Heyoon & Mother Tongue
- Stephen Collier
- Mar 4, 2018
- 1 min read
Heyoon is about a kid who doesn't fit in anywhere and finds a sanctuary in Heyoon. Nobody knows where it is until you get taken there yourself by someone who has that knowledge. Alex went there with his friends and they just pretty much hung out there all night long. Alex went in there to escape his life's problems and pretty much spent all of his nights there. He had a good relationship with the place itself but not the people who owned the land. Heyoon was sacred because it was life a sanctuary city for people where they forgot all about their problems and the owners only wanted it for themselves. Time is important in this because it shows that Alex lost track of time and just spent endless hours at Heyoon. Research papers are actually done with various sources while a personal narrative is mainly about what you've experienced. They are similar in that they tell a story about a specific place.
I use the blunt English that gets straight to the point in my writing sometimes. There really isn't a need to over examine a sentence when it can be explained in a few words. The different Englishes Amy describes are basically perfect English, I viewed one of the other one's as caveman English and then there's talking tin the third person. When Amy gets mad she uses the caveman English to show that she isn't messing around. She uses perfect English when she's at a fancy party or she's with her family somewhere.
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