You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
I have noticed a pretty good representation around the globe exist in ArchBang. I responded to the where are you thread. I thought I would start another about the languages everyone speaks. Please list your first language followed by others you know!
Unfortunately I only know one, English.
Free Software Foundation member 10865
Offline
Dutch,
German,
English,
French,
some Italian and Spanish I can understand without being able to speak it.
Getting your questions answered here at ArchBang Forums
Please! Always give hardware info, if there is a chance that 's relevant: #lspci -vnn
Quote: What I have learnt from Linux is to minimize dependencies and functionalities for greater independence.
On Arch(bang) and Openbox: http://stillstup.blogspot.com/
Offline
English (fluent)
French (was fluent)
some Italian, Spanish and Portuguese
Japanese (as fluent as English)
Cantonese (fluent)
Mandarin
Korean (fluent)
Thai
Tagalog
Indonesian (fluent)
Manadonese
Javanese (fluent)
Balinese
My daily languages are English, Indonesian and Javanese. I speak a bunch of other languages not listed with enough for a decent basic conversation. I grew up in a multicultural neighbourhood of first generation immigrants and all the kids in the neighbourhood spoke several languages from hanging out at each other's houses.
I've taught in English, French, Japanese, Indonesian and Cantonese.
Lately been hanging in Japanese forums answering questions about ArchBang and Arch.
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
Very impressive ArchVortex, hopefully you won't scare off anyone that only speaks a couple languages!
I am also impressed on how often you post here, even more so knowing you are hanging out in other forums from around the world!
Free Software Foundation member 10865
Offline
I'm scared already!
I only know english and spanish!
It's only chaos to those not interested.
"Power aint nothing if you don't use it."
"I call it a sin Not to rule the world, if you've been blessed, with the strength!"
Offline
Hahaha!! I'm looking at doing the Indonesian and Japanese translation for the Wiki in the near future.
I'm here most of the time and only in the Japanese forums when there is a question. Too much of my time here is removing spam and potential spammers ![]()
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
ha..you forgot Chinese...
Offline
Very enviable this kind of language knowledge, Archvortex!!
As I have never been out of Europe my entire life, I only speak the local languages.
Getting your questions answered here at ArchBang Forums
Please! Always give hardware info, if there is a chance that 's relevant: #lspci -vnn
Quote: What I have learnt from Linux is to minimize dependencies and functionalities for greater independence.
On Arch(bang) and Openbox: http://stillstup.blogspot.com/
Offline
I've lived in Asia most of my adult life. Japan, Hong Kong, Macau and Indonesia. Next March I will move to Kaohsiung, Taiwan. I originally come from Vancouver, Canada where Asia meets Europe.
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
@ArchVortex
歡迎你明年來高雄訪問。
Offline
@ once
謝謝!!
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
I speak good english (sometimes :-) ) , technic french (for my job, but no so good on conversation), and a little bit of german ...
In my wild days I understand a little bit of holland (is writing right Pablokal ?) and spanish and portoguese.
Now I'm studying chinese For talking with my wife's relatives and friends in China.
Edit: typo (many thanks Pablokal, sorry for the mistake)
Last edited by paolo (2011-11-13 01:58:29)
Laptops Acer Aspire 1355LM P4-Athlon XP mobile 2600+ - RAM 2GB - HD 40 GB and Acer Travelmate 632 XV P4-M 1.6 GHz - RAM 1 GB - HD 40 GB - 14.1" TFT XGA (1024 x 768) both for Archbang !
Sorry for my bad english ...
Offline
hollandese should be "hollands".
Getting your questions answered here at ArchBang Forums
Please! Always give hardware info, if there is a chance that 's relevant: #lspci -vnn
Quote: What I have learnt from Linux is to minimize dependencies and functionalities for greater independence.
On Arch(bang) and Openbox: http://stillstup.blogspot.com/
Offline
- English
- (really bad) English
- (Canadian French) which could also be considered, -really bad canadian english ![]()
- some German
- some Polish/Russian I haven't figured out the difference yet ![]()
- Caribbean, it's my favourite, 'cause you can't guess which one it is, mahn ![]()
in summary, I guess it's like any "living" language, you gotta "LIVE" it culturally, before you can speak it.
ya baby !![]()
Last edited by scjet (2011-11-24 14:10:18)
The "BSD" things in life are "Free", and "Open", and so is ArchBang!
Go Leafs Go !!!
Offline
you gotta "LIVE" it culturally, before you can speak it.
True dat, mon!! You can learn a language but you really don't start picking it up quickly and mastering it until you're in a situation where you have to think, speak and especially, listen, in that language only. Being book smart will only carry you so far.
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
English (fluent)
French (was fluent)
some Italian, Spanish and PortugueseJapanese (as fluent as English)
Cantonese (fluent)
Mandarin
Korean (fluent)
Thai
Tagalog
Indonesian (fluent)
Manadonese
Javanese (fluent)
BalineseMy daily languages are English, Indonesian and Javanese. I speak a bunch of other languages not listed with enough for a decent basic conversation. I grew up in a multicultural neighbourhood of first generation immigrants and all the kids in the neighbourhood spoke several languages from hanging out at each other's houses.
I've taught in English, French, Japanese, Indonesian and Cantonese.
Lately been hanging in Japanese forums answering questions about ArchBang and Arch.
Dude, I gotta admit, my Dad spoke 4 L's fluently,(and none of those were Asian) but THE hardest language to master seems to be asian, obvously because of its more complicated grammar, context, pro-nouns, vowels, ... just to mention some of those hurdles ?
But hey, I dunno, all the more power to you, 'fer sure mon.
And maybe that's why you don't include Chinese in your repertoire ?
Last edited by scjet (2011-11-25 08:42:56)
The "BSD" things in life are "Free", and "Open", and so is ArchBang!
Go Leafs Go !!!
Offline
Cantonese (Hong Kong Chinese) and Mandarin (China and Taiwan) are Chinese.
I also speak a bit of Hakka and Hokkien.
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
Archvortex, that is impresive, I only speak spanish and english, and currently some friend is teaching me portuguese. OTIMO!!
Last edited by jorgkraken (2012-01-31 19:43:13)
Offline
Finnish
English
Offline
Cantonese (Hong Kong Chinese) and Mandarin (China and Taiwan) are Chinese.
I also speak a bit of Hakka and Hokkien.
三月歡迎來台灣玩。
Offline
russian, german, a little bit english
Offline
German
English
Offline
Just English. ![]()
Offline
I speak two:
Afrikaans (mother tongue)
English
Afrikaans is South-African and Namibian.
In the 17th century the ancient Dutch people in south Africa spoke a Ducth slang affected by the surrounding African languages and other factors. It grew and developed and became a language in its own right. Today it is a mature and modern language to converse in.
Comparing it with English The vowels are more neutral and the consonants are harder. Rolling R's and a sound resembling the one cowboys make before spitting (gggggg-spit!) characterizes it.
So when we write 'grawe'
We are referring to a word that sounds like 'gggrrawvuh'
(It means "dig")
Last edited by Ped (2012-04-02 19:30:50)
P E Destrian of life
"Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they're supposed to help you discover who you are." -Bernice Johnson Reagon
Offline
Chinese(mother tongue),(简体中文,繁体能读不会写,simplified Chinese, can only read traditional Chinese, and do not know how to write most of the traditional Chinese characters)
English(not fluent in speaking)
so many people can speak more than two languages!!!!!
Offline
Ped. thanks for adding background information about your primary language. I would have had to looked it up. It is nice to share with such a diverse community!
loveblueshy2009, and some of us only speak 1 (me included). Learning English after growing up with Chinese is impressive to me. I can sometimes make out some of the European languages because I can recognize many of the letters. But there is nothing similar between Chinese and English (that I know of, feel free to enlighten me!).
Free Software Foundation member 10865
Offline
So when we write 'grawe'
We are referring to a word that sounds like 'gggrrawvuh'
(It means "dig")
Dutch speaking people can mostly understand Afrikaans and can enjoy the feeling and atmosphere of the language very much;
and there is much admiration in Holland for poets like Elisabeth Eybers, Ingrid Jonker ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingrid_Jonker ) and Gert Vlok Nel.
Although Afrikaans got very nasty associations during the period of Apartheid, when everyone in Holland was ashamed that a Dutch word was used to designate such a crime against humanity..
Getting your questions answered here at ArchBang Forums
Please! Always give hardware info, if there is a chance that 's relevant: #lspci -vnn
Quote: What I have learnt from Linux is to minimize dependencies and functionalities for greater independence.
On Arch(bang) and Openbox: http://stillstup.blogspot.com/
Offline
@pablokal
Yes you are right. The white Afrikaans speaking Government of that time were overly Capitalistic or racist or in a certain sense comunist. I don't know what it was.
(As I understand my parents: ) In 1955 the law called 'Apartheid', commissioned in 1948 started to be thoroughly enforced. They Divided The country into "Tiny countries" for each Tribe, forced the less fortunate to carry a pass and be back in their "country" at night.
It's just a big long unpleasant story of how people hated each other, protested against each other and, many times, killed each other. We're just so lucky the whole thing didn't break loose into war. I thank God for the restoration and healing taking place these day's. Even Though we can't always see what He is doing, He is there.
People I know (from both sides), have told me horrible stories of what happened with them during those times. I'm just so glad its over.
Myself, however, grew up rather unaffected by the historic events. I went to a bilingual primary school and made great friends with our black nabors. Today I enjoy it when I converge with people from the diverse communities within South-Africa even without keeping the friends I know within them in mind.
Last edited by Ped (2012-04-03 18:06:01)
P E Destrian of life
"Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they're supposed to help you discover who you are." -Bernice Johnson Reagon
Offline
@ Ped, that is great to hear; only forgiveness and mercy can heal the wounds of history.
The poverty and lack of perspective for many youngsters still leads to violence and crime, especially the violence against women has taken horrific forms, I have read.
Hopefully South-Africa can develop to a more harmonious society. The nature often looks like paradise what I see from images.
Getting your questions answered here at ArchBang Forums
Please! Always give hardware info, if there is a chance that 's relevant: #lspci -vnn
Quote: What I have learnt from Linux is to minimize dependencies and functionalities for greater independence.
On Arch(bang) and Openbox: http://stillstup.blogspot.com/
Offline
German
English
Offline
German
English
Czech (little bit)
Offline
German
English (as fluent as German)
Spanish (not so fluent..)
also:
Catalan and French, but not enough for proper conversations
And I can, if I have to, read and understand Italian and Portuguese...
Still far from Archvortex' impressive list.
Maybe I should start learning some completely different language, just to see if the brain of someone in his 30s is still adaptable enough. Also, it bothers me when I people tell me that they speak more than 5 languages fluently, makes me feel like I missed out on some great opportunities in my youth ![]()
If you don't know it: Catalan is the regional language in the northeast Spanish region of Cataluny, with dialects of it spoken in and around Valencia, in the Baleares (Mallorca etc.) and even in the south of France.
Offline
Danish (mother tongue)
English
Swedish (don't speak - but understand)
Norwegian (don't speak - but understand)
and a little German
Offline
I feel a little dwarfed by the linguists in this forum haha!
I only know:
American english (my fluent home language)
Japanese (nowhere near fluent)
Spanish (highschool level only)
Offline
"bash" -but only on a good day, if I'm lucky, and even then, I don't even understand myself ?![]()
Last edited by scjet (2012-05-12 08:37:07)
The "BSD" things in life are "Free", and "Open", and so is ArchBang!
Go Leafs Go !!!
Offline
Spanish and English (fluent on both / read & write)
Offline
Cantonese (fluent)
Mandarin
AV, question from my other half.
She was wondering if it is true that that there is as much difference between Mandarin and Cantonese as there is in say French and English.
Offline
@marxav,
Pronunciation and tones are different, and idiomatic phrases and slang uses different characters quite often to talk about the same thing. Definitely two distinct languages. I can read a Mandarin newspaper but I don't understand it completely.
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
Only English, southeastern US English.
In the past, I have studied Spanish, Latin, and German, but I only learned enough to pass the classes and forgot most of what I learned.
Tim
Offline
Crippled English
Indonesian
Javanese (native tongue)
Melayu ( a little bit)
Norsk (passively)
but my primary language is Foul Language
I'm impressed that there are some guys here who can speak more than 3/4 languages fluently , just what are you guys made of?!
@ArchVortex
Jakarta sebelah ngendi pak?
Last edited by fiddler (2012-10-28 09:12:28)
Offline
@fiddler, Di Menteng sekarang. Gue sudah pernah tinggal di Malang (Singo Edan). Tinggal di mana? Some random 3rd world country. Lucu sekali!! Jan%@$ Justin Bieber!!
GUI's?? We don't need no stinkin' GUI's!!!
Offline
Online
Pages: 1