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Jinx Triglot Senior Member Germany reverbnation.co Joined 5691 days ago 1085 posts - 1879 votes Speaks: English*, German, French Studies: Catalan, Dutch, Esperanto, Croatian, Serbian, Norwegian, Mandarin, Italian, Spanish, Yiddish
| Message 129 of 204 27 December 2010 at 8:12pm | IP Logged |
I'm 23.
ENGLISH: Native, very good knowledge including "flexible" knowledge (I can do "Basic English" when necessary, etc.) – although I have a slight Neptunian accent which I just can't shift.
FRENCH: Studied it for three pathetic years in high school, was barely able to ask a question in it by the end of that time, and didn't have a good accent at all. I started re-learning it (pretty much from scratch) on my own a year ago and have been progressing rapidly. I'm now able to hold basic conversations, read easily for pleasure in various genres (Simenon mysteries, classics like Balzac and Hugo, autobiography, etc.), and write to French-speaking friends without too much trouble.
GERMAN: My linguistic true love. I obsessively listened to German pop music all through high school without actually studying it at all, but that turned out to be the best possible preparation for "real" study. When I got to university I started studying it intensely and progressed very rapidly. I've since spent six months living in Germany, can converse comfortably if imperfectly in it, can write and read for pleasure, and am in the process of translating a German novel into English for my final project at uni.
ITALIAN: I've studied it on and off, with not much motivation but lots of fondness, for about two years. I can just manage to hold a basic conversation in it, but my accent is quite good and I have hardly any trouble reading. I could also get by just fine when I visited Italy this past spring.
ESPERANTO: I've been trying to learn it for several years now, doing a few weeks of effort and then getting frustrated with my lack of interest and giving up. I could probably hold a basic conversation on familiar topics. I can read with not much trouble and write to penpals quite easily as well, but my speaking (and listening, to a lesser degree) continues to lag behind.
MANDARIN CHINESE: Pretty much just started. I became interested in it in mid-October, studied intensely for about a month, then trailed off to focus on finals. Now that the semester's over I'm going to return to it, but I can already see that I've forgotten some words. I know just enough to say things like "I am American" and "I study Chinese but I can not speak it yet."
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ETA: Welcome to the forum, guitarob! :)
Edited by Jinx on 27 December 2010 at 8:14pm
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| Rodrigo Chaves Hexaglot Newbie BrazilRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5430 days ago 12 posts - 18 votes Speaks: Portuguese*, Esperanto, English, Spanish, Italian, Catalan Studies: Japanese, French
| Message 130 of 204 27 December 2010 at 8:26pm | IP Logged |
I'm 17
Portuguese - Native
English - My first contact with English happened when I was 6. I can speak it fairly well
Spanish - Started studying when I was 13/14. Since it's very similar to Portuguese, I can speak it well too.
Esperanto - Started this year, on January. Because of it's easiness, it's not hard to learn. I don't speak it very fluently, but I speak it well too.
Japanese - Tried it when I was 12-14 but i stopped studying it. I only remember Kanas, Kanjis and basic conversation. My grammar sucks just like my vocabulary =P
Catalan - I've been studying Catalan for 3 or 4 months. I can talk/write and understand Catalan, not very well but I can. I intend to get a C1 level by March
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| Lianne Senior Member Canada thetoweringpile.blog Joined 5113 days ago 284 posts - 410 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Esperanto, Toki Pona, German, French
| Message 131 of 204 27 December 2010 at 8:54pm | IP Logged |
I'm 22 and still monolingual.
English: native tongue.
French: at least 6 years of classes in school, resulting in me knowing a couple of common phrases, and I might still remember the present tense conjugations of etre and avoir.
German: started studying on my own about a year ago using Pimsleur. This has continued on and off. I don't know much, but I'm told I have a pretty good accent.
Esperanto: started a few months ago, though I haven't had a lot of time for study since I've been in university. I am in love with this language and do not doubt that I will become fluent in it. I seem to soak up the vocabulary like a sponge.
Toki Pona: started a few weeks ago, just had time to start really focusing on it in the last week or so. I've learned over half the words, but to understand sentences I have to read the whole thing and then pick them apart, which just won't do in spoken conversation.
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| wv girl Diglot Senior Member United States Joined 5237 days ago 174 posts - 330 votes Speaks: English*, French Studies: Spanish
| Message 132 of 204 27 December 2010 at 10:32pm | IP Logged |
I feel soooo old compared to many others on this forum. I just turned 45!
Latin: Studied for 2 years in high school. Had a great teacher and can still conjugate in the present & future and
remember most of the cases, but have no desire to try to pick it back up. I'd rather spend my precious time on
spoken languages.
French: Started at age 22 with 2 summer college classes, then joined an adult group, and later studied privately
with a native speaker, to whom I owe my conversational ability. Later finished a French/Secondary Education
degree, but wouldn't have been able to communicate without my years of 1-on 1 practice with my private tutor.
I'd say I have basic fluency, although maybe it's a little higher, though certainly not advanced fluency.
Conversationally, I can still hold my own, although I no longer have a native speaker to practice with.
Spanish: Briefly started in 1992, to commemorate the 500 year old "discovery" of the New World, but couldn't
keep it up. Picked it back up with an adult group maybe in 1998, then took a class or 2 at university, but I never
learn as much with "formal" training as I do 1-on-1 or in an unstructured environment. In 2005, for job
security, I bit the bullet and finished the classes I needed to become a "teacher," but I know my level doesn't
reach basic fluency, so I consider myself still studying, still trying to improve. Practice with a native speaker
makes such a difference!
1 person has voted this message useful
| JPike1028 Triglot Senior Member United States piketransitions Joined 5395 days ago 297 posts - 337 votes Speaks: English*, French, Italian Studies: German, Spanish, Russian, Arabic (Written), Swedish, Portuguese, Czech
| Message 133 of 204 27 December 2010 at 11:27pm | IP Logged |
Myself: 26
Italian: about a B1 or B2 - started studying at 18
French: about a B1 - started at 20
Spanish: maybe B1 - studied in high school for 4 years and then didn't study it again until this year
All of my other languages were started this year and range from A1 - B1.
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| CheeseInsider Bilingual Diglot Senior Member Canada Joined 5120 days ago 193 posts - 238 votes Speaks: English*, Mandarin* Studies: French, German
| Message 134 of 204 28 December 2010 at 3:44am | IP Logged |
I'm 16 years old
English: Native language :P
Mandarin: Secondary native language
French: "Studied" it in school from grade 4-9, learned how to say some stuff. Bonjour and the numbers 1-10 are all I remember from those classes though. Started self studying it this summer - Intermediate. Skills, from strongest to weakest go: Speaking (weird right?), reading, writing, listening. Hoping to improve the listening by watching French movies with French subtitles.
Cantonese: Level- Atrocious, started maybe 1 month ago? I guess I'm not motivated enough at the moment.
*EDIT
Since this post, I picked up German as a target language haha...
Okay so here it is.
German: Level- Beginner, just started. I'm loving the grammar so far, I don't know why, but it's just really interesting. Anyways, hopefully come summer I'll be able to conduct relatively lengthy conversations, even if they're riddled with blunders on my part.
Edited by CheeseInsider on 30 December 2010 at 4:39am
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| sm66 Diglot Newbie Australia Joined 5356 days ago 26 posts - 32 votes Speaks: English*, French Studies: Italian, Greek, German
| Message 135 of 204 28 December 2010 at 5:21am | IP Logged |
I'm 19 years old.
English: Mother tongue.
French: Been studying for 1 year and would say that I'm at an intermediate level.
Italian: Something of a secondary native language for myself, yet I can't speak it, due
to my grandparents being from there, I believe I've had 100s hours of input...yet very
little output. Therefore, my speaking is worse than French but my listening and
understanding is far better in Italian!
1 person has voted this message useful
| El niño copado Newbie Joined 5078 days ago 1 posts - 1 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish, Russian, Romanian
| Message 136 of 204 28 December 2010 at 7:34pm | IP Logged |
I'm 16.
English is my native tongue.
Spanish: I've been studying Spanish for a year now, but at a faster pace that most
people (In America, because HS language is a joke). I converse with natives a lot in
chat rooms (with minimal errors and misunderstandings), and have read some smaller literature. All in all though, I'm a beginner level, due to my crappy conversational
ability.
Russian: I've been studying for less than 6 months. I stubble and crash along at best
in writing and conversation, my comprehension is iffy, and I've never had a
conversation yet.
Romanian: I started studying that last week, so my practical skills end at hello, but I
can tell you if you're a guy, girl, etc. XD
I've got amoeba sized vocabs and understanding of a few other languages like Biblical
Hebrew, French, German, Dutch, Polish, but like I said I don't know much at all about
those languages just some phrases and small pieces.
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