You're fluent in. At least a dozen for me, the most fluent in : English, French, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Tibetan, Mongolian, Chinese Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean and German for me personally.
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You're fluent in. At least a dozen for me, the most fluent in : English, French, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Tibetan, Mongolian, Chinese Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, Korean and German for me personally.
Yep I could but mostly due to being on disability for so long, I don't really see the point of working, too stressful for me personally.I can only speak English.
Question. If you really wanted to @Naiwen . Could you get paid a lot just to be a translator for people?
Someone told me that they make a lot of money.
I can decipher just about any language, code, human or made-up, and process any information, coding and etc. and my level is just as good as I'm typing it on here, For example, I can understand, read, speak, understand and write anything because I'm a high functioning autistic. All ABC languages and a few Asian ones, science and social sciences pose no problem to me at all personally. Been incredibility brilliant in school, yet not so much at work, because I lack the social and communication skills.How exactly are we defining fluent here, because if you really speak 12 languages what I consider to be 'fluently' then that's incredibly impressive.
I speak English (obviously), Gaeilge (similar to apathy, had it at school but never really use it, and don't know how fluent I am these days), pretty decent French, and conversational Spanish.
All ABC languages
I know the rules, lol. Lati, Ancient Greek and I'm Asian myself, lol. So basically,I have studied history of languages and etc so yeah. Every particle sounds crystal to me personally.There are about 7000 living langauges in the world and the vast majority of them use the Latin alphabet.
I get that if you know or two languages from the same language tree, then you can understand parts of others in the same tree, but there are other languages that are quite unique like Basque or Lithuanian/Latvian, I don't see that you can understand them without learning rules first.
I know the rules, lol. Lati, Ancient Greek and I'm Asian myself, lol. So basically,I have studied history of languages and etc so yeah. Every particle sounds crystal to me personally
Online yep, for studying purposes yep. And I speak my mother tongues natively : Chinese Mandarin, Japanese, Tibetan, Mongolian and Korean.I also studied language history a bit as part of a wider topic, which is why I'm questioning this so deeply.
There are over a hundred language families with living languages in them, but let's narrow it down to just the biggest 10-20, those would cover about 75% of languages. Then there are about 70 languages that are 'isolates' and don't belong to a family. There are also a load of unclassified languages, but they are spoken by very few people so we won't include those.
So, along with Greek and Latin, you've learned the basic rules for another 90 or so families/isolates?
Hola! I did French in high school and I can only say a few phrases as well. I kind of wish I took Spanish instead because it would have helped me a lot right now since I'm learning it.I can only speak English.
I did take some Spanish in high school. I can say a few words/phrases in Spanish but I'm not fluent by any means.