What languages do you speak?

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Murais

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Sep 11, 2007
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s0p0g said:
german, english, french, latin (yes, you can speak latin!!), all both written and spoken, although the latter not fluently

Murais said:
Ich habe eine katze im mein hosen! ^_^
it should be "...in meiner hose" (wrong casus and numerus; also, pants/trousers aren't plural by default; one person wears "one trouser" at a time (usually xD))
but considering that many many people think german is quite a bi**ch it doesn't sound too fractured *thumbs up*
hell, half the population here sucks at their own language's grammar xD
I was worried about that. German is kind of a joke class at my school, so I've been worried that my proficiency in learning it might be... shit? I dunno. I might pick up a copy of Rosetta Stone to supplement it or something.
 

Talespinner

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Dec 8, 2010
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Danish and English fluent. German and French well enough for simple conversation without having to ask for clarification all the time. Russian and Italian well enough to read it or understand it if spoken slowly and very clearly.
 

s0p0g

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Aug 24, 2009
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Murais said:
I was worried about that. German is kind of a joke class at my school, so I've been worried that my proficiency in learning it might be... shit? I dunno. I might pick up a copy of Rosetta Stone to supplement it or something.
you pick german deliberately? fully conscious? not being threatened to be hit or sth? ^^
 

Cyd0n1a

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Jul 15, 2009
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Finnish is my native language, but I can also speak English and Swedish fluently. I would love to learn Latin or Russian if I had the time.
 

Murais

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s0p0g said:
Murais said:
I was worried about that. German is kind of a joke class at my school, so I've been worried that my proficiency in learning it might be... shit? I dunno. I might pick up a copy of Rosetta Stone to supplement it or something.
you pick german deliberately? fully conscious? not being threatened to be hit or sth? ^^
Yessir. I'm fascinated with the country/culture. I find the language incredibly enjoyable to speak. It's a language that, as you implied, is not commonly chosen, so I'll have a leg-up on others in terms of language skills. Plus, I'd really love to go to Oktoberfest some day :p. Any country that can get 400,000 drunk people in one spot without it turning into a riot is pretty awesome to me.

But seriously, I just find it really cool. I'd like to be fluent some day. Maybe go visit Regensburg or Munich some day.
 

Mr. Eff_v1legacy

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Aug 20, 2009
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I was forced to learn French in school (being Canadian has this unfortunate side effect). However I forgot most of it. I probably know more German (which isn't much) than French.
 

BlackSaint09

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Dec 9, 2010
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Native: Estonian
Second:English
Third:German
Wanna learn: Japanese, Italian, French, Spanish and Chinese
Oh and Irish
 

CrystalShadow

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Apr 11, 2009
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I speak English, Dutch and German.

English and Dutch are both native languages to me (learned them both at a very young age), but due to circumstance, I'm better at English.

My German is OK, but not great.

I've studied a lot of other languages (french & Indonesian for one) that I barely remember a recognisable sentence of.

Aside from these, I know tiny fragments of Japanese. With more effort, I'd probably get a moderate understanding of it, similar to my understanding of German.
 

Nuclear_Suspect

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Jun 1, 2010
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holy_secret said:
Nuclear_Suspect said:
You're not really suggesting Danish written and Danish spoken are anything alike? If the Danes would actually talk like they write, I'd understand them :)
Norwegian is easy to understan, but Danish...I dunno.

Men jag har kärlek till dig ändå, lillebror :) *virtuell kram*

PS: Does this mean I also should add Norwegian and Danish to my list?
What I mean is, if I were to take you line "Men jag har kärlek till dig ändå, lillebror :) *virtuell kram*" and read it as I would read Danish, then it makes perfect sense, however spoken Norwegian is another matter ;)
 

holy_secret

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Nuclear_Suspect said:
holy_secret said:
Nuclear_Suspect said:
You're not really suggesting Danish written and Danish spoken are anything alike? If the Danes would actually talk like they write, I'd understand them :)
Norwegian is easy to understan, but Danish...I dunno.

Men jag har kärlek till dig ändå, lillebror :) *virtuell kram*

PS: Does this mean I also should add Norwegian and Danish to my list?
What I mean is, if I were to take you line "Men jag har kärlek till dig ändå, lillebror :) *virtuell kram*" and read it as I would read Danish, then it makes perfect sense, however spoken Norwegian is another matter ;)
Interesting...I suppose it makes sense. Show me! :) Hit me with a sentence of the language of consonant-hate :)
 

Thaa'ir

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Feb 10, 2011
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Creator002 said:
Thaa said:
So...weird topic, I know, but I'm a language fanatic, so I like this kind of stuff.

So who's polylingual? What languages do you speak?

Me? English is my native language...I speak German (pretty damn well) and Arabic (intermediate level). Makes sense though...those are my majors.
Your whole post, minus the Arabic and the majoring in a language, is me. Yes, the whole post, including the fanaticism.
Represent! Languages are awesome! I tell my parents a lot I wish they were foreigners because I would have learned their language in addition to American English. Sigh. Oh well.

Deutsch war früher meine Lieblingssprache aber ich hab mich so sehr in Arabisch verliebt...

(German used to be my favorite language but I fell in love with Arabic so much...)#

benzooka said:
Finnish as a native language and some English, adequately, although I barely ever actually speak it.

This is one of those things where cultural differences come into play. If you ask a Finn what languages what languages he/she knows, you won't hear a language unless the person can use it very fluently. Few phrases and a couple dozen words count for absolutely nothing.
I tend to be the same. I can speak rudimentary Dutch (weird, awesome German!), Latin (love), and Esperanto (ew), but I don't claim to speak them since I'm not too proficient.

It is the goal of every language learner I know at my school to learn your native language, by the way, myself included.
 

BENZOOKA

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Oct 26, 2009
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Thaa said:
benzooka said:
Finnish as a native language and some English, adequately, although I barely ever actually speak it.

This is one of those things where cultural differences come into play. If you ask a Finn what languages he/she knows, you won't hear a language unless the person can use it very fluently. Few phrases and a couple dozen words count for absolutely nothing.
I tend to be the same. I can speak rudimentary Dutch (weird, awesome German!), Latin (love), and Esperanto (ew), but I don't claim to speak them since I'm not too proficient.

It is the goal of every language learner I know at my school to learn your native language, by the way, myself included.
Modesty is a virtue.

Wow. Really? That made me feel even better about Finnish already. I've always loved Finnish and liked the qualities of it, compared to English, for example. Why is it that you want to learn it?
 

Evil Teddie

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Feb 7, 2011
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English and Welsh.

I wouldn't really count Welsh as it is the stuff the government feeds up in order to keep the language 'alive'. Compared to a fluent Welshie, I would sound super polite and silly because I do not have the accent and can not fake it very well. Still it is fun to insult people in a language people outisde of the UK never hear.
 

Thaa'ir

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Feb 10, 2011
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benzooka said:
Thaa said:
benzooka said:
Finnish as a native language and some English, adequately, although I barely ever actually speak it.

This is one of those things where cultural differences come into play. If you ask a Finn what languages he/she knows, you won't hear a language unless the person can use it very fluently. Few phrases and a couple dozen words count for absolutely nothing.
I tend to be the same. I can speak rudimentary Dutch (weird, awesome German!), Latin (love), and Esperanto (ew), but I don't claim to speak them since I'm not too proficient.

It is the goal of every language learner I know at my school to learn your native language, by the way, myself included.
Modesty is a virtue.

Wow. Really? That made me feel even better about Finnish already. I've always loved Finnish and liked the qualities of it, compared to English, for example. Why is it that you want to learn it?
It sounds absolutely beautiful. It looks beautiful. It has 15 noun cases and tends, at least from what little I've seen, to form long words. I dunno, I just have preferences for types of languages I like, and Finnish and Hungarian fit the bill perfectly.

I still love English though, although I likely wouldn't if it weren't my native language. I particularly love our "th" sounds.
 

Jenneh

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Jan 27, 2011
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I only speak english as my native language and if I was stuck in France for a day, i could probably understand 1 in 5 words spoken. I wish i knew more, though.