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re: How many of y'all are multilingual?

Posted on 2/21/16 at 2:45 am to
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18812 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 2:45 am to
So you're no longer a Southerner?
Posted by The Silverback
Neptune
Member since May 2013
2036 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 12:51 pm to
German and Mandarin Chinese
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 1:30 pm to
quote:

how'd you learn Greek? that's interesting, T.


Dad was stationed over there when I was a kid. Whole family learned it because we lived in the community.

Conversations with my immediate family are interesting because my Mom will randomly drop in Greek or Spanish words/terms
This post was edited on 2/21/16 at 1:34 pm
Posted by Allyn McKeen
Key West, FL
Member since Jun 2012
4291 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 2:11 pm to
quote:

My gf's family is Dutch-American


The Dutch always told me, "Dutch is a language that is as beautiful as it is useful." With that in mind, I never bothered learning any.

I constantly work on several foreign languages. I am pretty good at Japanese, Korean, Swedish, and Danish. Most of the business that I conduct in Japan and Korea is done in the local language and English. I can understand their Japanese. They can understand my English. We just stick to speaking our own language. Same for Korea.

Speaking Asian languages is particularly tricky because of the different versions. I learned my first Japanese from a Japanese girlfriend at Berkeley. I thought I was pretty good at it. On my first business trip to Tokyo, I was speaking a lot of Japanese. Finally, one of my customers says to me, "Your Japanese is very good, but why do you talk like a girl?" I basically had to scrap a lot of what I "knew" and start over. Kanto, Kansai, formal, informal, men only, standard Japanese, women talk... Sheesh. On top of that, you have to figure out what they mean and not what they say.
Posted by tduecen
Member since Nov 2006
161244 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 2:13 pm to
I tried learning French but someone told me Dutch would be easier to learn as an American
Posted by Carolina_Girl
South Cackalacky
Member since Apr 2012
23973 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 4:41 pm to
I used to speak French fairly well but outside of general day-to-day type of convos, I've pretty much forgotten most of it.

My son, who was already fluent in German when he moved to Germany, had a very difficult time readjusting to English when he moved back to the states.

My daughter is fluent in German (she currently lives in Germany) as well as French and Spanish.

Posted by Pavoloco83
Acworth Ga. too many damn dawgs
Member since Nov 2013
15347 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 6:35 pm to
I am highly skilled in English, redneck and cunnilingus.
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18812 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 6:41 pm to
quote:

Dutch is a language that is as beautiful as it is useful


haha... yeah, this is true. If you don't have any family or marry into one who speaks it, there really is no reason as they all speak perfect english. It's surprising how easy it is to comprehend with minimal study and hearing it all day when we're at her parents.'

quote:

Kanto, Kansai, formal, informal, men only, standard Japanese, women talk


interesting... I knew chinese had something like this, but didn't know it was the same for japanese as well.
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18812 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 6:44 pm to
German is a great language to know, but I refuse to even try to learn it because they're so rude. lol. Yeah, readjustment takes a while. For a week after I got back to Texas I could swear people around me were talking in french.
Posted by Herman Frisco
Bon Secour
Member since Sep 2008
17285 posts
Posted on 2/21/16 at 8:27 pm to
My son is in the Foreign Service and speaks four and can get by in French.

I speak one when my wife lets me...
Posted by BamaFinland
Espoo, Finland
Member since Oct 2015
2587 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 8:33 am to
Finnish and Japanese. Japanese from living in Okinawa and Tokyo region for 12 years. Just finnished level 3 in Finnish last week in school. Do not speak either language perfect, but enough to get by when needed.
Posted by Pavoloco83
Acworth Ga. too many damn dawgs
Member since Nov 2013
15347 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 8:44 am to
Im really surprised that Im the only one here who is fluently cunnilingual.
Posted by Pavoloco83
Acworth Ga. too many damn dawgs
Member since Nov 2013
15347 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 8:46 am to
Japanese and Finnish... what are you going to do with that?

Finnish has to be the most incomprehensible language ever. I deal with Finns regularly in business.
Posted by RockyMtnTigerWDE
War Damn Eagle Dad!
Member since Oct 2010
105446 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 8:48 am to
You must have missed my post...
Posted by BamaFinland
Espoo, Finland
Member since Oct 2015
2587 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 9:06 am to
Japanese was useful when I was younger and meeting girls and building rice burners. Finnish is, well, complicated doesn't begin to describe it. Supposedly the 2nd hardest language to learn behind Mandarin. I live in Finland now, so in order to get a job here you have to speak Finnish unless you live in Helsinki. So its pretty much force fed on us foreigners here to learn it. Basically, you know how we change everything in America to include Spanish. Well the Finnish are just the opposite, they pretty say that if you are going to live here, you have to learn their language.
Posted by Allyn McKeen
Key West, FL
Member since Jun 2012
4291 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 10:00 am to
I used to do a lot of business with Nokia back in the day, but I haven't been to Finland since 1999. My memory of the Finns is of them taking their own bottle of liquor to a party and then just drinking straight out of the bottle.
Posted by RebMed
Rowland Medical Library
Member since Feb 2015
49 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 11:24 am to
My grandmother's family is German, and she and her oldest brother speak it together. I took 3 years of it in college and now speak it with her and my great uncle. And you're absolutely right about Dutch being close to English. Frisian is a dialect of Dutch spoken in the Frisian Islands of Holland, and it is the closest language to English. Dutch spelling is crazy, though.
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18812 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 7:51 pm to
quote:

Well the Finnish are just the opposite, they pretty say that if you are going to live here, you have to learn their language.


Inconvenient for travelers, but this is the way is should be. I hate seeing Spanish shite in Texas. They are making teachers in some schools label things in Spanish and English. I would pull my kid out of that school immediately.
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18812 posts
Posted on 2/22/16 at 7:53 pm to
She is Frisian, actually. They speak both but fris at home.
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