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Learning another anguage

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    #11
    Originally posted by Mushroombump View Post
    Spanish would be pretty useful
    Exactly. I cant believe no-one else said that.


    I once did spanish in the evenings. Aside from English, it's spoken in more countries than any other language.

    Also Spanish is the second most natively spoken language in the world (mandarin is the spoken the most purely on how many chinese people there are), above English at 3rd place.

    It's a very nice language to learn as well ... Far more refined and romantic than italian or god forbid, french.




    I would recommend rosetta stone by the way. Really is unbeatable language software ....

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      #12
      Originally posted by dang65 View Post
      French - Useful but mostly unfulfilling because the French expect you to speak French anyway and just look bored if you struggle.
      Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
      French has to be the easiest; if you don't know the word just say the English word in a French accent and you'll probably be right. And the word order is roughly the same as English too.
      There is no point learning french. One of our friends can speak french very well. Even went to france on their honeymoon, only to be screamed, sworn and talked down to for slightly mispronouncing one word.

      Here is the easiest french lesson ever and the only sentence you need, works on every french person: Va chier!

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        #13
        Originally posted by chef View Post
        Just a heads up, German grammar is f@c#ing difficult, frustrating and complex, however, once you've mastered it you're home free.. he hopes
        German is a piece of piss compared to Russian or any other Slavic language. Trust me!

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          #14
          Originally posted by wim121 View Post
          Exactly. I cant believe no-one else said that.


          I once did spanish in the evenings. Aside from English, it's spoken in more countries than any other language.

          Also Spanish is the second most natively spoken language in the world (mandarin is the spoken the most purely on how many chinese people there are), above English at 3rd place.

          It's a very nice language to learn as well ... Far more refined and romantic than italian or god forbid, french.




          I would recommend rosetta stone by the way. Really is unbeatable language software ....
          I was thinking the same thing! I did a bit of Spanish at school and got the hang of it, after spending the season in Ibiza a few years later I was amazed at how much I could remember! Its a really nice language and also very similar to Italian, so you could go on to learn this and be multi lingual!
          I have heard Rosetta Stone is good, not actually used it myself as its quite pricey and I dont know anyone that has used it! Would you recommend it? Maybe I should invest in a language!

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            #15
            Originally posted by dang65 View Post
            :

            German - Almost pointless because the Germans will nearly always default to English as soon as you open your mouth to speak.
            I disagree. You probably are talking of the Dutch who, annoyingly, refuse to speak Dutch to foreigners I speak a bit of Dutch and I had to pretend to be Belgian to be accepted into a conversation). The Germans I've met (I used to live in the Netherlands, near the border with Germany and visted Germany every weekend) do not really like to speak English unless politely asked (Sprechen Sie Englisch, bitte?).

            My advice: go for German but travel frequently to Germany and try to practice your German without reverting to English while you're there.
            <Insert idea here> will never be adopted because the politicians are in the pockets of the banks!

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              #16
              Originally posted by wim121 View Post
              There is no point learning french. One of our friends can speak french very well. Even went to france on their honeymoon, only to be screamed, sworn and talked down to for slightly mispronouncing one word.

              Here is the easiest french lesson ever and the only sentence you need, works on every french person: Va chier!
              Never had a problem speaking French in various parts of France, only problem I came across was when a waiter heard me translating the menu into English and the refused to speak to me in French for the rest of the evening. Though that was in Paris.
              "Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch." - Orson Welles

              Norrahe's blog

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                #17
                Originally posted by norrahe View Post
                Never had a problem speaking French in various parts of France, only problem I came across was when a waiter heard me translating the menu into English and the refused to speak to me in French for the rest of the evening. Though that was in Paris.

                Am currently trying to get to grips with Dutch using Michel Thomas which isn't bad, the cds, the Dutch does take a while to get your head around.
                "Ask not what you can do for your country. Ask what's for lunch." - Orson Welles

                Norrahe's blog

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                  #18
                  Spanish, Mandarin and English are the three languages in the trilingual era apparently. Spanish is very easy to learn compared to other languages.

                  I'm currently brushing up on A-Level German from twenty odd years ago and Brazilian Portugeuse. I agree with what has been said about german grammar - it's a bugger when you're learning it.

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                    #19
                    I am learning German and i would recommend it. Not only for the kudos as Brits in general are awful at learning other languages, but for the ability to scare your wifey/girlfriend by telling her loudly "Ich Leibe Dich!" It is certainly not a beautiful lingo!

                    I'm finding it ok and slowly picking up the vocabulary and context. Don't expect to be fluent in six months but do expect to be able to visit Germany and get by adequately. I find listening to German TV aimed at young folks to be handy as German words are mixed with a lot of English (sounds more cool i guess) and this allows me to put the German in some kind of context... Not a classical way of learning but works for me..

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                      #20
                      Arabic and Hindi IMO.
                      'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

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