maybe You should be learning a second language!

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Andalusa

Mad Cat Lady
Feb 25, 2008
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1. Mostly English. During the summer we get the occasional tourist from some country or other.
2. Kind of.
3. French, mandatory school subject, I'm better at reading/listening than writing/speaking. German, Italian, Spanish, Latin.. just random phrases I've picked up.
 

Aetera

New member
Jan 19, 2011
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The only languages that I'm interested in learning are all dead languages. I've studied Latin for years now. My former roommate is like me; she is actually fluent in Sumerian and has worked as a translator for museums.

Yay for impractical interests?
 

Coller

New member
Oct 4, 2010
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1. Do you live in an area where more then one language is commonly used?
2. Do you know more then one language?
3. If yes, what other language do you speak


1. Kinda. (some people speak Russian)
2. Yes.
3. Lithuanian(native), English, Russian, French, German, and a little bit of japanese and spanish.
 

Boba Frag

New member
Dec 11, 2009
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I live in Ireland so it's English for pretty much everything.

Sadly, Irish people should be by rights bi-lingual; the Irish language is spoken by very few people in the periphery of Ireland, despite the fact that every child born of Irish citizens in the country must learn the language when they start attending school.

It's forced down people's throats and I absolutely hated it until I went to an Irish speaking area for a three week course in the oral aspect of it (the major school leaving exam awards 25% for spoken Irish) and I fell in love with it.

I loved communicating, however poorly at first, in my own native tongue.

I'm one of those people who also did French but my teacher was atrocious and it bored the shit out of me, so, je suis tré désole, mais mon Francais est trés faible.

I probably just gave you a hernia the spelling and grammar is so bad :p

A second language is sort of superfluous in Ireland when we're an island part of the Atlantic Atlantic English speaking community of the the UK and the US to either side of us. It is not, however, a bad thing to be multilingual.

Sorry, Europe, but the way we've been treated by Sarkozy and Merkel over the last year has turned me against the idea that my country's future lies exclusively inside the European project.

Don't get me wrong, I've nothing against the EU, or our French, German, Spanish, Italian etc friends, I just think that in Ireland's case, European languages have never been to the fore as regards education policy for the simple reason that the English speaking culture is more embedded here.
 

runnernda

New member
Feb 8, 2010
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It's pretty much just English here, but I live close to Philadelphia, where you get tourists and immigrants from all over. I speak both English and French fluently. I know a little bit of Spanish and a little bit of German. I want to get proficient in both of those, and..any other language, really. I think language is fascinating.

I also know the Ancient Greek alphabet and binary, if those count for anything.
 

HK_01

New member
Jun 1, 2009
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1. Nope, German is always used in Germany in everyday life.

2. I have learned English (to the extent that I could be considered a native speaker since I've gone to an English speaking school for five years) and I am learning French and trying to learn Russian (only just begun though and it's really hard).

3. See above.
 

Brutal Peanut

This is so freakin aweso-BLARGH!
Oct 15, 2010
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1. Do you live in an area where more then one language is commonly used?
I live in Southern California, U.S. Spanish. Luckily, there is also a lot of Spanglish. Spanglish makes life a bit easier for people who aren't bilingual.

2. Do you know more then one language?
My Mother and her friends tried when I was younger. My Mother's side of the family are Yaqui Natives and Mexican, and spoke Spanish quite frequently and I just seemed to refuse to pick any of it up. I didn't like the sound of it (still do not), and I never really wanted to learn it. I took two years in school (if you didn't take at least two years of a different language AND pass, you didn't graduate). I had signed up for French but apparently the classes in my year were 'full', so they placed me in Spanish, as a default. I should have chosen German, since my Father speaks German fluently from having lived their as a child on his summer breaks, with family.

I've always wanted to learn French and that is what I plan on doing.

3. If yes, what other language do you speak.
I know some Spanish - I wouldn't say fluently. Just enough to get by. Though I probably know more then I think I do, or that I am admitting.
 

Boba Frag

New member
Dec 11, 2009
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Fayathon said:
I'm a grammar Nazi in the sense of 'if you should know better.' I'm willing to overlook some grammatical problems and chock it up to it just being human error, but when I know someone is typing in the most lazy and half-assed way possible it makes my blood boil. To be fair, any language I pick up I'm gonna be a grammar Nazi in because if you can't be arsed to speak/write in a language properly then I'm of the opinion you should shut your mouth.

Not directing that at anyone in this thread, just wanted to air it out.
I agree with you completely, but I did find it amusing that you used 'chock' instead of 'chalk' :p
As in, 'chalk it down' etc.

But like you very fairly said, human error. It happens!

Lazy text speak on forums pisses me off no end. It's like reading something written in dodgy crayon...
 

Rawne1980

New member
Jul 29, 2011
4,143
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Nope, the town I live in is English speaking .... it's the UK what did you expect?

During my Army years, we learned to order a beer and swear in the language of whichever country we were in at the time.

Forgotten most of it, my memory is shockingly bad.
 

BaronUberstein

New member
Jul 14, 2011
384
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Tried to learn French, hated it, all those years of French classes have turned into a physical hatred for the language.

Learning German in college, it's a much more logical language, must more pleasant to learn, at least for me.

Nothing against the French themselves (Well, a few things here and there, but every country has it's flaws).
 

platinawolf

New member
Oct 27, 2009
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1. Do you live in an area where more then one language is commonly used? Not really. In my area Swedish is basically whats used. Unless of-course you are speaking to a foreigner where almost anyone can help by switching to English
2. Do you know more then one language? Yes
3. If yes, what other language do you speak? Swedish and English. Did try to learn French once, didn't agree with me. Tried to learn Japanese but a major depression stopped those plans ^^*

But yes, its very double standard. You should be able to understand the native language in the area enough to at-least point them to another person. And of-course you should strive to learn the language spoken natively. I'd never hire you if you didn't speak English and at-least basic Swedish unless its a very basic job with minimal contact with costumers.
 

Fayathon

Professional Lurker
Nov 18, 2009
905
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Boba Frag said:
I agree with you completely, but I did find it amusing that you used 'chock' instead of 'chalk' :p
As in, 'chalk it down' etc.

But like you very fairly said, human error. It happens!

Lazy text speak on forums pisses me off no end. It's like reading something written in dodgy crayon...
Well, shit...

Hell, and I pride myself on damn near flawless grammar. Oh well.
 

Major_Tom

Anticitizen
Jun 29, 2008
799
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1. No, mostly just Croatian.
2. Yes.
3. English, I studied some French and Hungarian in high school. Also, when you speak Croatian you also know Serbian, Bosnian and Montenegrin. I know some Slovenian from watching their television and some Macedonian my friend taught me.
 

Blow_Pop

Supreme Evil Overlord
Jan 21, 2009
4,861
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we have a bunch of spanish speakers around here because ya know they live in America and refuse to learn the language. I refuse to learn spanish since everyone expects me to automatically know it. I know a bit of French here and there. My pronunciation sucks but I can read it and mostly understand it and hear it and mostly understand it. Might not be able to respond but I'm slowly working on it. Like I keep learning it and then because I have no one to talk to in the language i forget it. I eventually also plan on learning...oh dear long list. Lets just say there is a few dead languages on that list and a bunch of other languages mostly from the European area. I do know a few words here and there in a few other languages (Japanese, Deutsch, French-which i know the most of, greek, and italian).


I know the way I worded it about refusing to learn Spanish makes it look like I am unsympathetic and think everyone should speak English. I would like to say this is not true. I think if you are going to live in a country you should learn the damn language they speak.
 

kittii-chan 300

New member
Feb 27, 2011
704
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I lived in japan and england at different times.
I can speak japanese ok but im not really good...
my english isnt that good either... and i can't write japanese...
waaaah...
 

Unstable Ark

New member
Jul 26, 2011
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1. Sort of. I grew up in an immigrant area, so spanish is used heavily just about everywhere except school (Which, from what I've recently learned, is now being taught in my old elementary school.) Good luck trying to order a sandwich otherwise.

2. Yup

3. English and Spanish fluently. I also know a bit of German through high school, but most of it has been forgotten.
 

MurderousToaster

New member
Aug 9, 2008
3,074
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1. No, unless you actually count Scots as being varied enough from English to be its own language (which some do).

2. I did French for somewhere between five and seven years (and did well in it, too), but then I dropped it because I could only take 5 subjects this year and wanted to do others more.

3. I have subsequently forgotten most of the French I have learned, so not really.
 

Null-Entity

New member
Jun 8, 2010
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1. Almost never its the south coats of england and other than people of other ethnic origins either out and about or at work its almost 100% spoken/written English.

2. No but would love to, I was never any good at languages but being and speaning only english I will admit to considering it a massive failing on ymy part, just because English is the language of Business for most of the world doesn't mean we should not learn another language its been proven to have all kinds of beneits and shows some respect to the rest of the world to learn theirs if they learn ours.

3.No. wish I did.
 

Kreett

Constant Contrarian
Nov 20, 2009
391
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Well in Sweden english is a base subject which means if you flunk english you cant apply for high school or college and have to take a secondary school program to advance your grades or simply redo the 9:th grade
 

Gabriel Wahlgren

New member
Jul 19, 2011
10
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Wow! I was really surprised by the amount of Swedish-speakers!

And yes, I know 3 languages: Swedish (native tounge), English (Fluent/near fluent) and german (just started) oh, norwegian and danish comes naturally aswell :)