- English
- Spanish
- French
- German
- Italian
- Russian
- Chinese
- Japanese
- Arabic
- Other
0 voters
2021-06-28T05:00:00Z
0 voters
2021-06-28T05:00:00Z
other, gaelic. 1.8 million people speak it, as a 1st or 2nd language. i’ve been shopping for books to learn and only found books that go up to intermediate gaelic.
I would like to know more business and commerce terms in written simplified Chinese. However, software code is done in English so I’d like to know more technical terminology.
I’d love to learn Spanish. I think the only way to learn a language is immersion. I took it for two years in college. I’m able to understand very little and speak none.
I think mandarin is a very good language. I’m interested to learn how to write it specifically. It seems like it would take a long time to write.
I speak and write fluently 3 languages, French, English and Arabic.
Mandarin is the spoken language of Chinese. Simplified and Traditional Chinese characters are the written text of Chinese. Writing will be a skill of the past as typing quickly and accurately is the future.
That’s interesting never knew that.
I took Spanish courses in college and university but forgot it, though I know some words and phrases like Como te llamas? (whats your name?) La piscina, etc also some french and spanish words are similar. Piscina is piscine in French which means swimming pool. I also took a German course for two weeks in Germany but forgot it, only remember some words and phrases, Was machen sie? which means what are you doing?
I am very close to being fluent in Spanish but I am not quite there yet. I’m studying like crazy to get there though.
I am learning Biblical Greek and Biblical Hebrew.
I’ve dabbled in other languages as a hobby.
I studied German throughout school and am trying to keep up with it. I also learned some Swedish and a few others. I love languages.
Where I live there are a lot of Spanish speaking people so that’s the language I would like to learn.
I think korean might be interesting to learn, although I might be interested in some european languages. Thankfully I really like england and english is spoken there.
Finnish.
I knew it as a kid, but I didn’t maintain it.
It’s an interesting language
The non European language I’d choose to learn overnight (should the technology be available) would be Arabic. And of course improve my Danish
I don’t think you can become fluent in a language by studying it. I don’t even know if I would call myself fluent in English.
Norwegian. My great grandparents were Norwegian, and I loved listening to them speak when I was a kid. I’ll also be visiting Oslo for the first time later this year or early next, and want to be able to have some small conversations with the locals, though they all speak English well enough to get by without.
I’ve been learning basic german on Duolingo, I’m also starting to learn some french so I can talk with some gamer buddies
Duolingo is free it might not be the best way but whatever works
Ich bin ein mann, du list eine zeitung?
I’d like to be fluent in Spanish.