This one.
Same, plus seven more.
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First language was Spanish, English is my daily language, self taught enough French to get by on a trip about a decade ago.
In all reality I could probably only sus out enough in Spanish or French to barely get by if really had to. I do still have all my training material and would like to continue learning. But low on my priority list
German, English, a tiny bit of French since I had that in school but forgot most of it. And a bunch of computer programming languages.
Spanish as native language, and I’m proficient in catalan and English.
I’m quite confident in german, i’m cuarrently taking lessons to pass the B1 exam next course.
Beyond these languages, the ones i have enough confidence to say i can speak them, I also speak some japanese and I plan to take the japanase JPLT N5. No rushes though. It’s the introductory level.
Romanian and english can speak well
I can translate, write and speak in toki pona and latin if i have a dictionary(i couldnt memorize the words)
Only English fluently.
I can speak a tiny bit of Spanish. Enough to order food, ask for directions etc.
I can also sort of decipher the meaning of sentences in German, but not fast enough to have a conversation.
I’m fluent in Spanish and English, speak like a first grader in Japanese, and read Italian and Portuguese a little. I can even read Greek and Russian a little but that’s more because I used their letters all the time in engineering and math stuff.
- Danish
- Swedish
- German
- English
- Japanese
- French
Danish native
English fluent
I can pronounce German quite well imo
In Finnish i can say “my bunny is cute”what’s the story behind that one finnish sentence? :D terveisiä suomesta
Nothing interesting really, I might get the opportunity to move to Finland for a year, so I’ve practiced Finnish through Duolingo if that becomes a reality :)
English (fluent)
Dutch (bad)
French (basics)
Japanese (basics)
Standard German (native)
Lower Austrian German (fluent)
Bavarian German (fluent)
Saxonian German (fluent)
Vienna German (good)
Hamburgian German (OK)
Berlin German (OK)
Northern German (OK)
Swabian German (OK)
Platt German (bad)
Tyrolean German (bad)
Swiss German (worse) - Yes, for me it’s easier to understand Dutch than Swiss German
Are all those Germans really different enough to count separately?
Like, I wouldn’t know how to distinguish my fluency in American English from British English. And that’s not even getting to Canadian, Australian, Irish… the differences are far more cultural than linguistic.
Yes, German dialects can vary greatly for example here’s the same sentence “I have an apple.” in different German dialects:
Standard German:
“Ich habe einen Apfel.”
Northern German / Platt:
“Ik hab en Appel.”
Middle German / Saxonian:
" 'sch’habm Abbl." ( 'sch is pronounced like sh)
Southern German / Bavarian & Austrian:
“I hob an Opfü.” (I is pronounced like the single letter E)
The Southern Germans are the ones with the Schwarzenegger accent.
English
Spanglish
Some SQL
English and viet I speak well
Learning spanish and german
Whoa, lady, I only speak two languages, English and bad English.