Finnish (1st language)
Swedish (also 1st language, I'm bilingual)
English
..and I've totally forgotten German.
Swedish (also 1st language, I'm bilingual)
English
..and I've totally forgotten German.
I need around tree fiddy.
Last edited by Poppa Bear (2008-01-29 06:26:41)
Last edited by GunSlinger OIF II (2008-03-31 14:56:32)
I think we do to a certain extent. The old stereotypical idea of the English tourist speaking really slow and loud and despairing that the 'foreigner' doesn't know what they are on about (that stereotype pretty much holds for Irish tourists too, except we're usually drunk as well!).Flaming_Maniac wrote:
You think Ireland and Britain have a bad rep?
I certainly don't do anything to change the world view about our country, I speak English and am taking German classes, but the class has been terrible and despite taking it for three years, I probably couldn't even get by in German.
Well I really meant compared to my country, the U.S.Braddock wrote:
I think we do to a certain extent. The old stereotypical idea of the English tourist speaking really slow and loud and despairing that the 'foreigner' doesn't know what they are on about (that stereotype pretty much holds for Irish tourists too, except we're usually drunk as well!).Flaming_Maniac wrote:
You think Ireland and Britain have a bad rep?
I certainly don't do anything to change the world view about our country, I speak English and am taking German classes, but the class has been terrible and despite taking it for three years, I probably couldn't even get by in German.
I'd say that around 10% of my music library is from English speaking countries.Rubix-Cubes wrote:
only english for me, i was saying at work the other day, how lazy we the english are with foreign languages, he agreed, but then said, a lot of the best music in the world comes from the UK and USA and its all in English, so a lot of foreignairs listen to that and pick a lot up from songs... is that a good point or not??
Last edited by PBAsydney (2008-03-31 15:22:11)
You see! That's what I'm talking about... putting the rest of us to shame!PBAsydney wrote:
Fluent Icelandic
Fluent English
Fluent Danish
A little Swedish
A little Norwegian
Learning German
That's sort-of true. Both languages stem from Germanic, so there's bound to be some similarities. It's worse than drunken Dutch though.Braddock wrote:
You see! That's what I'm talking about... putting the rest of us to shame!PBAsydney wrote:
Fluent Icelandic
Fluent English
Fluent Danish
A little Swedish
A little Norwegian
Learning German
Out of interest how similar are the neighbouring Scandinavian languages? A Dutch friend of mine said she could kind of understand Danish because it was like drunken Dutch!