Have you bothered to learn?

Jump to forum:
« Previous | 1 2 3 4 | Next » | Last Post
31st March 2008, 10:20am
#1
by Queenie
London House United Kingdom
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 1813

 I think that people whose first language is English, are quite lazy about learning other language's, and I am just amazed that so many people on this site whose first language is not English can speak and write in English. (ferlop excused, but I love his postings) (No really, really I do). How many Language's have you learnt, to speak?

31st March 2008, 10:25am
#2
by Sothilde
Groningen Netherlands
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 256
four
31st March 2008, 10:28am
#3
by Queenie
London House United Kingdom
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 1813
Sothilde wrote: four

 which four?


31st March 2008, 10:28am
#4
by likesforests
United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 4407
Two fluently. Bits of a dozen others.
31st March 2008, 10:48am
#5
by mytself
youngstown,ohio United States
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 1820
i've spent most of my life learning 'american' which is somewhat different than 'english'. Learned the 'street' japanese which is different than formal. Some formal french and formal german. Now am learning some blended native american tongues.
31st March 2008, 10:54am
#6
by shadowslayer
Grand Rapids, Michigan United States
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 1556
american only because I am lazy and that's america
31st March 2008, 10:56am
#7
by erik
Mountain View, CA United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 10123
same as likesforests: two fluently (english, spanish), and understand bits here and there of others (french, portugeues, guarani).
31st March 2008, 11:06am
#8
by Boring304
Israel
Member Since: Sep 2007
Member Points: 685
My first language is not english, I learned 2 preety good (Arabic and English and of-cousre I also know hebrew) and a bit of other 2 ( Greek and Japaneise)
31st March 2008, 11:22am
#9
by mrsoccerchessman
Pennsylvania United States
Member Since: Feb 2008
Member Points: 263

Yeah, I speak American-English which is pretty cool cause you ain't got to gots the bestest type of grammer when ya speak. LOL, it's pretty fun

 

I also like how people from other countries speak English better than those raised with the English language.  The reason being is because they take it more serious and it doesn't help when an American grows up around people speaking slang English and incorrect grammar in their words.

 

I love you all who are not American.

 

I also am taking Latin.  So that makes it easier for me to comprehend words from other countries.  Latin is the root of all languages.  And it's not dead, a new word has been made recently. 


31st March 2008, 11:24am
#10
by ih8sens
Sudbury, Ontario Canada
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 2874

Unfortunately I ONLY speak English.. and I feel terrible for it.

I've taken a few months worth of a spanish course and know some of the basics...

I also know a tiny bit of French, simply from living in an area with a lot of french speakers.

 


31st March 2008, 11:48am
#11
by hicetnunc
Neuilly-sur-Seine France
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 3327
Besides English, I know some French Wink
31st March 2008, 12:08pm
#12
by 789159
United States
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 176
Working on German, bits of Spanish
31st March 2008, 12:13pm
#13
by Chesser777
Belgium
Member Since: Feb 2008
Member Points: 393
Dutch, German, French, English
31st March 2008, 12:28pm
#14
by mcfrazier
Philadelphia United States
Member Since: Feb 2008
Member Points: 78

I speak American English natively, and read and write Biblical Hebrew, Koine Greek and Neo-Latin. Also, I know tiny smatterings of French (mostly rude words ice-hockey terms), Italian, Swahili, and Russian. But I haven't used any of those last four in ages, and I find that if I'm not using a language regularly, I lose it pretty quickly.

 


31st March 2008, 12:28pm
#15
by JRadis
Sweden
Member Since: Jan 2008
Member Points: 452

fluently, swedish and English

In german I am also quite good, and my spanish i pretty poor but I am learning :) Still goes to school and I am hoping to learn all four fluently.


31st March 2008, 12:29pm
#16
by hondoham
North Carolina USA and Honduras
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 579
a generational issue...  nowadays children in USA are told that foreign languages are essential job skills.  when i grew up, it was a hobby and a way to bump up your SAT scores because of the latin roots.  i took Spanish for the field trips to the ONE mexican restaurant in my city.  I imagine the same mindset shift is going on in England and Australia. i don't believe people change, but i do believe they eventually disappear.
31st March 2008, 01:09pm
#17
by More_Ignorance
Terrigal, NSW International
Member Since: Feb 2008
Member Points: 209
I can't really speak any language other than English. But at a site like this you can fake it with babelfish and other translation pages, but I think it makes speak me terribling maybe.
31st March 2008, 05:39pm
#18
by Knatted
Gibsons BC Canada
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 1725

I continue my study in Francias!

 

 


4th April 2008, 07:05am
#19
by chesscombat
Cainta Philippines
Member Since: Nov 2007
Member Points: 1722
a little of english, spanish, enlish, spanish, english, spanish...hehe thats all
4th April 2008, 07:44am
#20
by petershaby
Exeter England England
Member Since: Oct 2007
Member Points: 1275
I speeke an rite flewintly in allmowst evry languidge
« Previous | 1 2 3 4 | Next » | Last Post

Add your comment:

Join Chess.com for free to add your comment! Already a member? Then login now to comment.