2.46)
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Tonight I am leading a Yeth an Werin (conversation group) with some people who are learning Cornish
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and some who are more fluent.
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Sometimes there are lots of us, other times there aren’t so many,
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but people come every fortnight to chat together.
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So I lead this.
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And also I present a radio programme, ‘The News’ on BBC Radio Cornwall,
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It’s the only programme in Cornish on an official radio station.
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There’s another programme but that’s only available online.
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Besides that, well, I work at Truro Cathedral
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and I have a cat. My cat is called Ted.
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And I have a partner called Ross.
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So yeah, that’s all from me, I think. I can’t remember, I can’t think of what else to say.
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So yeah, that’s all. Goodbye!