English, French, German, wee bit of Japanese but I wouldn't say I could live on it, same for Chinese.
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English, French, German, wee bit of Japanese but I wouldn't say I could live on it, same for Chinese.
I speak English. Thats it. Just English, I can't be smurfed to learn any other languages. I don't need them.
Spanish and English. I'm in my ninth year of spanish.
Since I'm American I speak English and I also speak Tagalog
I speak English, spanish and enough Japanese to get me by. I'm starting to teach myself French though =)
English fluently.
Cantonese semi-fluently.
German. I learnt it back in high school for four years, but it's all gone now. But it'd probably come rushing back to me if I looked back through my exercise books.
I learnt a few other languages in high school but I only did them for about half a year. French, Ancient Greek and Latin.
I'm still deciding between learning Chinese (Mandarin) and Japanese next year.
Only English
I speak English and a little Shona.
I can speak English and some German.
English, Malay, a little bit Japanese.
Mainly English, a fair amount of Spanish, some Hawaiian, and I'd like to learn Japanese.
Spanish (as a first language), English, and some French. Depending if I specialize in French or Slavic studies for my MA, I will also study the cooresponding language(s).
English (first language), some French and some Japanese. I'm better at Japanese than French. I didn't pay attention in French for 2 years.
English is the only language I am fluent in. I can speak bits and pieces of Spanish and can understand some French but not enough to get by in typical conversation.
I have heard the hardest part is how closely the sounds resemble common English. I can't offer any examples right now though. I would have to ask a friend of mine who is enrolled in a Russian college class.Quote:
I hear Russian is very hard. Is that true?
i grew up learning English first. additionally, i know a language called Teochew, which i use with family.