Swedish - native
English - fluent
French - a little
Finnish - a little
Japanese - very little...
You?
German - native
English - fluent
Latin - a little
{{babel-9|ja-1|la-2|ang-1|1337-N|dolphin|en-0|lnx|fox|lj}}
English - Native.
Russian - Conversational.
Japanese - As much as one could learn from watching Japanese movies and cartoons.
Друзя, довай говорить по руский.
1) English
2) Bad English
English - native
Japanese - not yet fluent, not novice level
German - forgotten most of it
English - Native
French - Semi-Fluent
Japanese - Hopeless :(
1) Swedish [fluently - main language]
2) English [fluently]
3) German [unable to any longer construct correct sentances, far too rusty. Understand most of it without any problems.]
4) Hungerian [see note for #3]
5) French [see n#3, only understandment having the value "a little"]
Swedish - Native
Finnish - Native but rusty
English - Fluent
German - Not really, too lazy
Bad English is a very important skill in many parts of the world, and is distinct from English. You can be very good at English, yet totally fail to communicate in Bad English.
Swedish - Native
English - Fluent
German - Barely (can read manuals when required)
Norwegian - native
English - pretty good
French - learning
learning what anonymous people can speak is very interesting!!
english - native
spanish - pretty good
quenya - better than most
sindarin - a little
japanese - a little
klingon - a little
russian - very little
> quenya - better than most
That's no big surprise here, you HUGE GEEK!
English - native
Spanish - I was pretty damn good having lived in Mexico for a few years, and taken two years of it... I forgot most now.
Japanese - certainly above Wapanese level and can watch some shows raw with near full comprehension... but still not good enough.
English - Native
Spanish - Basic
Japanese - Fundamentals
>>11 speaks the truth!
All rise for the entrance of Alexander to this unworthy thread!
English - Native
Isixhosa - fluent, almost
Afrikaans/Dutch - Enough to insult people
Japanese - enough to impress the wapanese
Mandarin - Enough to impress cute waitresses
French - Enough to impress anyone else
You guys speak so many languages. It makes me proud ;,|
Together, we can speak them all!
English - fluently
American - a tiny bit
Japanese - I know how to sing the first verse of "Head Cha-La"
Pikachu - partially
l33t - 4 5m411 b17 (a small bit?)
I think that's it.
English - fluent
Spanish - fluent
French - some, understand better than speak
Japanese - slightly above wapanese level(i hope)
Shortwave radio is great for learning the popular languages on the cheap. The english NHK feed to north america has two programs for learning japanese. I've also stumbled onto programs for spanish and german while scanning.
English
and a Smattering of Spanish and Japanese courtesies
Engrish
Spanish - Native (i'm peruvian)
English - very well
Galician - very well
French - a little
Japanese - a little (I'm fan of anime & manga, and learn a little more every day.)
Italian - very poor.. (¡Ciao Ragazza!)
Norwegian - Native.
English - Fluent or almost fluent.
German - some.
Japanese - very much compared to the rest in my city , very little compared to japanese ppl.
Russian:2-3words
Polish:2-3words
Old norse=10+- words "ek har ein knifr ok eit haus"
>>13
Kult å sjå andre norske her , og om du snakkar nynorsk er endå meir kult.
OMG everyone speaks japanese.
I DON'T
ps. lying is badde, totally badde
i mean, if the japanese you pick up from watching anime and dramas counts then i know a little of every scandinavian language, (except for finnish but i think that's mostly made up as a joke or to hide that all finns are telepaths or something)
Algunos de nosotros dominamos el castellano (español), ya sea por que es nuestro idioma nativo, o porque lo aprendimos viajando. Aún así, el inglés sigue siendo un buen método para que todos en este foro podamos comunicarnos.
>>33 seconded. If you know how to read a newspaper (or hold a conversation beyond "my name is ____ whar is the museum?") in the language of your choice, then you could say you "know" it.
For example, >>25 only knows english, yet he has listed 4 bullshit languages
>>37
Make me a sandwich, Watson!
No se peruano!
Japanese : Native
English : fair (depends on my psyco. condition)
French : forgotten
Ancient Hebrew : a few words and the grammar
Arameic : a few words w/out grammar
>>36 and >>37
Of course you can list 'bullshit languages', languages you only know a few words of :D
I started the thread and I only listed the ones I actually speak.
For 'bullshit' ones, then:
American english
Saami
Latin
and uhm.. whatever the name is for that silly language kids use to write secret messages and such.
> and uhm.. whatever the name is for that silly language kids use to write secret messages and such.
I think in at least American English they call it AOLchat
pig latin?
>I think in at least American English they call it AOLchat
Well, about that AOLchat thing. I find it pretty useful for accomplishing the purpose.
> For 'bullshit' ones, ... Latin
What a crock of shit! Latin killed the Romans, yes, but that doesn't mean it's not a real language. Hey, if it has it's own allocation on ISO 609, it's a language.
I think he means that he only knows it a little bit, not well enough to translate a written text easily.
I can't believe only one person here speaks some Chinese. I'm fluent in English and pretty fluent, conversation-wise anyway, in Chinese (Cantonese to be exact, my Mandarin comprises of bu, ji, and dao :P).
English: native
Japanese: fluent
I've been educated in the languages below:
I've also learned a little of both Japanese and Hindi from film, and I've been taught some Russian profanity.
Visayan/Tagalog - fluent
English - fluent
English - Native
German - About high-school level
Spanish - Enough to get around Dallas
Japanese - Enough to understand anime
Mandarin - Bu, shi, and ma
Russian - Can't speak it but can read Cyrillic
Greek - Same as Russian
Korean - Same as Russian
Norwegian - I know several words from Kaizers Orchestra's "Bak et halleluja"
English - Native
Japanese - Two semesters college level so far (I need at least 4 for my degree), and I practiced a lot too, so...
Tagalog - Itty bit (I wish I could know my own language, though. ~_~)
Spanish - Two years high school level
Latin - Used to know a bit... it's kinda lost now. =(
English-native, sadly
Japanese-nearly fluent
German-enough to get around/learning
>>59 look on the bright side
common: english-->esoteric language
uncommon: esoteric language-->esoteric language
English is the door to the world of languages!
Mandarin - native
English - nearly fluent
Japanese - conversational level
Taiwanese(or Minnan if you like) - sucks big time
Swedish - Native
French - Three years, high school level
English - Quite well
Spanish - Native.... even though i forgotten most of it.
Japanese - Qurrently learning. I Suck quite bad at it though.
French - native
English - learned it on the Internets
English - Native
Cantonese - Fluent
Mandarin - Conversational
Japanese - Conversational
French - High School
I can speak Cajun creole and English because they are my native tounges
I learned how to read quite abit of Kanji and Hangul from playing Japanese and Korean games for so many years. My Korean is much, much better than my Japanese, though. Lately as I moved from console to PC games, my Korean naturally got better
I also live in a dense hispanic population part of Texas now, so I can pick up Spanish fairly easy. Cajun language uses lots of French vocabulary and most of it is very similar to Spanish
Hungarian - Native
English - Fluent
German - Conversational
French - studied for four years, forgot everything
Japanese - studying it right now... getting there, slowly.
Slovak - native
Czech - fluently
French - fluently
English - quite well
Russian - studied for 3 years, i think I could buy some bread there
Japanese - passed 3 lessons, maybe in 10 years
lol malpt
jpnese- native
english- a little
French - native
English - fluent
German - Conversational
Japanese - Have been studying for 2 years, still going on.
English - native
Spanish - tres anos en el colegio (se dice "high school" en ingles). Estaba muy bueno, pero he olvidado mucho.
French - enough to be dangerous, mainly from reading VCR warning labels when I was 6.
Japanese - about the same as French, but enough to read Japanese web pages if I look up the kanji.
German - Bits and pieces, mainly from my younger brother.
English — native
Tlingit — conversational
Japanese — conversational
Russian — conversational but rusty
Dutch — conversational
French — reading
German — whatever Dutch I can make Germans understand
Hawaiian — reading
Hawaiian Pidgin — nuff fo tok wit da pake landlady, I stay learn um but
English - Native
Japanese - Intermediate conversational
Korean - Decent to crappy depending on my mood
English-native
german-fluent
french-fluent
arabic-studying
=) after seeing all your posts i feel very dumb ^^;;
english - native
latin - dunno how well now, but years ago i translated chapters of the aeneid
italian - took several years, can speak a little, can understand enough for basic commerce.
japanese - very little
spanish - can understand basics, can't speak a word
i do speak "programmer-ese" fluently though.
mi kan spek in Genglish. mi hab spas with dat!...
ah! Creoles.
German - native
english - fluent
D:
>>77 aber Deutsch mache spaß für mir
I think that german is underrated even by people who speek it.
>>79
With whom?
>>80
half the people at a Star Trek convention...lol
English - my primary language
Esperanto - not a lot
Spanish - even less
Angla - mia unua lingvo
Esperanta - malgranda
Hispana - tre malpli
Japanese-native
English-fluent
Russian-not a lot
:D
English - Native
French - Passable proficiency
Japanese - Learning, starting second year
German - Only took one year :P
Chinese - Just about to start first year
English - native
Spanish - understand most, can speak some, construct basic sentences
Japanese - can read/understand some, speak a bit, know about 100 kanji
>>85
100 kanji , wow cool.
I only know 円
Must be because i study economics ;)
>>86
Haha, that would be helpful.
Most of the kanji I know is basic stuff, like numbers, days of the week, maybe a dozen or so names, some places, colors, and basic nouns. And 円. :P
English - native
Korean - native
Japanese - fluent
Spanish - little
English - fluent
Japanese - basic conversation, 250 kanji
French - a little
English - fluent
Japanese - wannabe otaku phrases =P
Chinese - 4th year study
2chlangauge - native
English - native
Japanese - know a couple hundred words, no desire to learn kanji 8)
took a year of German but I've completely forgotten it
これは本当にくそスレだな…
Really, who cares what language you speak?! I better see a fucking poll created, or else this thread was entirely in vain. Do you really care if some anonymous person knows French - a little whereas another anonymous person knows French - passable proficiency?
This thread would only be suitable on forums that require registration, and even then, it would still be shit.
Even "Residents of Needler High!" was more successful than this!
Even "How old are you?" was more successful and meaningful than this!
[Worst Thread Ever] How many languages do you speak? ver2 [SHAME]
I've taken the liberty of naming the next thread for you, once this one reaches 1004 posts in year 2008!
Go die, >>1!
>>93
I think somebody needs a nap...
>>93
What crawled up your ass? This thread was fine until you took a dump in it.
>>91
WTF is 2chlanguage?
I like this thread because it seems to say that a lot more people at 4-ch speak french than I would expect