Out of curiosity, how did you learn Coast Salish? Family? Native American languages are really cool.CobraX said:English is my language. However I am fluent in Coast Salish (Native American Language) and can speak a little bit of French.
It was like discovering a complete wine-filled cellar filled with bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavor never tasted before. It quite intoxicated me...Thaa said: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.benzooka said:Modesty is a virtue.Thaa said: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.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.
It is the goal of every language learner I know at my school to learn your native language, by the way, myself included.
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?
I still love English though, although I likely wouldn't if it weren't my native language. I particularly love our "th" sounds.
Mijn vriend en ik willen Nederlands leren maar we hebben geen tijd. =(SuperToaster said:My native language is Dutch
And i speak pretty good english
Thanks man! For sure!benzooka said:It was like discovering a complete wine-filled cellar filled with bottles of an amazing wine of a kind and flavor never tasted before. It quite intoxicated me...Thaa said: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.benzooka said:Modesty is a virtue.Thaa said: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.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.
It is the goal of every language learner I know at my school to learn your native language, by the way, myself included.
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?
I still love English though, although I likely wouldn't if it weren't my native language. I particularly love our "th" sounds.
You know your stuff! Not nitpicking here, but there are 14 or 15 noun cases, depending on how you look at the wacky accusative. For some reason they haven't settled that to an absolute value. And we do have a knack for long words. I suppose it makes German slightly more easier to learn.
English is great as well; it's simple in a good way and quite practical to use in many ways.
Feel free to PM me, if you have anything to ask about Finnish language or anything somehow related to it.
that was actually pretty funny!Kysafen said:Try speaking American, it's the only language I understand. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiyH4QS8nCk#t=0m33s]