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- Jan 4, 2021
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I'm barely proficient in English sometimes. But it is an interesting language to know. Once you know it, you basically also know Dutch/what is left of Friesian by default and most other Germanic languages are on easy mode except Danish. I have no idea why Danish is the way it is, but compared to Dutch, Swedish, or Norwegian, Danish is messed up. At least I have an explanation for Icelandic.It's a precise language but its frustrating to not be proficient in it.
Depends, I think. If their English is particularly good, they will insist on English, no matter how good your German is. Key is to find German speakers that aren't comfortable speaking English, which is easier in rural areas, but then you have to deal with serious dialects, heh.I sometimes had this problem, I would usually tell them my foreign exchange program made me sign an agreement not to speak English during my time in the program. And while this was true, the rule was not strictly enforced. But in general, continuing to reply to English inquiries in German will eventually frustrate most German speakers enough to stop code-switching and they will just talk to you in German. IMO they're doing it because they think you have limited German skills, so if you can demonstrate proficiency they will stop doing this.
Its a good language to use when you are having an angry episode.
Halt's Maul du Arschloch!
Du kannst froh sein, wenn ich dich am leben lasse!
French is classified as a romance language as in it was derived from vulgar Latin and is Roman in origin.french being romantic is such is a psyop...![]()
Cyrillic is greatI sorta like Cyrillic
I hope you find the time somewhere along the lineRussian, along with Lithuanian and Latvian, are just things on the procrastination list.
I know, I meant that it’s not lovelyFrench is classified as a romance language
Eh, it isn't too difficult. For whatever reason, the syntax came pretty naturally to me. All the declensions are a complete pain in the dick, but there are some things that not even native speakers agree on. Once I gave up caring about getting that correct all the time, it got much more enjoyable. What ends up happening is that you default to learning like a child for some things. Once you hear X in Y case enough, you just say it without any thought given. German is annoying simply because you have no idea the genders for most things as it makes no sense in the singular. In plural, it is all feminine. In languages that have fixed gender rules for 99% of the nouns in the singular like Spanish or Lithuanian, it is far easier. It is also fun. My name can't exist in Lithuanian for grammatical reasons, so Lithuanians renamed me, hehe.I like to listen to German-speakers with subtitles but I am too dumb to personally handle an inflected language.