Simple Tenses
2. Past Indefinite Tense
Understanding communication
Strangeness and familiarity make up a continuum. As for William
Gudykunst and Young Yun Kim the term “stranger” is to refer to those
people at the most unfamiliar end of continuum.1 Thus anyone could be
considered a stranger, given a sufficiently foreign context. A stranger
has limited knowledge of their new environment – of its norms and
values. And in turn, the locals have little knowledge of the stranger – of
their beliefs, interests and habits. Generally speaking, communication
with another involves predicting or anticipating their responses. When
communicating with someone familiar we