English is my mother tongue. My parents are anglophones.
Le français est ma deuxième langue. Depuis j'étais dans l'école primaire, j'appris comment parler en français. La côté de ma grandmama paternelle est québécois/acadien. Officiellement, je suis bilingue.
I rarely in French, so my grammar is a bit off. I have really good comprehension though.
日本語は第三の言語を勉強した。でも、ちょっと下手と思う。
I hope that sentence made sense. I need to practice my Japanese more and speak more French.
My native tongue is English, which is the only language I can speak fluently. I can speak some Japanese and a little bit of Spanish, and I can say hello in quite a few languages.
I'd like to learn every language, but there's not enough time in my life for that. If I had to pick only a few, I would like to learn Japanese (which I already know some), Korean because I think it's a very pretty language, maybe Mandarin or Cantonese.
Also Latin would be cool!![]()
English and conversational Spanish. I kinda wish I was more fluent in Spanish, but oh well.
Fluent in English and Spanish. Currently learning Italian.
After that, I want to go for Japanese, German, and Arabic. I'd study French, but I'd never be able to pronounce it. -_^
Rye made this!
Dutch, English, German and a little french. I'm doing a three year course in Japanese too.
I'm pretty much avarage for a dutch guy. I know people who speak 6 languages.
English, conversational German and enough Welsh to confuse tourists.
Not my words Carol, the words of Top Gear magazine.
I keep a tenuous grasp on the English language and very little else! I think it a shame so few Americans are bilingual; both my parents speak two languages and the one I know I learned at a school!
I was literate at age two, and crafted my first poem at age four. I presented a written six paragraph speech at seven to my class, much to the chargin of myself. I'm better at learning and using words than the actual tense and conjugation aspect(s).
For example, I could write a killer speech in English off the top of my head and and learn French words practically instantly, but how to use those words correctly in the sentence is nothing special.
Last edited by Laddy; 09-27-2009 at 11:49 PM.
I'm exemplary with English and can get by in Estonian. Otherwise all I know how to do is shout loudly in some sort of pig-German.
DAS IST NEIN UNT CHEESBURGEREN, DAS IST UNT REGULARENBURGEREN!
I would like nine cheeseburgers. And a side of regular burgers.DAS IST NEIN UNT CHEESBURGEREN, DAS IST UNT REGULARENBURGEREN!