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How many languages do Europeans speak

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66 messages over 9 pages: << Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... 8 9 Next >>
Ogrim
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France
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 Message 57 of 66
07 October 2014 at 6:12pm | IP Logged 
eyðimörk wrote:
Never underestimate the Swedish ability to believe themselves as a people to be the best in the world at everything (English as a foreign language, childcare, health care, elder care, education) while simultaneously allowing no individual Swede to be considered better than average at anything. ;)


What you say about the Swedes applies fully to the Norwegians as well (and to your list I should add cross-country skiing as far as Norway is concerned :). Just wait until this Friday when the Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Peace Price committee, former Prime Minister Jagland, will announce this year's winner: Half of the comments on twitter and btl in the Norwegian newspapers will be about his horrible English accent (conveniently ignoring that his English is totally understandable and his vocabulary quite adequate). I have yet to meet any non-Norwegian who makes any particular criticism about his English accent, except to note that it is "very Norwegian". If you search for videoclips of e.g. François Hollande or Manuel Valls speaking English, then you can really see that our Norwegian politicans compare quite well to leaders in other countries.

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showtime17
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Slovakia
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 Message 58 of 66
26 October 2014 at 11:02pm | IP Logged 
This depends on the country. While your typical Belgian (from the Flemish part) can speak around 4 languages, a person from Spain or Italy will usually just speak their own language.

The strongest countries for languages, where people usually speak more languages are Luxembourg, Belgium and Switzerland at the top, where speaking 3 or more languages can be the norm for a large part of the people and even a homeless person is almost a polyglot. Then probably comes the Netherlands and the Scandinavian countries, where people have good English skills and many people can also speak another language such as German (also sometimes Spanish). Also Romanians usually speak multiple languages.
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Serpent
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Russian Federation
serpent-849.livejour
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 Message 59 of 66
27 October 2014 at 6:49am | IP Logged 
You forgot about Malta
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Camundonguinho
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Brazil
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 Message 60 of 66
30 October 2014 at 11:25am | IP Logged 
eyðimörk wrote:
daegga wrote:
beano wrote:
But the Swedes themselves speak English with an accent. Why should it bother them if an immigrant does the same?

Different perception though. I don't think Swedes would call their own accent an
unpleasant one. They are certainly very much used to their own accent.

In my experience, Swedes who speak English well usually abhor a Swedish accent.


But still many Swedes fail to voice their [z]'s and use [s] instead,
they for example fail to hear(?) the lose [z] / loose [s] distinction and
pronounce both words with an [s]


please with [s],
eyes with [s]
lose with [s]
music with [s]

this is not native English/American/Australian accent, but is found in Swedish/Danish/Norwegian English.

It's annoying to hear [s] instead of [z] every time there's a Swedish group (like Roxette or Ace of Base) on the radio. Please include [z] in your English classes.

The group September singing ''music'' as [mjusik]:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ie5UiQoQYz4

This is very weird, and I wouldn't consider it good accent.

Edited by Camundonguinho on 30 October 2014 at 11:30am

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chokofingrz
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England
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 Message 61 of 66
30 October 2014 at 12:41pm | IP Logged 
Camundonguinho wrote:

This is very weird, and I wouldn't consider it good accent.


How important is accent when you can speak English as well as many Swedes? Not very, and I happen to like they way they pronounce their [s].
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Ari
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Norway
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 Message 62 of 66
30 October 2014 at 1:37pm | IP Logged 
Yes, the failure to voice the 'z' is very common in Swedes speaking English. The voiced
sound doesn't exist in Swedish and many people don't even know it exists in English. It's
not taught in English classes either, AFAIK. Also widespread, but not quite as common, is
the failure to distinguish "sheep" and "cheap", as well as mixing up 'v' and 'w', leading
to hypercorrections like "thank you wery much".
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daegga
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Austria
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 Message 63 of 66
30 October 2014 at 2:28pm | IP Logged 
Camundonguinho wrote:

It's annoying to hear [s] instead of [z] every time there's a Swedish group (like
Roxette or Ace of Base) on the radio. Please include [z] in your English classes.


That's futile. English teachers aren't qualified to provide the kind of training that
would be necessary.
An anecdote from Austria (we don't have [z] either): Teacher trying to explain the
voiced s used the Standard German word "summen" as an example. Just pronounce it like
the buzzing sound at the start of "summen". Stupid teacher, it doesn't have any buzzing
sound in Standard Austrian German. Even in Standard German, the s would be unvoiced
when not surrounded by other voiced sounds. You can't learn it like that if your native
language doesn't have that sound.
You need to go a different route, and the average teacher has no idea how to do that.
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Serpent
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Russian Federation
serpent-849.livejour
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 Message 64 of 66
30 October 2014 at 4:37pm | IP Logged 
I think learning voiced equivalents of sounds that you already know is much easier. Assuming you also know some voiced/voiceless pairs like p/b and t/d.


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