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What languages have you heard today?

 Language Learning Forum : Cultural Experiences in Foreign Languages Post Reply
121 messages over 16 pages: 1 2 3 46 7 ... 5 ... 15 16 Next >>
maaku
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5354 days ago

359 posts - 562 votes 
Speaks: English*

 
 Message 33 of 121
31 August 2009 at 1:57am | IP Logged 
English, Mandarin Chinese, and Spanish. Because that's what me, my roommates, and my neighbors speak. Living in a multi-cultural community is awesome :)
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newyorkeric
Diglot
Moderator
Singapore
Joined 6159 days ago

1598 posts - 2174 votes 
Speaks: English*, Italian
Studies: Mandarin, Malay
Personal Language Map

 
 Message 34 of 121
31 August 2009 at 6:09am | IP Logged 
English (every day)
Mandarin (every day)
Indonesian (most days)
Hokkien (most days)
Cantonese (some days)
Japanese (some days)
Korean (some days)
Malay (some days)
Tamil (some days)

and lots of other South Asian languages that I can't identify.

Edited by newyorkeric on 31 August 2009 at 6:10am

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Ashley_Victrola
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5486 days ago

416 posts - 429 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: French, Romanian

 
 Message 35 of 121
04 September 2009 at 1:19pm | IP Logged 
English
French (movie and music)
Romanian (music)
a mix of Asiatic and Indian languages that I do not know (international students in my dorm)
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Choscura
Diglot
Groupie
United States
Joined 5328 days ago

61 posts - 82 votes 
Speaks: English*, Thai

 
 Message 36 of 121
27 September 2009 at 7:50pm | IP Logged 
I've had some days where I hear a lot of languages every minute. I think the record is going to a bible-camp thing and coming across a large number of hill tribe languages and american/european missionaries. Off the top of my head, I remember English, Spanish, norweigan, swedish, russian, and German being spoken on the missionary side, and on the missionary-ee side, Thai, lao, khmer, burmese, kachin, jinpaw, lisu (green, blue), lahu, rawang, naka, karren, karreni, s'gah, mong (green, white, black), and akha. Half of these languages are dying, Jinpaw I think being the worst among them- even fluent native speakers find it an unpleasant and difficult language to speak, apparently, and so it's dying out in favor of trade languages.
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Iversen
Super Polyglot
Moderator
Denmark
berejst.dk
Joined 6483 days ago

9078 posts - 16473 votes 
Speaks: Danish*, French, English, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Swedish, Esperanto, Romanian, Catalan
Studies: Afrikaans, Greek, Norwegian, Russian, Serbian, Icelandic, Latin, Irish, Lowland Scots, Indonesian, Polish, Croatian
Personal Language Map

 
 Message 37 of 121
27 September 2009 at 10:05pm | IP Logged 
Yesterday I visited Rosenborg castle and several museums and the tourist information in Copenhagen, I walked through 'Strøget' (the main pedestrian street in Copenhagen) and I had dinner dinner in a room where people where speaking at least three languages simultaneously.

I heard at last Danish, English, Swedish, Norwegian, German, Low German (uttered by myself), Dutch, French, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, some Indian language, Polish and at least one other Slavic language (Czech or Slovak- I'm not sure), and probably many more which I just didn't care about.

Today I visited Roskilde, which is much more sedate, but there was a group of Japanese tourists in the Viking ship museum, and I heard at least Danish, German and Swedish. I'm currently watching Discovery in English, so that doesn't add any new languages to the list.

Edited by Iversen on 27 September 2009 at 10:06pm

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Americano
Senior Member
Korea, South
Joined 6626 days ago

101 posts - 120 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish, Korean

 
 Message 38 of 121
01 October 2009 at 9:19am | IP Logged 
I was at a club last night and I heard Spanish(spoken by me with some Central Americans), Russian, Czech, Mandarin (I'm in Taipei), Hindi, and English. A typical day here I only hear Mandarin and English though.

Edited by Americano on 01 October 2009 at 9:20am

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ennime
Tetraglot
Senior Member
South Africa
universityofbrokengl
Joined 5684 days ago

397 posts - 507 votes 
Speaks: English, Dutch*, Esperanto, Afrikaans
Studies: Xhosa, French, Korean, Portuguese, Zulu

 
 Message 39 of 121
01 October 2009 at 10:12pm | IP Logged 
today: English, Korean and French (all in Seoul)... Bit of German cause there were three
tourists next to our table in Starbucks.

Usually that is kinda it what I experience here in Seoul, though infrequently I get
exposes to Japanese and Mandarin as well
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Levi
Pentaglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5347 days ago

2268 posts - 3328 votes 
Speaks: English*, French, Esperanto, German, Spanish
Studies: Russian, Dutch, Portuguese, Mandarin, Japanese, Italian

 
 Message 40 of 121
02 October 2009 at 1:20am | IP Logged 
English (everywhere)
French (customers at work)
Korean (customers at work)
Spanish (listened to news)
German (listened to news)
Chinese (audio lesson, music)
Japanese (music)


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