Originally posted by norrahe
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How many languages?
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Originally posted by stek View PostHow do you know she's fluent unless you are fluent too?
She could be babbling incoherently and they native speakers being polite...
I well remember being sat in the airport transfer bus from Sheremetyevo 2 to 1, c 2002, separate buildings then and was chatting to this Danish guy who claimed he spoke fluent Russian, he gets off the bus and walked straight into an unyielding door marked 'входа нет' - means 'No entry'. Wad a dick!
Put it this way little kids can speak English fluently before they can read or write it."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostSpeaking doesn't equal the ability to read or write the language as they are 3 different skills.
Put it this way little kids can speak English fluently before they can read or write it.Comment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostSpeaking doesn't equal the ability to read or write the language as they are 3 different skills.
Put it this way little kids can speak English fluently before they can read or write it.Comment
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My former Dutch GF and I once stopped a businessman in a well-to-do suburb of Den Haag, asking for directions. She asked first, so he started replying to her in Dutch; she translated salient bits to me. Realising I was English, he then started talking in English when he was addressing me, and in Dutch when he was addressing her. It became rather weird, as he'd say something like "Carry on until you see a church" as he was looking at me and then, turning to her, say "and then turn left" in Dutch. I don't think he realised he was switching between the two languages depending on who he was looking at; it was just the way you'd talk if you were giving directions to a couple, looking at both of them rather than just talking to one while ignoring the other, but in two languages
After he'd gone, I mentioned it to my GF; she admitted that she hadn't actually noticed that he was talking in both languages, but she'd understood all of the directions, so we got to where we wanted to beComment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostMy former Dutch GF and I once stopped a businessman in a well-to-do suburb of Den Haag, asking for directions. She asked first, so he started replying to her in Dutch; she translated salient bits to me. Realising I was English, he then started talking in English when he was addressing me, and in Dutch when he was addressing her. It became rather weird, as he'd say something like "Carry on until you see a church" as he was looking at me and then, turning to her, say "and then turn left" in Dutch. I don't think he realised he was switching between the two languages depending on who he was looking at; it wtas just the way you'd talk if you were giving directions to a couple, looking at both of them rather than just talking to one while ignoring the other, but in two languages
After he'd gone, I mentioned it to my GF; she admitted that she hadn't actually noticed that he was talking in both languages, but she'd understood all of the directions, so we got to where we wanted to beWhat happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostMy former Dutch GF and I ...Comment
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In my kids' school(equivalent to sixth form college), they have to read 50 books in three years, 15 in English, 15 in French and 20 in German. Kids specialising in languages will add Italian, Spanish and one other to the mix.
The locals grow up learning Swiss German, then learn German when they start school, with French coming in a year later, and English from about age 11. There's moves to start teaching English from 7 as well.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostIn my kids' school(equivalent to sixth form college), they have to read 50 books in three years, 15 in English, 15 in French and 20 in German. Kids specialising in languages will add Italian, Spanish and one other to the mix.
The locals grow up learning Swiss German, then learn German when they start school, with French coming in a year later, and English from about age 11. There's moves to start teaching English from 7 as well.Comment
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I once stopped at some motorway services in Belgium and had one of those guys rush up to try to sell me a gold watch, or some such tat, but in Belgian (or Flemish, whatever it is). I just said "I'm English" and without pausing for breath he instantly switched his patter to perfect English. He was from Turkey, so presumably spoke at least 3 languages well enough to scam people in each.
I'm getting close to a conversational level of French; really I need to go there and practice. But despite 2 years of German evening classes I'd struggle to string together much of anything in German. Pretty hopeless really.Will work inside IR35. Or for food.Comment
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