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In reply to the discussion: Over 90% of Germans speak English. What foreign language do you speak? [View all]treestar
(82,383 posts)255. Catalan impresses me
If that's not one's native language, that's an interesting one to choose to learn. I've been to Barcelona, and found it interesting. It is so specific to one area that taking time to learn it is impressive, even if you are living there.
I met some Dutch people once and another person commented how the Dutch seemed to speak several languages. One guy said, "We have to. No one else speaks Dutch!"
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Over 90% of Germans speak English. What foreign language do you speak? [View all]
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
OP
when I left Germany most of my cousins could speak speak pretty good English
gopiscrap
Feb 2014
#203
Someone found another source that gave a much lower figure. I was surprised at 90%
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#219
Spanish was the first language that I learned, and I have been living in a mostly Spanish-speaking
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#73
Yes. That English is so widely spoken is almost a handicap for Americans trying to learn another
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#79
Time is the big problem. You could try listening to opera and other Italian music.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#85
I hope to be able to speak, read, write, and understand Japanese when Im done
LostOne4Ever
Feb 2014
#250
She is amazing. I think that when children learn a second language when they are fairly
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#88
But you know a lot about other things. The hole in my education was science.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#208
Actually, I'm surprised at how many DUers speak another language. I did not realize that.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#207
Fluent in Russian, French and German; basic comprehension in reading Spanish, can get by in spoken
Brickbat
Feb 2014
#29
Catalan, Swedish, Dutch, Russian, German, Schwyzerdüütsch, French, Italian, Spanish
DFW
Feb 2014
#32
It's a mouthful just saying the names of all the languages you speak. Quite an accomplishment.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#103
I hadn't paid my annual membership yet and couldn't start a poll. That was my intention.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#168
Yes. A lot of Yiddish is like Austrian German. Not all of it by any means, but a lot of it.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#106
That is very ambitious. Arabic strikes me as a difficult language. And the script? Very difficult
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#212
I think of Dutch as a mixture of German and English. Bound to be some Spanish influence too.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#111
I totally agree. Lots of German, French, Norwegian, and English influences
BlueCaliDem
Feb 2014
#169
That's impressive! I have a good friend that is fluent in Swedish, German, French and Spanish, but
adirondacker
Feb 2014
#183
It should. If you were vacationing in the Hanoi Hilton during the Vietnam War, it was
MADem
Feb 2014
#190
Of course. This is just for fun. I did not expect so many DUers to know so many languages.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#200
Plop yourself down in the middle of the United States, look at a 500 mile radius and count languages
Bok_Tukalo
Feb 2014
#53
I did not realize that Minnesota was so diverse. I thought it was unique to California.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#202
You don't have to answer if you don't want to (obviously) but is pampango a Tagalog word?
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#218
Kind of. Slightly altered, it's the name of the province (Pampanga) that my wife is from.
pampango
Feb 2014
#235
Sneering? Really? Despite the intent of the OP, Americans are frequently looked down upon for
FSogol
Feb 2014
#84
My first point went totally over your head. You and I have a different way of interpreting things.
Quantess
Feb 2014
#96
Not addressing a point doesn't mean it went over my head. Plus, you brought up sneering, not me.
FSogol
Feb 2014
#141
Defending as lack of knowledge is a rather accurate example of the sub-literate...
LanternWaste
Feb 2014
#132
One can state the reason for a lack of knowledge without supporting that lack of knowledge.
FSogol
Feb 2014
#138
As you may see from the response, there is nothing sneering about it. A lot of DUers
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#216
Hungarian is so interesting and so few people speak it. What I find fascinating is
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#114
Aha! I have Hungarian relatives and never knew this. Thanks. I knew of the Uralic-Altaic
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#192
I understand Slovak and speak it like a three year old. My Grandparents always spoke to me in their
livetohike
Feb 2014
#77
I would love to go over and hike around there, too. My Dad was born in Michalovce and came to the US
livetohike
Feb 2014
#270
As someone pointed out above, you are muiti-lingual, very multi-lingual. Great.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#196
Yes. Being in love seems to improve one's retention for new words and a new language.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#197
That's great for your children. It is such an advantage for children to be bilingual.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#116
I never mastered the genders in German. I learned German by living in the countries.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#123
Yes. In Austrian you can kind of hide the fact that you are not using the correct genders by
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#217
I confes. I had to look up Kiswahili. I'm impressed that you know that language.
JDPriestly
Feb 2014
#118
And even in countries where most people speak English as a second language
Lydia Leftcoast
Feb 2014
#180
Spanish .use almost daily... grew up understanding a little german, slovak, italian
xiamiam
Feb 2014
#163
Norwegian linguists used to come to America and study the language of the second
Lydia Leftcoast
Feb 2014
#181