Spanish, english, and i'm taking japanese classes. I would like to learn some French in the future.
I now know that a language called Khmer exists.SupaWolfTiga wrote:
I currently speak English, Spanish, a little bit of Korean, a little bit of Khmer, and just one phrase in Swedish xD
Didn't Russia won 5-3 to Canada ? I don't really watch Ice Hockey that much but I heard a few of my friends talking about that all day long years ago and I still remember xDLewder wrote:
I now know that a language called Khmer exists.
I can teach you a new phrase in Swedish to return the favour:
Minns du slutresultatet av finalen i ishockey världsmästerskapet 2011?
Can you remember the final score of the grand finals of the ice hockey world championships in 2011?
because japanese is honto sugoi desuB1rd wrote:
I wonder why Japanese is so popular..
ee Nihongo wa sugoi desu neYayMii wrote:
because japanese is honto sugoi desuB1rd wrote:
I wonder why Japanese is so popular..
You're surrounded by weeaboos, of course it's popularB1rd wrote:
I wonder why Japanese is so popular..
Yo, don't call Welsh dead, keep it alive instead. I fucking hate when languages die because of people thinking it'd be convenient not to teach it to their children because they "won't need" it in the long run.rhiload wrote:
English and welsh (some dead language)
it is teached all around the country. it is not a dead language so to say. but its definitely overshadowed by the more dominant English language. its more of a "local" language so to say. im fine with it as long as it still has a mark on wales.Lewder wrote:
Yo, don't call Welsh dead, keep it alive instead. I fucking hate when languages die because of people thinking it'd be convenient not to teach it to their children because they "won't need" it in the long run.rhiload wrote:
English and welsh (some dead language)
Yeah but I mean kids will never learn to be fluent in it at school, I for an example speak Swedish as a heavy lingual minority in Finland and I will teach my adopted child(ren) Swedish if I happen to raise them with a Finnish speaker and Finnish if I happen to raise them with a Swedish speaker. If I was in your position and my potential children were both to be raised to Welsh parents who speak both Welsh and English I would have one parent speak Welsh to the children and the other one speak English, until they've reached the age of around 5 at which point they've developed most of their lingual fluency (they say children learn languages the fastest around the ages 2-3) and then switch to what feels most convenient. But that's just me who loves languages and culture and wants to keep them alive, Idunno.rhiload wrote:
it is teached all around the country. it is not a dead language so to say. but its definitely overshadowed by the more dominant English language. its more of a "local" language so to say. im fine with it as long as it still has a mark on wales.Lewder wrote:
Yo, don't call Welsh dead, keep it alive instead. I fucking hate when languages die because of people thinking it'd be convenient not to teach it to their children because they "won't need" it in the long run.
Yeah but I mean kids will never learn to be fluent in it at school, I for an example speak Swedish as a heavy lingual minority in Finland and I will teach my adopted child(ren) Swedish if I happen to raise them with a Finnish speaker and Finnish if I happen to raise them with a Swedish speaker. If I was in your position and my potential children were both to be raised to Welsh parents who speak both Welsh and English I would have one parent speak Welsh to the children and the other one speak English, until they've reached the age of around 5 at which point they've developed most of their lingual fluency (they say children learn languages the fastest around the ages 2-3) and then switch to what feels most convenient. But that's just me who loves languages and culture and wants to keep them alive, Idunno.Derailment of thread incoming. i completely agree with you. its nice to have the two languages there in case they need either/or.