What languages do you wish to learn?

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Nicarus

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Feb 15, 2010
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Japanese for sure. Then I could practice some awesome lines from my favorite animes.
 

adakias

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Jul 15, 2010
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Hm. I know a bit of French and I'm learning Latin...
I wish I could learn Arabic, Herbrew, Italian, Sanksrit, Swahili, and Lingala-French.
 

teutonicman

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Mar 30, 2009
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FreelanceButler said:
Italian. Because I want an excuse to move my hands around unnecessarily.
I've tried French, but that was a bigger flop than a... floppy... thing.
... than a fat man body slamming a pool? I would like to learn French so I can go to Quebec and know when I'm being insulted.
 

Piction Froject

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Nov 11, 2010
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Latin, Japanese, Mandarin, Russian, German, Italian, Spanish. Those are form really want to learn to not really want to learn.
 

neoontime

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Jul 10, 2009
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well I can brush up on my German and Spanish but i would also like to learn some Russian.
 

Benny Blanco

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Jan 23, 2008
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rutger5000 said:
Purely practical: German (it's the language of eastern Europe) Latin (then you can sort of figure out French,Italian, Spanish and Portuguese), and Chinglish. For roughly a bilioen people are going to think they speak English, but they really won't.
Latin is certainly helpful when learning French, Italian, Spanish and Portugese, but I don't know about the "figure out" part. I've studied Latin, French, Italian and Spanish, but Portugese still sounds like Spanish being spoken by a Polish person. Underwater.

Brazilian Portugese is a bit different and seems to have other languages mixed in... The instructor at my BJJ school keeps saying something which sounds like "ashpet" (meaning stop) but Iberian Portugese speakers I know don't understand this. In Italian, however, "aspetta" means "wait", so I'm guessing there's a link to that, possibly due to large numbers of Italians in Brazil.

I'd say that Latin was most directly helpful for learning Italian. The fact that one was the spoken language whilst one was the written language (Dante Aligheri was the 1st author to write in Italian) means a lot of Italian is just simplified/corrupted Latin. For instance, the Italian word for "really" or "indeed" is "davvero". The Latin equivalent is "ita vero".

In addition to brushing up the languages I already speak I'd like to get to grips with Farsi, Arabic, Greek and Russian. I've got phrasebooks and TYS packs for Tagalog and Hebrew as well, but I doubt those are gonna be super-useful any time soon. I did a year of German in school but again, not going there anytime soon and most of them speak good English.
 

Macgyvercas

Spice & Wolf Restored!
Feb 19, 2009
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Japanese, Sindarin (no one ever said it had to be real), and Python (or useful in everyday life, for that matter).
 

bulbasaur765

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May 1, 2010
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I would like to learn Choctaw (Native American Language) because I'm an 8th degree Choctaw and Spanish because I want to have more in common with my best friend, who speaks both English and Spanish.
 
Jan 29, 2009
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FreelanceButler said:
...I want an excuse to move my hands around unnecessarily.
Buy a kinect.

OP: I'll go for Chinese (seems useful these days, there ARE a billion speakers of it) and Russian (I need to know it if I plan to badger my way into their space agency)
 

brunothepig

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May 18, 2009
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Latin, most of the northern European languages, since I'll likely spend a lot of holidays there. Lot's of Metal shows, you see. So German, Finnish, Swedish and possibly Norwegian. Wouldn't mind finishing off my Japanese education either. I studied it a little in lower school.
 

Denamic

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Aug 19, 2009
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Japanese.
But that's mostly because I had a Japanese girlfriend a while back and I'm already half-proficient in the language.
It's unbelievably frustrating to feel like you could form a sentence, but getting stuck halfway through.