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How many languages do you speak or read?

how many languages do you speak or read competently  

62 members have voted

  1. 1. how many languages do you speak or read competently

    • 0
      2
    • 1
      15
    • 2
      25
    • 3
      13
    • 4
      3
    • 5
      3
    • 6
      0
    • 7
      0
    • 8 or more
      1


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There's a poll on this subject on my Australian board, and I was curious how the results would compare.

 

You're asked how many languages you can converse comfortably in, or can read with reasonable competence (excluding dialects).

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Thanks for your question, Newton. No, for once, I wasn't talking about varieties of sexual activities.

On my profile page here, I indicate my interests as spinners, redheads, and linguistics. The last category has been neglected compared with my hundreds of posts on the first two subjects, so this is a way of making some mild compensation. LOL (and teenspeak isn't a language).

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Cato, just kidding n tried to clarify as well.

;)

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I know, Newton. Me too.

Linguistics on my profile page doesn't refer to languages, anyway, but to tongues....

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I voted for the multiplicity of languages that I can read, write, and discourse with others. One question which has always intrigued me: Can love really be a language? :?

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I'm curious to know what the principal languages here are... I'm going to assume, being as we're in Canada and all, that English and French will top the list, but for those who have 3 or more - what are they?

 

And who speaks more than 8? Seriously? My brain couldn't function like that...

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I'm curious to know what the principal languages here are... I'm going to assume, being as we're in Canada and all, that English and French will top the list, but for those who have 3 or more - what are they?

 

And who speaks more than 8? Seriously? My brain couldn't function like that...

Being from eastern Ontario and my parents both being french with my mother from Quebec, I had no choice but to speak French at home all the time, my post secondary education was in English and I took Spanish to help with foreign relations (affair), very useful when visiting Mexico, Porto Rico and Costa Rica. Spanish is fairly easy if you are bilingual as there are many words from the French, English and Latin vocabulary.

 

I have some European friends that speak about 7 languages but most are similar.

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Let's see. I can read, write and speak English and Italian. My French is reading comprehensible, but I'm not particularly good at speaking it.

 

I also have reading comprehension in Latin and ancient Greek.

 

I can swear in English, French, Italian, German, and Chinese.

 

Cato, I'm also a fan of linguistics, particularly etymology.

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Funny nobody has mentioned sign language (reading sign language).

 

BTW Erin I can swear in a couple of languages as well :twisted:

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Following up on Flying Dutchman's inquiry and the response by T'storm, the majority of responses would be English and French. You would also have quite a number with either English or French, plus the language spoken by their parents. You then have, as T'storm mentions, those people who learn another language to travel the world.

 

As concerns polyglots, you will find that people who have lived in Europe or in Asia have command of quite a few languages. It is a matter of what you are exposed to when you are young or if you have a facility with language when you are older.

 

As for me, I consider myself conversant in English, French and Spanish.

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The current results on the Australian poll, with 41 people responding, are:

0 0%

1 17%

2 36%

3 15%

4 12%

5 10%

6 2%

7 0%

8 5%

9 or more 2%

 

rounding the results.

 

There was also a very interesting discussion on the Australian board about the difference between a language and a dialect.

 

So we have more trilingual people on cerb, but fewer multilingual respondents so far. A quarter of respondents in the Australian poll speak four or more languages.

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My parents are both strictly anglophone, but put me in the French school system. From there, I learned Spanish in high school (above post was right - it is easy to learn if you know French).

 

In Europe, though, as opposed to here, they're exposed to more languages in general. You're lucky to hear anything other than English spoken (officially, at least) in wester Canada. Just try getting government service in French in Alberta! Or a French-speaking cop in Winnipeg...

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A lot of the multilinguals on the Australian board indicate that they speak Asian languages. I'm wondering if that's the case here?

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Guest C****** K***e

I'm just a classic English and French girl...raised totally anglo, but I have always had enough of an interest that I somehow managed to learn it in my totally Anglo Southern Manitoban school.

My Italian is reminiscent of a 2-year old with a nasty case of potty-mouth, so I don't really count that as a language. I think maybe swearing and asking for vegetables are not particularly useful things :)

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I'm just a classic English and French girl...raised totally anglo, but I have always had enough of an interest that I somehow managed to learn it in my totally Anglo Southern Manitoban school.

My Italian is reminiscent of a 2-year old with a nasty case of potty-mouth, so I don't really count that as a language. I think maybe swearing and asking for vegetables are not particularly useful things :)

 

Pfft. Cursing is always useful. And you never know when you might need a cucumber!

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The answer is simple: an individual who is mute. Althought this individual may know sign language and is this then truly considered a "language".

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There's a poll on this subject on my Australian board, and I was curious how the results would compare.

 

You're asked how many languages you can converse comfortably in, or can read with reasonable competence (excluding dialects).

 

Sadly, only one. :oops:

 

How about you, how many languages are you able to speak? 8)

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Sadly, only one. :oops:

 

How about you, how many languages are you able to speak? 8)

 

If you're asking me in particular, Jackie, I'm a reasonable linguist. I'd be in the upper categories of the poll.

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I only know two - the obvious French and English of the Canadian variety, haha. However, I speak and understand Farsi, although I cannot read or write. Thankfully, I'm taking lessons in the summer so that I may formally call myself a trilingual.

يک زبان کافي نيست

 

 

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