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Post by Commissar on Aug 14, 2017 16:25:31 GMT
Forum users must respect to other languages but, Everybody talks English here.Nobody understands Russian or Spanish here.At least me. And then there is me who talks in fluent Russian and a bit in Spanish + a lot more languages lol I know, This is an International forum.But as you can see everyone is speaking English.That is suitable for us, Because if everyone talk with different languages, There will be a problem to communication for other players.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 14, 2017 16:53:57 GMT
Forum users must respect to other languages but, Everybody talks English here.Nobody understands Russian or Spanish here.At least me. And then there is me who talks in fluent Russian and a bit in Spanish + a lot more languages lol So you know Russian English latvian and others
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Post by The Light Bringer on Aug 14, 2017 17:08:01 GMT
And then there is me who talks in fluent Russian and a bit in Spanish + a lot more languages lol So you know Russian English latvian and others I made a post in first page about which language I am fluent at😉
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Post by Commissar on Aug 14, 2017 20:33:00 GMT
I'm from Italy, but I speak also french, german, a bit of spanish and english I'm sending my regards to Italy.Is a great country.
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Post by Commissar on Aug 14, 2017 20:34:29 GMT
I'm from Turkey.I completed my study years at London.Now I'm living at Moscow.
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Post by Ivan Kolev on Aug 15, 2017 2:02:22 GMT
As someone born in America, my native language is English. It is also the only language which I am fluent in. I do know a fair amount of French, probably enough to pass by in Quebec, but I'd call myself semi-fluent in French. I was learning Italian for a little while, but that faded during my Freshman year of High School. I know bits and pieces of Portuguese, Swedish and Romanian, but it's more just random knowledge than actually knowing the language (Like I know Nej Da is Swedish for goodbye, I'm pretty sure). I decided that French wasn't that useful a language to master in Sophomore year, especially as someone in the States, so I'm going to start taking Spanish next year. I'll only have two years in the course, but knowing some will probably help me down the road. Oh, but I do know a fair amount of Latin, the only language that matters .
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Post by NetherFreek on Aug 15, 2017 6:00:49 GMT
Really depends what you call fluent. I would say English, German and Dutch cause i'm able to have conversations in those languages. I learned some other languages as well including french, italian and greek, but i wouldn't call myself fluent in it.
I'm able to understand afrikaans as well ofcourse as well as dutch low saxon if you recognise it as a seperate language.
I don't know anything from the other official languages in here (limburgian, frysian or Papiamento)
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Post by Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb on Aug 15, 2017 17:43:38 GMT
I am Greek but I speak English (obviously) and a bit of German and French
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Post by Commissar on Aug 15, 2017 19:17:19 GMT
A little bit Spanish,A lot of English 😊.
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Post by Ivan Kolev on Aug 15, 2017 19:54:46 GMT
Really depends what you call fluent. I would say English, German and Dutch cause i'm able to have conversations in those languages. I learned some other languages as well including french, italian and greek, but i wouldn't call myself fluent in it. I'm able to understand afrikaans as well ofcourse as well as dutch low saxon if you recognise it as a seperate language. I don't know anything from the other official languages in here (limburgian, frysian or Papiamento) Papiamento I understand why you wouldn't know because it looks like it resembles more Portuguese and Haitian Creole than Dutch, but aren't Limburgian and Frysian very similar to Dutch? I could be wrong, but I'm just wondering.
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Post by NetherFreek on Aug 16, 2017 6:54:57 GMT
Really depends what you call fluent. I would say English, German and Dutch cause i'm able to have conversations in those languages. I learned some other languages as well including french, italian and greek, but i wouldn't call myself fluent in it. I'm able to understand afrikaans as well ofcourse as well as dutch low saxon if you recognise it as a seperate language. I don't know anything from the other official languages in here (limburgian, frysian or Papiamento) Papiamento I understand why you wouldn't know because it looks like it resembles more Portuguese and Haitian Creole than Dutch, but aren't Limburgian and Frysian very similar to Dutch? I could be wrong, but I'm just wondering. Papiamento is indeed more of a Mediterranean language meaning i don't really understand it. Frysian indeed holds great similarities with Dutch and is world-closest language to English apart from Scottish. I'm able to read it a bit but when talking the words just fly by too quickly to really understand it. Same with Danish and Norwegian btw, they also look very much like German/Dutch. Limburgian is a cross between german and dutch, i know basic stuff such as Haije/hoije which is in dutch doei and in english goodbye. But not more than that. I think i should be able to read it as well but to be fair i never did once. If you're interested in our dialects you can visit this site with an interactive map showing where they use which words, it's set for 'goodbye': www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/dialect-vertaler.php?woord=Tot+ziens
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Post by Big SmokTonVEVO on Aug 16, 2017 19:49:52 GMT
I'm fluent in: - Romanian (real-life and sometimes virtual [internet] life) - English ( virtual life)
I would like to give some romanian exemples, but there's so many ways to express a simple word-structure like "Hi"
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Post by Ivan Kolev on Aug 16, 2017 20:38:30 GMT
I'm fluent in: - Romanian (real-life and sometimes virtual [internet] life) - English ( virtual life) I would like to give some romanian exemples, but there's so many ways to express a simple word-structure like "Hi" Could you read Aromanian? Since I'm wondering how different they are as languages.
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Post by Big SmokTonVEVO on Aug 17, 2017 8:44:26 GMT
I'm fluent in: - Romanian (real-life and sometimes virtual [internet] life) - English ( virtual life) I would like to give some romanian exemples, but there's so many ways to express a simple word-structure like "Hi" Could you read Aromanian? Since I'm wondering how different they are as languages. Well, I think that Aromanian is pretty similar to Romanian, I had a friend named Kira and my science teacher said that Kira is an Aromanian name. I think that Aromanian is some kind of Romanian dialect.
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Post by Big SmokTonVEVO on Aug 17, 2017 8:53:07 GMT
Could you read Aromanian? Since I'm wondering how different they are as languages. Well, I think that Aromanian is pretty similar to Romanian, I had a friend named Kira and my science teacher said that Kira is an Aromanian name. I think that Aromanian is some kind of Romanian dialect. Ivan Kolev, it looks like that Aromanian is actually spoken in many countries but in small numbers (like in US, Canada, Macedonia, Latin America, France and Germany). And is just a branch of the Eastern Roman Languages [beside Daco-Romanian (pretty much Romanian), Istro-Romanian and Megleno-Romanian] but it has some similiraties with the Romanian, but not really really big.
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