As a matter of fact, when all a language takes from another one is mere words, it is usually because only a small number of speakers of the first language are bilingual in the second -- usually the ruling classes and the educator. In such cases, most (1) ______ speakers are not using the second language alongside the first one at a daily (2) ______ basis -- instead, the influence on the (3) ______ second language "trickles down" from the elite class to the masses. In cases like this, which trickles down most easily (4) ______ arc isolated words, rather than the things that are harder to pick up from a foreign language, such as word order and endings, which require the actual use of the second language to get the hang of. This was the situation, for example, in England when it was occupied by the Norman French: The Normans were the rulers when the masses continued (5) ______ happily using English. It is this reason (6) ______ that so many of the words we inherited from French have to do with conception of (7) ______ government [reign], fashion [attire], art [pen], cuisine [poultry], and, actually, the very words government fashion, art and cuisine. Just like often, (8) ______ moreover, geography and history have it that (9) ______ many, most, or all of a language’s speakers speak another one together alongside, and the (10) ______ result is the likes of Is it out of your mind you are In fact, most languages have had some influence on their structure from other languages at some point in their history.