If it was possible, all of the languages. But right now, I wish I would be more motivated to continue learning more Spanish. Would be my fourth language.
I would love to learn Swedish. I am beginning a course on Duolingo for just that purpose. So if you are a generous Swede, hit me up! I would love to learn from you.
I wanted French and Russian until I realize how much asshole they are. right now, I want Chinese or Japanese which is easier for me because I am Korean.
@DesiUwU I mean, I do know a lot of words, I can say sentences. But to a limit. I work with sone Latinos, so i try here and there. We need a little kick in the butt lol.
@Paul09 Accents in French are easy - hold on I'll give it a shot - So - É is used at the end of verbs (participe passé or any past tense verb that needs it you'll know) when need be as well as in adjectives and any noun when it starts with the é sound - The only times you don't put the accent even when you make the é sound is when the e is at the end of the word and after the e there's either:d, f, r, or z - as well as when there are any double consonants or an "x" after the e but it's wherever not just at the end of a word (essayer, intéressant, flexible) - the accent grave È is basically only used with words that end with an s but the s is not pronounced - like "après, près, congrès, décès" as well as other adverbs- as well as (and this one's a bit more complicated) when the after the e (è) there is a consonant followed by an unpronounced e (fièrement, avènement, collège)-You're only pronouncing the r and the n without pronouncing the e after it - this one's even more trickier - the è is put when the second letter that follows it - Second one - is either R or L (fièvre or lèvre or nèfle)- it's also put on a when the a doesn't represent the verb have as à. As well as in the word là (which means here or this place depending on the context) and other adverbs (déjà, delà, voilà)- and on u when you're asking where (où) to differ with the regular ou - and the ê, î, â and û are more complex you'll have to memorize those - The ô is used on every possessive that has an o in it (vôtre, nôtre)...
@jaybee281 Too much for my brain lol. What about ç âà ûù î lol. Or it drives me crazy with the masculine féminine, then You have to change all the words that cone after that. Which makes it more complicated for nothing. English is a bit tough too. But at least they dont change the word structure.
What Girls & Guys Said
Opinion
48Opinion
I would like to learn and speak Turkmen or Uzbek languages
Thanks Can you look at my profile, what nationality do you think I look like?
Japanese so I can watch anime without subtitles
Spanish cause I think it’s beautiful
German just for the heck of it lol
Turkish
Chinese
French
(Spain) Spanish not (Mexican) Spanish
If you didn't have a flag of Georgia lol, it would of been more fun to guess.
Russian - Not sure why, I just think it sounds great
Wow really? I find it annoying at times, and I understand every other word. Well a first for everything.
I can speak Polish, English and a bit German. At the moment I am learning Russian.
In the future I would like to get better at German, and also learn Spanish and Italian.
@jason0808 To be honest, I am content with only knowing how to speak Japanese & English.
Thanks
From the options: English, I'd love to be 100% fluent, and if I can pick any language, I'd love to learn korean.
If I may ask: what is your first language?
@Cubus I speak Spanish
Nice, mine is Polish.
*insert boring American* I speak English as my first language
If it was possible, all of the languages. But right now, I wish I would be more motivated to continue learning more Spanish. Would be my fourth language.
I say Armenian.
I would love to learn Swedish. I am beginning a course on Duolingo for just that purpose. So if you are a generous Swede, hit me up! I would love to learn from you.
Morse Code (I Got Rusty)
Navajo Indian Language
German
I don't give a shit about your nationality
I have a lot of interest in linguistics. Presently, I am fluent in 7 languages and I'm learning 12 more...
Just my opinion: you look Latin...
Everything that I can get my mind on , i already speak 5 indian language
Most common language I encounter on a daily basis. Could just be where I live.
I would like to learn Spanish, Russian, french, Korean and japenese
you look french
Are you doopayo
@Neosporin what does that mean
She was another 15 year old on here who recently quit @doopayo
Sign Language ✌️👌🤞👍
@Jason0808 Italian? Romanian? American? I don't know. Tell me ok?
🇦🇲
Well, I'm fluent in german and English...
Right now I learn Spanish...
After that, French it will be...
I wanted French and Russian until I realize how much asshole they are. right now, I want Chinese or Japanese which is easier for me because I am Korean.
Ikr same lmao Russian is a bitch to learn and French pronunciation is a pain to pronounce 😭
Armenian? Just a wild guess because my dad had some Armenian friends in college and you have fhe facial structure of an Armenian man.
I know French and it's very annoying to learn. Very complicated for nothing. I still have no clue how to use their Accents when writing.
@Paul09 same with Spanish for me 😞
@DesiUwU I mean, I do know a lot of words, I can say sentences. But to a limit. I work with sone Latinos, so i try here and there. We need a little kick in the butt lol.
@Paul09 I tried French. I think I need a tutor or smth. Not gonna teach myself French like I do with other languages
@Paul09 Accents in French are easy - hold on I'll give it a shot - So - É is used at the end of verbs (participe passé or any past tense verb that needs it you'll know) when need be as well as in adjectives and any noun when it starts with the é sound - The only times you don't put the accent even when you make the é sound is when the e is at the end of the word and after the e there's either:d, f, r, or z - as well as when there are any double consonants or an "x" after the e but it's wherever not just at the end of a word (essayer, intéressant, flexible) - the accent grave È is basically only used with words that end with an s but the s is not pronounced - like "après, près, congrès, décès" as well as other adverbs- as well as (and this one's a bit more complicated) when the after the e (è) there is a consonant followed by an unpronounced e (fièrement, avènement, collège)-You're only pronouncing the r and the n without pronouncing the e after it - this one's even more trickier - the è is put when the second letter that follows it - Second one - is either R or L (fièvre or lèvre or nèfle)- it's also put on a when the a doesn't represent the verb have as à. As well as in the word là (which means here or this place depending on the context) and other adverbs (déjà, delà, voilà)- and on u when you're asking where (où) to differ with the regular ou - and the ê, î, â and û are more complex you'll have to memorize those - The ô is used on every possessive that has an o in it (vôtre, nôtre)...
@jaybee281 Too much for my brain lol. What about ç âà ûù î lol. Or it drives me crazy with the masculine féminine, then You have to change all the words that cone after that. Which makes it more complicated for nothing. English is a bit tough too. But at least they dont change the word structure.
Yup sadly
If this bunch, Arabic
Thanks
Arabic Aramean Armenian, Czechslovakia, Hungarian
Thanks
@jason0808 You're Welcome :)
I want to learn Japanese or Italian
Thanks