i wonder how many people are bilingual vs trilingual
a lot of the ppl ik who are at least bilingual seem to also be trilingual, and itd b lovely to know if youre more "likely" o be trilingual if ur bilingual vs monolingual :-0
At the moment I am fluent in English abd Hungarian, learning French, Spanish, American Sign language and of course German (since that's my native language ). Recently, I was trying to learn some basic japanese, too, but the only thing I can read is most of the hiragana and some of the katakana.. And I know Latin, but I don't think that counts here as this isn't a language that anybody can speak nowadays..
I took 2 years of Japanese in high school, but can only recognize a few common words and phrases. Other than that I only speak English :?) I would love to be fluent in Japanese and Spanish!
I am fluent in Spanish (my native language) and also in English. Also, I'm studying Korean on my own and it is difficult. So far I can read hangul and recognize many phrases and sentences but thats about it. Hopefully I can stop being lazy and continue to study Korean.
I went ahead and voted "English/Other" but I really don't know much about Spanish haha. I've been trying to learn how to speak it for pretty much all of high school and I've never really dedicated myself to it. Really wish it was as easy as 1,2,3, but I seriously just can't formulate a Spanish sentence for the life of me without some form of translation.
I speak English more or less (you don't want to hear me speaking, it is really not great) and I speak my native language German. Next month I might start to learn a new language, but I'm not sure which one I'll pick yet. Maybe Spanish or Japanese.
I know a little bit of Spanish, but I'm going to a language immersion course at the end of summer to learn Lushootseed! (Coash Salish Native American language)
I know English and Japanese. Although I can count to 20 and Spanish along with saying some other things that will literally never be useful in my entire life. I can also say useless things in German. Some examples are in Spanish I can say the cat is in the butter (no clue how I learned that) and in German I can ask if people speak German (which is totally useless because then they would think I spoke German and I have no idea what they’d be talking about. And if they’re answer is in German and anything but no, I wouldn’t understand them anyway. But why would they say no to asking if they speak German in German? Why do I know these things)