They better not be aimed at me !SckizoBoy said:I was about to say that as a BBC, it should be obvious what languages I speak, though I'm shocked by how many there are that don't speak Chinese of one persuasion or another...
They are quite different. The pronunciation and vocabulary varies to such a degree that they are unable to understand each other. Manx Gaelic is especially different due to its strange writting system. Here is something that should help illustrate the differences http://www.omniglot.com/language/celtic/index.php (it also includes information on Welsh, Cornish, and Breton).Fatboy_41 said:Irish Gaelic. Not sure exactly how different they are. Maybe I'll dabble in Scottish afterwards as well.Vanilla_Druid said:Which type of Gaelic? I am assuming Scottish, but I can never be too sure. I am studying that and Welsh myself.Fatboy_41 said:English and Australian. And yes, they are different languages.
I'm starting to learn Gaelic too.
English and dr-Rawne1980 said:English and drunken English.
That is all I need.
Oh, don't worry, dear, that was never aimed at you... after all, I don't expect you to speak anything to me, only do things! =P *runs away before you can slap me*Girl With One Eye said:They better not be aimed at me !Not my fault my mum didn't teach me...
To be fair, nobody understands the Swiss. Or a lot of Germans, to be fair.SckizoBoy said:Oooch... the German dialects can be sooooooooo different. I understand a fair bit of Hochdeutsch and I worked with a couple of Swiss Germans last year, and I couldn't understand a damned word they said.
Even Germans?! =PQuaxar said:To be fair, nobody understands the Swiss. Or a lot of Germans, to be fair.