magnetic_pole (
magnetic_pole) wrote2018-01-29 09:19 pm
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Friday Five had a great weekend and is now ready to get back to work....
Via
alisanne, the week's prompt from
thefridayfive and my answers.
1. After your first language, what language would you most like to learn? (Say first language too)
2. Does your country have a second language? What is it?
3. How many languages can you count to 5 in? To 10 in? List them.
4. What is the first overseas country you visited? And from where? (ie/ timbuctoo to mars)
5. What country do you most want to visit? And why?
1. After your first language, what language would you most like to learn? (Say first language too)
Monolingual English speaker here who'd love to know Spanish! So useful. It should be required in the US, IMHO, and started much, much earlier than our current system allows. (In the school system I attended as a child, we only started a language at 15, having had no grammar beforehand. Needless to say, most of us didn't get very far.)
2. Does your country have a second language? What is it?
No national second language in the US. In the city where I live, public documents are also translated into Spanish, Vietnamese, Amharic, and sometimes Chinese.
3. How many languages can you count to 5 in? To 10 in? List them.
To ten in French, German, and Spanish. (And English, of course.) To five in Cantonese and Japanese, though with a bad accent.
4. What is the first overseas country you visited? And from where? (ie/ timbuctoo to mars)
Hm. Does overseas simply mean foreign, crossing a border? In which case, US to the Mexican border. Leaving the continent, US to the UK.
5. What country do you most want to visit? And why?
So many places I'd like to go! China is high on my list right now because I'm interested in the pace of urbanization there and the sheer scale of the new cities. Never been there before. Malaysia is always up there, too, because we visit friends there every five years or so, and our stay is always filled with wonderful food and conversation and local travel.
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1. After your first language, what language would you most like to learn? (Say first language too)
2. Does your country have a second language? What is it?
3. How many languages can you count to 5 in? To 10 in? List them.
4. What is the first overseas country you visited? And from where? (ie/ timbuctoo to mars)
5. What country do you most want to visit? And why?
1. After your first language, what language would you most like to learn? (Say first language too)
Monolingual English speaker here who'd love to know Spanish! So useful. It should be required in the US, IMHO, and started much, much earlier than our current system allows. (In the school system I attended as a child, we only started a language at 15, having had no grammar beforehand. Needless to say, most of us didn't get very far.)
2. Does your country have a second language? What is it?
No national second language in the US. In the city where I live, public documents are also translated into Spanish, Vietnamese, Amharic, and sometimes Chinese.
3. How many languages can you count to 5 in? To 10 in? List them.
To ten in French, German, and Spanish. (And English, of course.) To five in Cantonese and Japanese, though with a bad accent.
4. What is the first overseas country you visited? And from where? (ie/ timbuctoo to mars)
Hm. Does overseas simply mean foreign, crossing a border? In which case, US to the Mexican border. Leaving the continent, US to the UK.
5. What country do you most want to visit? And why?
So many places I'd like to go! China is high on my list right now because I'm interested in the pace of urbanization there and the sheer scale of the new cities. Never been there before. Malaysia is always up there, too, because we visit friends there every five years or so, and our stay is always filled with wonderful food and conversation and local travel.
no subject
I love vicarious flist travel. :)
And as for the Cantonese: as I was telling Alisanne above, the better half taught Cantonese bilingual kindergarten when we were first out of college. As she taught the students a few simple words and characters, I tried to learn, too. (Some of her students were Cantonese speaking, some weren't. It's her parents' language.) At the time, we were living near a Chinatown in our city, and so I'd walk though like a five year old, pointing and exclaiming "Fifth Street! Person! One dollar! Community Center!" (I actually really do know community center, for some reason.)
And the Japanese is is part due to the fact that Japanese-Americans call themselves "first generation," "second generation," etc. in Japanese: Issei, Nisei, etc. (Is that true in Europe, too?) M.
P.S. You would be *horrified* by my accent in all languages. I'm the worst sort of monolingual American--I just didn't start early enough.