Foreign languages - rate your skills
#1
Posted 2011-November-27, 17:59
1- like native
2- nearly like native
3- fluent
4- advanced
5- moderate
6- school basics
I start with >>>>
Polish - 1
German - 2
English- 5
Russian- 6
Dutch - 6
#2
Posted 2011-November-27, 19:05
New Yorkese 4
Alabaman 6
The first time I was in Paris I spent the first day asking "Do you speak French?" "Non".
I decided ok, I did pass a written exam in this stuff for my Ph.D. so off to get a book and practice. My best was at a docking point for boats that took passengers down the Seine. There was just one sailor there and I managed to learn that the place was closed because the river was too high and they were hoping to open back up soon. On my last day there a car pulled up and a passenger shouted out to ask for directions. In a complete fit of overconfidence I started over to help and then realized that a. I don't know my way around Paris and b. I don't know French. I suggested that they ask someone else.
On the same trip I was (later) taking a train from Madrid back to Paris, and sharing a compartment with some folks just returning to Spain. This was a few years after Franco was kicked out and they had been in exile while Franco was still in charge. It was very very stilted Spanish but I was highly interested and they were tolerant so we had a good conversation.
I passed an exam in German also but I don't know Scheisse.
In a bar in Girona someone tried to teach me Catalan. Probably this doesn't count.
#3
Posted 2011-November-27, 19:24
#4
Posted 2011-November-27, 21:11
aguahombre, on 2011-November-27, 19:24, said:
me speak english
once my boss said i spoke english as a second language like a native. that was because i made him pay me $20 to show him where ombudsman was in the dictionary.
i enjoy pointing out mistakes to the native: "Additional parking IN the rear". I cannot help it but wonder whose rear is being parked upon (or parked in)
i did try to pontificate in latin once to a cantakerous main bridge room expert. But he said my latin was worse than my bridge.
#5
Posted 2011-November-27, 21:14
At one time I could manage a conversation in Central American Spanish if nobody was fussy about tenses and syntax.
#6
Posted 2011-November-27, 23:05
Romanian 2
English 3
Icelandic 5
German 5
Dutch 5
Polish 6
Couldn't pick up a language properly since I was 10
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2011-November-27, 23:33
English 1
American 2 (but i don't spell it so well)
French 6
Tongan 6
Maori 6
Although they are problem sub-basic.
I did some very basic German, Italian, Spanish etc 30 or so years ago.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#8
Posted 2011-November-28, 04:15
#9
Posted 2011-November-28, 04:24
English, Dutch 2
German 3-4
Esperanto 4
French 5
Russian 5-6
Spanish 6
I used to speak fluent German and French, and I was able to manage in Spanish, so I guess I could pick those languages up quickly. But it has been a while.
I can sorta manage in Swedish and don't have major problems in Norwegian. But when I speak those languages I basically just speak Danish while mixing it with the few words from Swedish/Norwegian that I am aware of. And try to avoid aspects of the Danish language that I know course problems for other Scandinavians.
My partner is Polish and I slowly get better in picking it up when she talks with her family. But I can't speak it at all.
When I was young I studied some other languages as well, especially Mandarin. But I only got to get a basic grasp of the grammar. My vocabulary never became large enough to use it for anything serious.
#10
Posted 2011-November-28, 06:02
Hebrew 4
French 5-6 depending on how recently I've memorized vocabulary.
In general, I can pick up grammar and accents fairly quickly, but vocabulary eternally eludes me...this includes English.
At times I'd've rated my Hebrew as high as a 3, but spending time in an academic environment here has pointed out that I cannot hold particularly deep conversations in Hebrew.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#11
Posted 2011-November-28, 08:59
But proper English not like the @yanks' over the pond have done to it
#12
Posted 2011-November-28, 09:30
Oof Arted, on 2011-November-28, 08:59, said:
But proper English not like the @yanks' over the pond have done to it
And yet you still consider it a foreign language to you? Proper English is truly a foreign language here, over the pond.
#13
Posted 2011-November-28, 09:45
1 Dutch
3 English (except for the spelling of the word "awful", I always write it "aweful" for some reason)
4 German
4 French
6 Spanish
#14
Posted 2011-November-28, 09:51
When I was in grade 4 my French teacher was a maternity leave replacement, a grandmother with a thick Scottish brogue. Toasted me for any other languages forever and English for years.
What is baby oil made of?
#15
Posted 2011-November-29, 17:17
Hebrew 3/5 (depends if we're discussing oral language, or require any literacy skills)
French 6
Spanish 6 (But I'm working on it)
Hungarian 7
Farsi 7
(I added some that I feel are even worse than sub-par, but I do have a passing familiarity with and have attempted to learn in the past.)
#16
Posted 2011-November-29, 17:53
George Carlin
#17
Posted 2011-November-29, 19:57
gwnn, on 2011-November-29, 17:53, said:
I spent a lot of time in Hungary in my youth, but what I have learned does not qualify me even for 9. Zeus & Co had to be drunken while they created Hungarian language at Olympus;-)
#18
Posted 2011-November-29, 21:54
gwnn, on 2011-November-29, 17:53, said:
What was good about learning Hungarian was that it was so different than all the other languages I've attempted to learn, so there wasn't going to be a case of my attempting to use vocab/grammar from a different language in it (like French and Spanish).
I started learning Hungarian because I studied abroad there. Now I would say that I can't speak it at all, but I can take a running stab at common phrases, know my numbers, and know how to say that I don't speak Hungarian, and speak a little Hungarian.
I could likely read a child's picture book.
But darned if I could pronounce the difference o or u with an umlaut over it correctly (sorry, don't have an appropriate keyboard).
#19
Posted 2011-December-02, 13:34
English 2
German 2
French 4
Afrikaans 5
Italian 6
Russian 6
#20
Posted 2014-June-29, 03:44
gwnn, on 2011-November-27, 23:05, said:
Romanian 2
English
Dutch
German 5
Italian 6
FMP.
George Carlin