Captain Red Posted February 20, 2004 ¿Debe ser el título bastante auto explicativo, cuántos idiomas usted habla, y qué es usted primero idioma? Sé ese diablo Julian’francés de s, y molesto el infierno fuera de mí que él habla (bien tipos) inglés mejor entonces yo hago. Un sí, acabo de utilizar un jodida traductor en línea escribir a máquina esto. For bonus points++ tell me what that means. (and don't think the translator will help you, Bawhahahahaaaa! 0 Share this post Link to post
Julian Posted February 20, 2004 Ct_red_pants said:¿Debe ser el título bastante auto explicativo, cuántos idiomas usted habla, y qué es usted primero idioma? Sé ese diablo Julian’francés de s, y molesto el infierno fuera de mí que él habla (bien tipos) inglés mejor entonces yo hago. Un sí, acabo de utilizar un jodida traductor en línea escribir a máquina esto. For bonus points++ tell me what that means. (and don't think the translator will help you, Bawhahahahaaaa! This must be a very auto-explainative topic, how many languages do you speak and which one is your mother tongue? Ce diable de Julian est français (sure about the spelling?), and I find it annoying as Hell that he speaks (rather types) english better than I do sometimes. I give up on the second paragraph. I speak french, of course, english and spanish I sometimes understand. 0 Share this post Link to post
Fredrik Posted February 20, 2004 And yes, I have to use a fucking translator -line-machine-something. Hmm, natural or formal languages? 0 Share this post Link to post
Darkstalker Posted February 20, 2004 French as my mother tongue and english. 0 Share this post Link to post
Disorder Posted February 20, 2004 Dutch and English. I understand a bit of German. 0 Share this post Link to post
dsm Posted February 20, 2004 Danish (native language), English (Semi-native language to me, but with plenty of holes) and German (foreign language to me). I knew a bit of Spanish five years ago, but the language (or perhaps just the teacher?) didn't interest me enough for me to keep learning. I still remember a few words though. My sister tried to teach me some French aeons ago, but apparently, French pronounciation has some kind of grudge with me (I can't even pronounce the number "four" in French - how weak is that!). 0 Share this post Link to post
Julian Posted February 20, 2004 dsm said:(I can't even pronounce the number "four" in French - how weak is that!). On a scale from un to cinq I'd say QUATRE :P Pronunciation is quite simple actually: cat - rr 0 Share this post Link to post
Captain Red Posted February 20, 2004 Ct_red_pants originally said: The title should be pretty self explanatory, how many languages do you speak, and what is you first language? I know that devil Julian’s French, and it annoys the hell out of me that he speaks (well types) English better then I do. And yes, I just used a shitty online translator to type this. 0 Share this post Link to post
Darkstalker Posted February 20, 2004 Julian said:Pronunciation is quite simple actually: cat - rr Yeah but it's the 'r' that doesn't sound the same between french and english. <Jean Reno in Wasabi>Tigrrrrre</Jean Reno> I love that movie :P 0 Share this post Link to post
SSWolfenSie Posted February 20, 2004 Hebrew and English: òáøéú- Hebrew àðâìéú- English hihihihi :) :P 0 Share this post Link to post
dsm Posted February 20, 2004 Julian said:On a scale from un to cinq I'd say QUATRE :P Pronunciation is quite simple actually: cat - rr Lol. My sister claimed it was "gat - rr". 0 Share this post Link to post
-Jk- Posted February 20, 2004 I speak Swedish, English and some Finnish. 0 Share this post Link to post
Remilia Scarlet Posted February 20, 2004 English is my main language. Then I also speek some Japanese and some Spanish, though with Spanish I'm slowly forgetting it as it's replaced by Japanese. And here's that paragraph in Japanese: Boku wa, eigoga boku no bokokugo desu. Soshite, sukoshi nihongo to supeingo ga hanasemasu ga boku wa mou nihongo o manabinagara supeingo wa yukkuri wasurete kimasu . 0 Share this post Link to post
Infinite Ammunition Posted February 20, 2004 English, l33t, HTML and BASIC. 0 Share this post Link to post
Uncle 80 Posted February 20, 2004 Norwegian (primary) and English (secondary). Also, I know enough Swedish to ridicule swedes, and enough german to say things such as "Fritz hat ein Auto" or "Ich bin ein Wienerschnitzel". 0 Share this post Link to post
Janderson Posted February 20, 2004 I speak english like a native. I used to speak good french, semi-decent german and a bit of arabic but my teachers were boring so I didn't carry them on. 0 Share this post Link to post
exl Posted February 20, 2004 Like Disorder Dutch, English and some German. They tried to stuff French in there too but... that failed miserably. 0 Share this post Link to post
Little Faith Posted February 20, 2004 I can speak danish and english I can read spanish, norwegian, swedish and german. 0 Share this post Link to post
Grazza Posted February 20, 2004 In (rapidly) descending order of competence: English (native) Danish (very rusty though, and really crap given I lived in the country for two years) Spanish French Russian (no conversational ability) Latin Otherwise, just bits and pieces. I can guess a fair bit of German by analogy with other languages, and obviously I have some ability to read Norwegian. 0 Share this post Link to post
Donce Posted February 20, 2004 Lithuanian (native), English, Russian, a few words or sentences in French, German, Polish, Latin 0 Share this post Link to post
Kristian Ronge Posted February 20, 2004 Fluent in Swedish, and unrefined Swedish. ;-) Practically fluent in English (I have scored the highest marks in advanced technical English at university level, for example). Working knowledge of German. I can understand but not speak, properly anyway, Norwegian (not Nynorsk, only Bokmål), and Danish. I know some (*very* little) Spanish, Esperanto, Latin, Finnish, French, and Italian - hardly enough to get by solely on it, though. EDIT: Minor corrections. EDIT #2: Hehe, and of course a great number of computer languages. 0 Share this post Link to post
Szymanski Posted February 20, 2004 Kristian Ronge said:Esperanto LOL, people learn that? Anyway I can only speak English, I tried French and German but i'm far too slow for conversations :( 0 Share this post Link to post
Fredrik Posted February 20, 2004 Right, assuming that formal languages don't count: Swedish (crappy), English (sub-decent), French (awesome). 0 Share this post Link to post
Lord FlatHead Posted February 20, 2004 Dutch, English, French, and a little German, as they're the four official languages here in Belgium. For some reason I don't speak, but do understand Spanish quite a bit. 0 Share this post Link to post
Epyo Posted February 20, 2004 I acnay eakspay igpay atinlay, andhay Englishhay. Ankthay you, ankthay you, oureyay too indkay. 0 Share this post Link to post
Kristian Ronge Posted February 20, 2004 Szymanski said: LOL, people learn that? Sure! I passed by a terminal in a library once, and found it was set to some sort of official Esperanto page. There was a link there, "learn Esperanto in 5 minutes!", so I followed it. I found it amazing how easy the language is to learn. You learn the basic rules of the language very quickly; then it's only a matter of filling in the words. :-) I even know one guy who learnt Esperanto while hospitalized for 2 weeks with a broken leg! 0 Share this post Link to post
Sharessa Posted February 20, 2004 English is my native language, though I'm pretty terrible at grammatical structure and spelling. German I took for three years in high school, but I can't get the tenses down for the life of me. All I know is normal present and past. Oddly enough, it wasnt until after I got out of German and I started listening to stuff like Das Ich and KMFDM that I got the pronunciation down. I can also understand it reasonably well, though I need to look up words pretty often. French I know okay, since I have an aunt, a cousin and a grandpa who all speak it rather fluently, plus my mom and dad took it in high school. Unfortunately, I can only speak it (and then only a few words, not complete sentances), and not read or write it. Spanish is kind of a thing you need to know a bit of in the USA, so i know quite a few words of it. I know one or two werds of Japanese because there are so many people aroun here who either lived in Japan or wish they did. I used to know a bit of Tagalag because I had several Filipino friends. Then there are other languages I've picked up a few words from, such as Russian, Chinese, Arabic, and Latin. And last of all, I've had a recent interest in Anglo-Saxon (Old English). Flod under foldan. So, short answer: English and German. 0 Share this post Link to post
læmænt Posted February 20, 2004 anywhere from 2 to 5 depending on how you count. 0 Share this post Link to post