How many languages do you speak? (280)

1 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-20 20:56 ID:400HADiH

Swedish - native
English - fluent
French - a little
Finnish - a little
Japanese - very little...

You?

2 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-20 21:48 ID:A/LInCqw

German - native
English - fluent
Latin - a little

3 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-20 22:46 ID:Heaven

{{babel-9|ja-1|la-2|ang-1|1337-N|dolphin|en-0|lnx|fox|lj}}

4 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-20 22:47 ID:A/LInCqw

>>3
Dammit, I wanted to do that joke first!

5 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-20 22:58 ID:UVuQH30X

English - Native.
Russian - Conversational.
Japanese - As much as one could learn from watching Japanese movies and cartoons.

Друзя, довай говорить по руский.

6 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 03:33 ID:0MYtcYYL

1) English
2) Bad English

7 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 04:53 ID:Heaven

English - native
Japanese - not yet fluent, not novice level
German - forgotten most of it

8 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 10:28 ID:Heaven

English - Native
French - Semi-Fluent
Japanese - Hopeless :(

9 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 10:48 ID:Kfa7EC/4

1) Swedish [fluently - main language]
2) English [fluently]
3) German [unable to any longer construct correct sentances, far too rusty. Understand most of it without any problems.]
4) Hungerian [see note for #3]
5) French [see n#3, only understandment having the value "a little"]

10 Name: Alexander!DxY0NCwFJg!!MF8+ySC1 2005-10-21 10:56 ID:Heaven

Swedish - Native
Finnish - Native but rusty
English - Fluent
German - Not really, too lazy

11 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 12:12 ID:O67/w5Hl

>>6

Bad English is a very important skill in many parts of the world, and is distinct from English. You can be very good at English, yet totally fail to communicate in Bad English.

12 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 12:40 ID:u5JOfByi

Swedish - Native
English - Fluent
German - Barely (can read manuals when required)

13 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 16:21 ID:Heaven

Norwegian - native
English - pretty good
French - learning

learning what anonymous people can speak is very interesting!!

14 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 16:57 ID:1H4REVWx

english - native
spanish - pretty good
quenya - better than most
sindarin - a little
japanese - a little
klingon - a little
russian - very little

15 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 17:36 ID:Heaven

> quenya - better than most

That's no big surprise here, you HUGE GEEK!

16 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-21 18:28 ID:1H4REVWx

>>15
man apacennelye? sina na i internet...

17 Name: KJI!XDpPLAUYlQ 2005-10-21 20:26 ID:vFW0P50y

English - native

Spanish - I was pretty damn good having lived in Mexico for a few years, and taken two years of it... I forgot most now.

Japanese - certainly above Wapanese level and can watch some shows raw with near full comprehension... but still not good enough.

18 Name: Pseudonym Undercover 2005-10-21 22:15 ID:R+jim8V6

English - Native

Spanish - Basic

Japanese - Fundamentals

19 Name: Alexander!DxY0NCwFJg 2005-10-22 13:02 ID:Heaven

>>11 speaks the truth!

20 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-22 15:18 ID:vo+2haen

All rise for the entrance of Alexander to this unworthy thread!

21 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-22 15:52 ID:oVypECyA

  1. english - fluent
  2. swedish - fluent
  3. polish - fluent
  4. japanese - a little

22 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-22 19:55 ID:NyVQW+2F

English - Native
Isixhosa - fluent, almost
Afrikaans/Dutch - Enough to insult people
Japanese - enough to impress the wapanese
Mandarin - Enough to impress cute waitresses
French - Enough to impress anyone else

23 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-23 02:16 ID:Heaven

You guys speak so many languages. It makes me proud ;,|

24 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-24 18:53 ID:Heaven

Together, we can speak them all!

25 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-24 19:33 ID:Heaven

English - fluently
American - a tiny bit
Japanese - I know how to sing the first verse of "Head Cha-La"
Pikachu - partially
l33t - 4 5m411 b17 (a small bit?)

I think that's it.

26 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-25 04:35 ID:3+41QAQ5

English - fluent
Spanish - fluent
French - some, understand better than speak
Japanese - slightly above wapanese level(i hope)

Shortwave radio is great for learning the popular languages on the cheap. The english NHK feed to north america has two programs for learning japanese. I've also stumbled onto programs for spanish and german while scanning.

27 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-25 12:18 ID:jprNmWAD

English
and a Smattering of Spanish and Japanese courtesies

28 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-25 14:15 ID:Heaven

Engrish

29 Name: peppermint 2005-10-27 16:42 ID:AiFX8veX

Spanish - Native (i'm peruvian)
English - very well
Galician - very well
French - a little
Japanese - a little (I'm fan of anime & manga, and learn a little more every day.)
Italian - very poor.. (¡Ciao Ragazza!)

30 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 18:03 ID:P5NXdxA6

Norwegian - Native.
English - Fluent or almost fluent.
German - some.
Japanese - very much compared to the rest in my city , very little compared to japanese ppl.

Russian:2-3words
Polish:2-3words
Old norse=10+- words "ek har ein knifr ok eit haus"

31 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 18:04 ID:P5NXdxA6

>>13
Kult å sjå andre norske her , og om du snakkar nynorsk er endå meir kult.

32 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 18:07 ID:P5NXdxA6

OMG everyone speaks japanese.

33 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 19:10 ID:Heaven

I DON'T

ps. lying is badde, totally badde

i mean, if the japanese you pick up from watching anime and dramas counts then i know a little of every scandinavian language, (except for finnish but i think that's mostly made up as a joke or to hide that all finns are telepaths or something)

34 Name: peppermin 2005-10-27 19:33 ID:+DGQ9B6S

Algunos de nosotros dominamos el castellano (español), ya sea por que es nuestro idioma nativo, o porque lo aprendimos viajando. Aún así, el inglés sigue siendo un buen método para que todos en este foro podamos comunicarnos.

35 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 20:14 ID:P5NXdxA6

>>33
no thats danish

36 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 20:22 ID:Heaven

>>33 seconded. If you know how to read a newspaper (or hold a conversation beyond "my name is ____ whar is the museum?") in the language of your choice, then you could say you "know" it.

37 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 20:25 ID:Heaven

For example, >>25 only knows english, yet he has listed 4 bullshit languages

38 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-27 22:46 ID:Heaven

>>37
Make me a sandwich, Watson!

39 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-28 01:35 ID:3+41QAQ5

>>29

>Spanish - Native (i'm peruvian)

Holy cow! Yo tambien soy peruano!

40 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-28 01:41 ID:Heaven

No se peruano!

41 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-28 04:05 ID:vo+2haen

>>38
nn
OIR0tah

42 Name: peppermin 2005-10-28 07:32 ID:+DGQ9B6S

>>40 Yo te enseño !

43 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-28 11:26 ID:Y6Ne2Fh6

Japanese : Native
English : fair (depends on my psyco. condition)
French : forgotten
Ancient Hebrew : a few words and the grammar
Arameic : a few words w/out grammar

44 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-29 05:58 ID:400HADiH

>>36 and >>37
Of course you can list 'bullshit languages', languages you only know a few words of :D

I started the thread and I only listed the ones I actually speak.
For 'bullshit' ones, then:

American english
Saami
Latin

and uhm.. whatever the name is for that silly language kids use to write secret messages and such.

45 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-29 06:14 ID:Ixfl/bBQ

> and uhm.. whatever the name is for that silly language kids use to write secret messages and such.

I think in at least American English they call it AOLchat

46 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-29 10:06 ID:Heaven

pig latin?

47 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-29 11:06 ID:Y6Ne2Fh6

>>45

>I think in at least American English they call it AOLchat

Well, about that AOLchat thing. I find it pretty useful for accomplishing the purpose.

48 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-30 13:20 ID:Heaven

> For 'bullshit' ones, ... Latin

What a crock of shit! Latin killed the Romans, yes, but that doesn't mean it's not a real language. Hey, if it has it's own allocation on ISO 609, it's a language.

49 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-10-31 14:21 ID:Heaven

I think he means that he only knows it a little bit, not well enough to translate a written text easily.

50 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-20 03:14 ID:ozz8KadJ

I can't believe only one person here speaks some Chinese. I'm fluent in English and pretty fluent, conversation-wise anyway, in Chinese (Cantonese to be exact, my Mandarin comprises of bu, ji, and dao :P).

51 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-20 07:23 ID:Heaven

English: native
Japanese: fluent

52 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-21 00:30 ID:Heaven

>>50

Wo hui shuo zhongguohua.

Ni bu ji dao ma? ;)

53 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-21 00:39 ID:djSI/eL2

I've been educated in the languages below:

  1. English - fluent - One of my native languages
  2. Spanglish - fluent - One of my native languages ;)
  3. Spanish - conversational - One of my native languages
  4. Chinese - okayish. it's been a long while
  5. Italian - It's been a longer while

I've also learned a little of both Japanese and Hindi from film, and I've been taught some Russian profanity.

54 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-21 05:03 ID:6kEi+hwj

Visayan/Tagalog - fluent
English - fluent

55 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-21 05:20 ID:k05NmdVw

>>52
I don't know -_-.. well maybe a bit.

56 Name: BENOIST 2005-11-21 16:46 ID:A8S0P/Us

English - Native
German - About high-school level
Spanish - Enough to get around Dallas
Japanese - Enough to understand anime
Mandarin - Bu, shi, and ma
Russian - Can't speak it but can read Cyrillic
Greek - Same as Russian
Korean - Same as Russian
Norwegian - I know several words from Kaizers Orchestra's "Bak et halleluja"

57 Name: SQUISHIE 2005-11-21 19:36 ID:B4nBp1Dk

English - Native
Japanese - Two semesters college level so far (I need at least 4 for my degree), and I practiced a lot too, so...
Tagalog - Itty bit (I wish I could know my own language, though. ~_~)
Spanish - Two years high school level
Latin - Used to know a bit... it's kinda lost now. =(

58 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-21 21:17 ID:aITRbNgP

>>56
Mmmmm, Kaizers <3

59 Name: jessy 2005-11-21 21:55 ID:0nJcVtvq

English-native, sadly
Japanese-nearly fluent
German-enough to get around/learning

60 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-22 14:18 ID:Heaven

>>59 look on the bright side
common: english-->esoteric language
uncommon: esoteric language-->esoteric language
English is the door to the world of languages!

61 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-23 11:18 ID:t/RSbPmZ

Mandarin - native
English - nearly fluent
Japanese - conversational level
Taiwanese(or Minnan if you like) - sucks big time

62 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-23 11:44 ID:Y4oHN0I0

Swedish - Native
French - Three years, high school level
English - Quite well
Spanish - Native.... even though i forgotten most of it.
Japanese - Qurrently learning. I Suck quite bad at it though.

63 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-24 00:14 ID:3X3S9mwu

French - native
English - learned it on the Internets

64 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-25 03:27 ID:Qs1VhfJ3

English - Native
Cantonese - Fluent
Mandarin - Conversational
Japanese - Conversational
French - High School

65 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-25 03:54 ID:/NhRjyhS

I can speak Cajun creole and English because they are my native tounges

I learned how to read quite abit of Kanji and Hangul from playing Japanese and Korean games for so many years. My Korean is much, much better than my Japanese, though. Lately as I moved from console to PC games, my Korean naturally got better

I also live in a dense hispanic population part of Texas now, so I can pick up Spanish fairly easy. Cajun language uses lots of French vocabulary and most of it is very similar to Spanish

66 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-25 06:01 ID:OqDh2Wwp

Hungarian - Native
English - Fluent
German - Conversational
French - studied for four years, forgot everything
Japanese - studying it right now... getting there, slowly.

67 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-29 12:48 ID:qsUiziJH

Slovak - native
Czech - fluently
French - fluently
English - quite well
Russian - studied for 3 years, i think I could buy some bread there

Japanese - passed 3 lessons, maybe in 10 years

68 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-29 14:05 ID:s3JFSJCf

lol malpt

69 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-29 18:57 ID:9ySOWKpW

jpnese- native
english- a little

70 Name: Thirqual 2005-11-29 23:12 ID:vKKosNt6

French - native
English - fluent
German - Conversational
Japanese - Have been studying for 2 years, still going on.

71 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-11-30 17:11 ID:LlnL581r

English - native
Spanish - tres anos en el colegio (se dice "high school" en ingles). Estaba muy bueno, pero he olvidado mucho.
French - enough to be dangerous, mainly from reading VCR warning labels when I was 6.
Japanese - about the same as French, but enough to read Japanese web pages if I look up the kanji.
German - Bits and pieces, mainly from my younger brother.

72 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-04 08:00 ID:qV7e2bDy

English — native
Tlingit — conversational
Japanese — conversational
Russian — conversational but rusty
Dutch — conversational
French — reading
German — whatever Dutch I can make Germans understand
Hawaiian — reading
Hawaiian Pidgin — nuff fo tok wit da pake landlady, I stay learn um but

73 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-12 18:49 ID:Heaven

English - Native
Japanese - Intermediate conversational
Korean - Decent to crappy depending on my mood

74 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-14 23:14 ID:B1wrY1PT

English-native
german-fluent
french-fluent
arabic-studying

75 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-15 01:22 ID:2Qoi8b4C

=) after seeing all your posts i feel very dumb ^^;;

english - native
latin - dunno how well now, but years ago i translated chapters of the aeneid
italian - took several years, can speak a little, can understand enough for basic commerce.
japanese - very little
spanish - can understand basics, can't speak a word

i do speak "programmer-ese" fluently though.

76 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-15 03:44 ID:B1wrY1PT

mi kan spek in Genglish. mi hab spas with dat!...
ah! Creoles.

77 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-15 15:26 ID:Heaven

German - native
english - fluent

D:

78 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-15 20:40 ID:B1wrY1PT

>>77 aber Deutsch mache spaß für mir

I think that german is underrated even by people who speek it.

79 Name: dokyonn 2005-12-16 00:36 ID:Heaven

i can speak all languages spoken in star trek

80 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-16 23:20 ID:Heaven

>>79
With whom?

81 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-19 23:28 ID:B1wrY1PT

>>80
half the people at a Star Trek convention...lol

82 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-20 00:15 ID:pH7QL9W9

English - my primary language
Esperanto - not a lot
Spanish - even less

Angla - mia unua lingvo
Esperanta - malgranda
Hispana - tre malpli

83 Name: Random Anonymous 2005-12-20 22:09 ID:xe4cscq+

Japanese-native
English-fluent
Russian-not a lot

:D

84 Name: (´-`).。oO(おっぱい (. Y .) ) 2005-12-21 03:12 ID:o76MEHQT

English - Native
French - Passable proficiency
Japanese - Learning, starting second year
German - Only took one year :P
Chinese - Just about to start first year

85 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-01 22:54 ID:n70AQRPm

English - native
Spanish - understand most, can speak some, construct basic sentences
Japanese - can read/understand some, speak a bit, know about 100 kanji

86 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-02 02:59 ID:P5NXdxA6

>>85
100 kanji , wow cool.
I only know 円 
Must be because i study economics ;)

87 Name: 85 2006-01-02 08:11 ID:i2J7NrUn

>>86
Haha, that would be helpful.

Most of the kanji I know is basic stuff, like numbers, days of the week, maybe a dozen or so names, some places, colors, and basic nouns. And 円. :P

88 Name: Mr. Anderson 2006-01-05 04:28 ID:2Ay5L4Kr

English - native
Korean - native
Japanese - fluent
Spanish - little

89 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-06 17:30 ID:hmySAU0D

English - fluent
Japanese - basic conversation, 250 kanji
French - a little

90 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-07 06:43 ID:sYNWq2Ax

English - fluent
Japanese - wannabe otaku phrases =P
Chinese - 4th year study

91 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-09 00:34 ID:WjoSBIqV

2chlangauge - native
 

92 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-09 01:53 ID:9XfDHiwX

English - native
Japanese - know a couple hundred words, no desire to learn kanji 8)
took a year of German but I've completely forgotten it

93 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-09 03:17 ID:Heaven

これは本当にくそスレだな…
Really, who cares what language you speak?! I better see a fucking poll created, or else this thread was entirely in vain. Do you really care if some anonymous person knows French - a little whereas another anonymous person knows French - passable proficiency?
This thread would only be suitable on forums that require registration, and even then, it would still be shit.
Even "Residents of Needler High!" was more successful than this!
Even "How old are you?" was more successful and meaningful than this!

[Worst Thread Ever] How many languages do you speak? ver2 [SHAME]
I've taken the liberty of naming the next thread for you, once this one reaches 1004 posts in year 2008!

Go die, >>1!

94 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-09 03:22 ID:Heaven

>>93

>I better see a fucking poll created

graph, even

95 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-09 20:38 ID:Heaven

>>93
I think somebody needs a nap...

96 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-11 15:02 ID:Heaven

>>93
What crawled up your ass? This thread was fine until you took a dump in it.

97 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-11 18:46 ID:Heaven

>>91
WTF is 2chlanguage?

98 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-14 18:29 ID:yRKORKKH

>>97 warosu

99 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-15 03:05 ID:Heaven

I like this thread because it seems to say that a lot more people at 4-ch speak french than I would expect

100 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-15 13:22 ID:rV0rp2r6

>>97 shousai kibbonu

101 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-16 11:25 ID:ie0e4Beu

>>93
whatever... :P

German - Native (Swiss German, actually, makes for a horrible accent :P)
French - Enough to understand all my Comp Sci/Math Courses.
English - Fluent

102 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-01-17 01:09 ID:w50TcgYI

English - fluent
Russian - native
French - half fluent
Japanese - beginner-intermediate

103 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-03 10:48 ID:rd8KS9xJ

Finnish - native
English - very fluent (near near-native)
French - little
Swedish - ditto
Japanese - very little but hoping to learn more!

(...and more and more and more....buahahahahhahahahahah!!!!!!!)

Klingon - No and I never want to learn it!!!!!!

1337 - \/\/311 i 5p34k 17 b3773R 7h4|\| 4n 4\/3r463 n00b...

104 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-03 10:54 ID:Heaven

>>93

LOLZ 1337 h4x0r...

105 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-03 11:25 ID:1H4REVWx

>>103

>¥/¥/311 i 5p34k 17 b3773R 7h4|¥| 4n 4¥/3r463 n00b...

what?

106 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-03 13:25 ID:rd8KS9xJ

Odd...it displays that one symbol I used correctly on my computer.

What I meant to say was:

"well I speak it better than an average noob"

107 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-03 15:33 ID:sH92EZch

108 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-04 03:18 ID:Heaven

This is an interesting remark, from a cultural perspective:

> When one of my customers from Korea was visiting here, I asked him if it bothered him that the backslash doesn't appear as a backslash. It did bother him, and he believes it bothers most of his countrymen. However, he was fatalistic about it, "What can we do to change it. It's been this way for a long time. We are used to it."

It's interesting because, like, no American would say something like that. Ever. And as an American, I find this sort of resignedness to just making do with whatever people give you, puzzling.

109 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-04 05:53 ID:1H4REVWx

>It's interesting because, like, no American would say something like that. Ever. And as an American, I find this sort of resignedness to just making do with whatever people give you, puzzling.

how many americans use windows?
how many americans use internet explorer?

110 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-04 14:27 ID:Heaven

>>108 is a stupid, ignorant American.

111 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-04 21:43 ID:Heaven

>>106
using it at all makes you an "average noob"

112 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-06 14:21 ID:Heaven

>>108
You expect to single-handedly be able to change a well-established status quo?

113 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 15:27 ID:1OvmkeF1

Swedish - fluent
English - fluent
Serbian - a little
French - a little
Japanese - a little
Russian - a little

114 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 15:44 ID:Qv1fHmZu

German - Native
Bosnian - Semi-Native, but not very fluent
English - fluent
French - A little
Spanish - A little more

115 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 16:48 ID:vmpd5eho

i speak nihonese desu

116 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 17:14 ID:YpWxF1dY

English - Native
French - Broken
Spanish - A Little
German - Few Phrases
Japanese - Hello I am Gaijin Man! YATTA!

117 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 19:51 ID:/i5xVsNj

English - fluent
Malayalam - sort of fluent, I can communicate but reading is difficult
Tamil - I can pick up a few words if I listen carefully
French - 2 1/2 years in school but not very good at it

118 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 21:20 ID:PI7ejPQO

42

119 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 21:21 ID:sH92EZch

English - LOL AMERICAN
German - I can't understand people anymore, but I can read it
Latin - Passable but way out of touch

Languages really do not stick around in your mind if you do not use them sadly. When did all of you polyglot people start learning all of these languages? Starting in junior high was difficult for me.

120 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 21:29 ID:YpWxF1dY

I learned mostly because my dad was a travel agent and tour runner when I was younger. We went to alot of countries and I just picked up the language from hearing it so much. Lost alot of it now though, don't go as much any more.

121 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-09 22:23 ID:vV7FdmdQ

English - Fluent
Japanese - Fluent
Korean - Fluent
Spanish - I can tell customers that they can come back to the store the next day to pick up their order. 4 years of high school Spanish in action.

122 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-14 14:01 ID:XmeLNG97

Japanese - Native
Korean - Fluent
English - Fluent
French - Fluent
Vietnamese - Quite fluent
Mandarin - a little
Spanish - un pocito

123 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-14 14:15 ID:1H4REVWx

>Spanish - un pocito

it's "poquito"

124 Name: 4nd 2006-02-15 02:12 ID:5LfLFfhB

English:a little
japanese:native

I wanna speak English...orz

125 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-15 04:45 ID:Heaven

>>124 is cute unless he's a lying weaboo

126 Name: 4nd 2006-02-15 05:23 ID:Heaven

What is"lying weaboo"?
Sorry,I dont know this word.

127 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-15 16:34 ID:Heaven

>>126
just ignore >>125
"weeaboo" is a 4chan wordfilter for "wapanese"

128 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-15 17:57 ID:Heaven

>>124
The best way of learning a language is speaking it.
Try to get to know native English speakers.

I wanna learn Japanese orz

129 Name: 4nd 2006-02-16 00:50 ID:y0ZWqvrD

>>127 Thanks(in 2ch "Tonks" always We use)!

>>128 I have no friend who can speak English and
My English is so poor.
I hope We have Friendship.
susigeisyamifune@yahoo.co.jp
(If you are OK)
では、さようなら。

130 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-16 22:00 ID:Heaven

>>3
I don´t get it._. pls2explain

131 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-16 22:08 ID:Heaven

>>125
Weeaboos are cute, too(・ー・)

132 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 00:48 ID:Heaven

People think i'm wapanese when I post on 2ch, but I'm not, really =(

133 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 00:52 ID:ZS7ljrsU

I speak multiple language

Australia(English)
Belize(English)
Canada(English)
Carriebean(English)
Jamaica(English)
New Zealand(English)
Philiphines(English)
England(English)
United States(English)
etc(English)

134 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 01:11 ID:y0ZWqvrD

>>132
are you japanese?
where thread can you post on?

135 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 04:16 ID:CTzXvX+S

I speak French, Italian, English and Japanese. French is my first language and English is second. The others are for traveling reasons.

136 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 06:23 ID:Heaven

so?

137 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 14:16 ID:FM0la0CQ

English and Spanish

I think I'd like to learn some Asian language, but I'm not sold on Japanese, which unless you are going to that nation is only useful for badly translating mangas and pretending to be cool.

138 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 14:58 ID:HlTZFE+H

English, German, Italian. I'm learning Japanese, and I can understand Spanish and French.

139 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-17 18:18 ID:Heaven

>>137
Also; getting laid with weeaboo chicks.

140 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-18 14:51 ID:Heaven

Japanese(native) and English(a little).
I've learned Spanish when I was a junior high school student,
but I can hardly understand.

141 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-18 22:22 ID:mXOd4U35

English(a little)...

That is all.

142 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-19 03:16 ID:Heaven

I want to learn korean so badly. not joking.

143 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-20 17:10 ID:OL4HqOu1

Northern 'bad' English (native - vstrong accent)
Southern 'bad' French (native - vstrong accent)
International Business English (no accent & no slang)
Francais soutenu (stuff used to blurb your way through exams)

German (pretty well - helps to have cute german friends)
Spanish (enough to get by & swear a lot)
Latin (no-one but wiccan wierdos speaks this anymore ...ok but I can read & decypher this shit from taking classes 5 years -for the lulz)

I want to learn Russian, Ancient greek, improve the Spanish and learn how to swear & say rude shit in Arabic.

144 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-22 22:22 ID:2TsI0aBl

English, and that's it. I want to take other languages (I took a bunch of German in high-school and forgot it all, sadly) but I'm not quite sure which.

145 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-23 14:24 ID:vGpa+2qN

German - native
English - fluent
French - a little
Russian - a little
Japanese - very little

146 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-26 21:11 ID:VW+NAOp1

UZBEK-native
Russian-fluent
Engilish-almost fluent
Persian-a little
Turkish -a little

147 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-27 12:24 ID:rd8KS9xJ

Des lenguezos imaginatives:

Parais - native, in io hett
Tonoan - ques spregt io spregtai allteim
Potash - fluvient
Gibberish - aur-fluvient
Quenya - halo!! io est neget ten pathetice...
MORDOR - ius mateis iusit im aet iuot te spreget em native...no chance 'nre hel...

beot MORDOR graz lenguez est.

trú!

Moteltian - lehtl
Klingon - jauk est? seriust? sic?

148 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-27 15:21 ID:Heaven

>>147
what are talking about.

149 Name: Random Anonymous 2006-02-27 16:21 ID:rd8KS9xJ

>>148

Des lenguezos imaginatives

150 Name: Anonymous : 2006-02-28 19:21 ID:Heaven

>>147 best post

151 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-12 02:25 ID:UrIJ/FoS

Spanish - Native
English - Regular
Japanese - Little, Still Learning
Italian - Very few phrases
Chinese - Can say hello >.<

152 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-12 04:31 ID:K9rcz1Ei

English - Native
German - Intermediate
Japanese - Beginner (ie. 2 months)

153 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-15 06:14 ID:gWutY8EQ

Nothing.
Im 2years old.

154 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-15 08:28 ID:W7RXCHsq

English - Native

But I would love to learn a lot more languages.

155 Name: benson_2009 : 2006-03-15 12:44 ID:GQ5hd+EW

Chinese - Native
English - Fluent
Japanese - a little (stil learning)

156 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-15 17:18 ID:qSLSdf22

English - Native
French - Can read most and write, need to work on speaking it...

157 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-15 21:04 ID:r4fcp4wY

Spanish -Native
English - Almost Fluent
Japanese - Intermediate

158 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-15 21:07 ID:xFQWyts2

German - Native
English - Fluent
French - well, still not fluent but ok
Italien - so-so
Japanese - just started to learn a month ago ^^

159 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-16 12:31 ID:l2Jp443m

I only speak the LINGUA DOS GAYS!

160 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-20 12:20 ID:kGAtyXw5

Dutch - native
Hindi/hindu - not that well but better then my japanese :P
German - understand most of it but cant speak it
English - fluent
Japanese - well it's getting better but im still learning.

161 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-20 16:14 ID:q3FvONiV

Finnish - native
English - fluent, mistaken for a native speaker sometimes
Swedish - rusty
Japanese - errm.. can usually tell what they're speaking about

162 Name: Anonymous : 2006-03-20 22:14 ID:4q4uoBek

osakan - native
english - toefl 640
spanish - business level
japanese - i gave up...

163 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-03 23:48 ID:TsjYi29V

engleesh

164 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-05 02:09 ID:Heaven

165 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-11 21:06 ID:zLL48nR8

spanglish - my papito
wapannise - domo arigatou

166 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-12 00:22 ID:Heaven

>>165
ore no papito

wait... that's still wrong.

167 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-12 06:20 ID:HRZE01tt

spanish - fluent second language
portuguese - native
english - 3rd fluent
italian - basic
chinese - little, learning
japanese - little more, learning
korean - more than little more, learning

168 Name: sage : 2006-04-12 06:23 ID:HRZE01tt

testing

169 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-12 09:33 ID:XphxJtiw

english - fluent
tagalog - fluent
german - can hold a conversation
japanese - can hold a conversation
mandarin - can hold a conversation

>>168 in the link field

170 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-12 11:02 ID:K39q+I0r

English - Native.

171 Post deleted by moderator.

172 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-12 16:43 ID:xPe89Fnt

>>166 Myyyy papitooooooooooooo

173 Name: YLTA2006 : 2006-04-20 00:44 ID:4KbEEO9Z

german - native
english,italian,spanish, french - fluent
japanese - almost fluent
korean - lerning

174 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-20 10:41 ID:xgoYlg21

Japanese - native
English - can hold a slow conversation
Deutcsh - lerning 2 yrs, but i squeeze through last semester's test//

175 Name: YLTA2006 : 2006-04-20 16:24 ID:tKp6euwC

174 sry about that

176 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-21 03:35 ID:Heaven

        Shitty thread Wasshoi!!
     \\ Shitty thread Wasshoi! //
 +   + \\Shitty thread Wasshoi!/+
        ∬ ∬    ∬ ∬    ∬ ∬  +
   +     人      人      人     +
         (_)    (_)    (__)
  +    (__)   (__)   (__)     +
.   +   ( __ )  ( __ )  ( __ )  +
      ( ´∀`∩ (´∀`∩) ( ´∀`)
 +  (( (つ   ノ (つ  丿 (つ  つ ))  +
       ヽ  ( ノ  ( ヽノ   ) ) )
       (_)し'  し(_)  (_)_)

177 Name: Anonymous : 2006-04-28 14:47 ID:QQN6WMzg

mandarin - native, but i've been living in canada so long that English is probably 'more' native to me now

178 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-26 23:12 ID:fZQjoijO

Spanish - Native
English - Almost perfect
French - Intermediate
German - Intermediate
Russian - Basic Grammar

179 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-26 23:59 ID:6TEpggmr

English - fluent
German - to good to buy a cola , to bad to talk about einstein's theories.
Norwegian - native
Japanese - almost nothing , but more then nothing.
Russian - one word.

180 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-27 01:22 ID:kTbzazCV

181 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-27 12:59 ID:RyYp3gkt

182 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-29 09:55 ID:V2hDveZQ

I started this thread, I can't believe it's alive still.

183 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-29 09:56 ID:V2hDveZQ

Huh? Why has my ID changed?

184 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-29 16:20 ID:An6rat8S

French - Native
English - somehow
Japanese - a little
Spanish - a little

185 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-29 16:44 ID:p4G3MkL4

>>183

Your old ID was taken hostage

186 Name: Anonymous : 2006-05-30 02:02 ID:Heaven

I should slap you >>182

187 Name: ID kIDNappers : 2006-05-30 22:19 ID:Heaven

>>183
we have your ID.
brINg $100,000,000 To The corNer of NINTh sT.
aNd QuaIl by 5 pm or you wIll Never see IT agaIN.

--ID kIDNappers

188 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-11 16:28 ID:vquJhpr1

English - Fluent [native]
French - Fluent [bilingual/native]
Norwegian - Enough to get by [relatives]
Japanese - Learning. D: [university, woot.]

189 Name: Mich The Weird : 2006-06-11 16:53 ID:MxQZ3AWv

English - Fluent (native).

French - A little.

Spanish - A little.

German - A little.

Japanese - More than I know of French and Spanish, but much less than I know of English.

Other - Very little per language and none for most other languages.

190 Name: Daisuke : 2006-06-12 02:01 ID:fBfGa1Of

Spanish - Fluent (Native)

English - Enough to mantain a conversation

Japanese - Something... I can read hiragana and katakana, some kanji... If I go to Japan, I can go back to the hotel by asking someone ^^'

French - Very Little

Italian - Very Little

191 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-12 04:19 ID:m0N9tLKT

English - Native

Everything else - Nothing

192 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-12 19:35 ID:zKEqi7hZ

German - Native.
English - Fluent.
French - Can read and understand some of it. My speaking skills might even manage to get me a ride to Germany/UK if dropped somewhere in the French countryside with a reasonable amount of cash.
Latin - Studied it for seven bloody years.
Spanish - Same as with French, but would need substantially more cash to pay for the damage to Spaniard eardrums.
Japanese - Passed JLPT level 3, taking level 2 this year.
Swedish - NEJ DU!

193 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-12 20:16 ID:pje37zT9

>>192 you studied latin for seven years? wtf are you a catholic priest or what

194 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-12 23:57 ID:E4Tdl/yp

ttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFMYoKqLqmk
Japanese Michael Jackson palody

195 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-14 01:23 ID:gB19PJCT

Spanish - Native
English - Excellent
Latin - V. Little
Italian - V. Little
Japanese - Ermm Few words

196 Name: minorcode : 2006-06-14 10:06 ID:Heaven

Japanese - Native
English - Reading/Writing : a little, Speaking : very little
Klingon - only a word "Qapla'"

197 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-14 15:05 ID:s1T8WESr

>>193

No, I live in South Germany and went to a Benedictine monastery school.

198 Name: >>192,197 : 2006-06-14 15:28 ID:s1T8WESr

Would have studied it for two more years if I hadn't moved to UK after 11th grade.

199 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-22 01:17 ID:Heaven

Four. But two of those are a bit crappy due to bad teachers. Ich habe Sauerkraut in meine Lederhosen.

200 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-27 09:20 ID:b4DDR0GM

Japanese"standard" - Native
Japanese"Kansai" - Native
English - fluency
German - conversational

BTW,What is Wapanese? (^^;)

201 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-27 09:44 ID:RQF4IlJl

I can speak two dialect of one language and two other language:

Cantonese: native but only up to yr3 elementary level
Mandarin: understandable but not very good
English: fluent, second language
Japanese: semi-fluent, understandable to conversationable

202 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-27 15:19 ID:224eQ9+1

english - first language
german - somewhat

203 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-27 20:32 ID:aRyWg/NZ

>>200

>BTW,What is Wapanese?

It means "wannabe japanese", a term used to insult fans of anime/manga who learn japanese. Most 4chan users use the word "weeaboo" instead of "wapanese", they both mean the same thing.

204 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-28 01:09 ID:Heaven

Wapanese is the term used to describe a person of non-japanese descent (usually white, however some others are lumped in there as well) who is incredibly obsessed with Japanese things.

A person who watches anime or majors in Japanese language at university is not counted as wapanese.

These are common behaviours displayed by wapanese:

  1. Being obsessed with anime. The typical anime watcher enjoys the shows because they are fun to watch and interesting (not all are for children, that is a myth). However, wapanese will take it to an unhealthy level.
  2. Their rooms will be filled with japanese things. Anything from anime stuff to japanese things such as Tatami. A true wapanese will have next to nothing non-japanese in their room.
  3. Many wapanese will believe that Japan is the best country ever and that if they go there they will be adored. However, most wapanese don't understand that Japan is a very racist society and they don't like white people very much.
  4. They will constantly post things on the internet containing a few of the japanese words they know. These words are usually: kawaii and baka. These words will be used in an english sentence such as: "You are so baka"
  5. Many wapanese will develope an unhealthy obsession with asian girls/guys. Many of them will refuse to be with someone who isn't japanese.
  6. wapanese tend to spend all of their time watching anime, reading manga and listening to japanese music. A lot of them are unemployed and live at home with their parents (some are students, some are over 30). The ones who do have jobs, have very poor jobs, such as working at a supermarket.
  7. Wapanese listen to tons of japanese music but will refuse to listen to anything non-japanese. They also tend to say that non-japanese music is crap while the japanese music is godly. However, most wapanese tend to listen to Japanese Pop which can be very, very similar to non-Japanese pop.
  8. Many wapanese do cosplay. However, many normal anime watchers cosplay as well. However, wapanese tend to overdo it and act very elitist at conventions.
  9. Most wapanese know very little about Japan. They don't look past the anime and whatnot. Most wapanese don't know anything about Japan's history. However many wapanese will pretend to know what they are talking about, however they tend to be incorrect.
  10. Wapanese also tend to butcher the language (besides using them in english sentences). A good example is the meaning of otaku. The wapanese will use it to describe themselves, however most don't realize that otaku in Japan means you are very mentally unstable. Otaku in Japan are looked down upon and ridiculed.

205 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-28 03:19 ID:Heaven

> However, wapanese will take it to an unhealthy level.
> However, many normal anime watchers cosplay as well.

Half of the entries on urbandictionary are trying to define it so it doesn't include the author. Sort of pathetic.

206 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-28 11:16 ID:/SB1OgIl

Japan isn't a racist society >>204. It just focus on the group more. Any one outside of a group is ignored and excluded but it does not make them racist. And not only the Japanese, there are also some Chinese who does not like Westerners on historical and social reasons and I dont think the reasons make us Chinese/Japanese racist.
Someone here called me a weeaboo/wapanese once. However, I dont just only know a few Japanese words as I'm currently learning the language in a course at my university.

207 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-28 18:19 ID:IG2cAhGy

>>206
You are wapanese. Look at your name.

208 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-29 08:39 ID:Rw5Pcj6h

I'm NOT wapanese. I do know more than just a few phrases of Japanese. And I'm not white, nor would I wanna be.
I'm at least on lvl 3 on the JLPT, a test to identify one's proficiency in Japanese. The typical 'wapanese' wouldnt even make it up to lvl3

209 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-29 08:54 ID:Heaven

>>208
I doubt they could even do level 4.

last I check, I was 4-3-ish, but was too lazy to take it.

210 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-29 10:34 ID:Heaven

>>208
sorry, putting "otoko" in your name automatically qualifies you as wapanese, regardless of your jlpt level.

ps. shut the fuck up, you chinese people have it easy, all that fucking kanji and you can read all of it.

211 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-29 11:24 ID:Rw5Pcj6h

I hope you know just because it's the same characters doesnt mean it has the same pronounciation. It's just easier for me to recognize it but remembering how to pronounce the word is the same as anyone else.

212 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-29 13:10 ID:Heaven

Bragging about how much japanese you know is pretty wapanese too.

213 Name: samapuma : 2006-06-29 17:22 ID:1lCpqUsr

japanese - familiar, can speak in a short conversation
Spanish - familiar, can speak in a short conversation
English - Native
French - trying to learn it

:)

214 Name: Desperate otoko (no ko) : 2006-06-30 08:25 ID:tqr0OygL

Not trying to brag, just stating facts to defend myself from your attempts to belittle me

215 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-30 13:11 ID:Heaven

> your attempts to belittle me

no one here is attempting to belittle you. you're already doing a better job of that than any of us ever could.

216 Name: Anonymous : 2006-06-30 18:29 ID:Heaven

Stop using romaji, desperate young male person! It hurts my eyes and makes my balls itch.

男の子. Comprende?

217 Name: Prototype Angel : 2006-07-08 16:23 ID:HEop1Wx4

English - Native (sort of)
Spanish - Native (sort of)

Can't remember which two language came first to be my native language. shrug

218 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-08 20:00 ID:njF8TaXS

french - native
english - fluent
japanese - fluent
chinese - very little.

what do you think about that ^__^

219 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-09 10:58 ID:Heaven

>>218
sugoi desu ne ^__^

220 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-10 04:29 ID:ME8Cxo7B

Why does a lot of people doubt others can seak Japanese? its not so hard to learn except Kanji

221 Name: 218 : 2006-07-10 09:51 ID:njF8TaXS

>>219

thanks ^_^

>>220

i think chinese is more difficult

222 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-10 11:22 ID:H5UXo+pQ

>>220

Because of the annoying people who drop "baka"s and "kawaii"s into everyday English to act Japanese.

I don't speak anything but English. Apart from my bakas and kawaiis.

223 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 03:33 ID:mISw2bXn

bengali-fluent
english- fluent
spanish-learning
japanese-learning

224 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 03:39 ID:mISw2bXn

>>220
>>222
Thats very true in my school kids say random Japanese things they here in Japanese. The Bakas and Kawaiis are O.K. But the kids Say Ohaiyo ,konnichiwas, itterasai,arigato....out of nowhere which really annoys me :-( . I am actually taking Japanese lessons. My dream is to live in Japan after I become a M.D. :-).

225 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 03:48 ID:bh1XM+dH

Throwing Japanese words into your English for any reason outside of humorous intent annoys the crap out of me.

226 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 06:23 ID:njF8TaXS

i'm french and i can say that even here there are those wapanese who annoy everybody around them.....

227 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 09:05 ID:Heaven

>>226
Not surprising. I gather that France has had a bit of a wap problem since a Japan fad fifteen, twenty years ago.

228 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-12 14:07 ID:Heaven

I love you guys <3

229 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-16 04:05 ID:Heaven

Japanese - native
English - a little
Engrish - fluent

230 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-16 15:22 ID:kH3gExU2

Japanese-native
English-good
Germany-a little
Russian-a little

231 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-16 19:04 ID:Hqs1K1qE

>>224
Did I hear someone say weeaboo?

232 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-17 10:44 ID:Z8N/50bm

english and german fluent.

233 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-18 12:22 ID:UIsAv4QL

In GURPS terms:

      spoken    written    cost

Finnish* native native [0]
French accented accented [4]
English native native [6]
Swedish accented accented [4]
German broken broken [2]
Italian accented accented [4]
Japanese accented broken [3]

Cultural Familiarity: Western* [0]

Total 23 points

*home culture and language are free

234 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-18 18:34 ID:Ou+ERrxM

i speak perl

235 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-18 19:38 ID:Heaven

>>234
You mean "I spek perl."

236 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 09:24 ID:RhXj4nPM

I speak kansaiben only
kansaiben is a dialect of Japanense.
and I'm very proud of kansanben !
One day all the people around the world will speak kansaiben.
Because it is fantastic,marvelous,wonderful..you know,it's beyond description.
once you get to know kansaiben,you'll bet hooked on it,for sure.

237 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 13:54 ID:Z8N/50bm

you dont even know if its kansaiben or kansanben ffs

238 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 13:58 ID:cbzHZ3hZ

>>235
You mean ">>%1 $p3ak [p]@rl=="

239 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 14:53 ID:BBkHkE/C

roflmaololomgwtfbbq i think a good 60% of the people here who say they speak some japanese only know some words, but they say they speak japanese a little because they are Wapanese

240 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 15:33 ID:Heaven

>>236

I can say "ee na" and "-han"!

241 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 17:11 ID:bN33Y/34

>>239

I can say やらないか
Am i wapanese?

242 Name: Anonymous : 2006-07-31 23:55 ID:IDr8ZomT

>>240
I'll teach you more fantastic phrases,which are エゲツナー
クサー(egetuna-,kusa-).lol
these phrases were used by Oka Hachirou,who was a famous Jaoanese comedian and passed away a few years ago.
If you would say these phrases in front of the people in Osaka,
You'll become very Popular among them. I assure you.lol
Do you know about yoshimoto ?
It's a comedy theater and he belonged to it.

243 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-01 05:02 ID:Adhvze16

>>236
I only know that most of the sentences in 関西弁 end with や
And I know that in 猫にゃん弁, a sentence should end with にゃ

244 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-01 17:41 ID:GlNJ1jZD

VIPからきますた

245 Name: Dante : 2006-08-04 02:47 ID:W+zgW0G6

English - native
Turkish - fluent
Arabic - some
Russian - some

246 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-04 21:37 ID:Heaven

>>242 do you know about yoshinoya

247 Name: 242 : 2006-08-06 01:33 ID:yr46OX1x

>>246
Of course I do.
Yoshinaya is one of the most famous food chain stores.
and they sell bowl of rice topped with beef mainly.
but they ran out of beef bacause of BSE,so they sell bowl of rice topped with pork mainly now.
I want to eat 牛丼(beef bowl ),but at the same time
I'm very scared of BSE.
to eat or not to eat...that is a question lol

248 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-06 06:15 ID:YV3tycTu

>>247
The incidence of vCJD (the human disease that develops from BSE) is about 1 in 1 million, on par with winning the second prize in most lottos.
If you're still scared, you should also start buying lottery tickets.

249 Name: 247 : 2006-08-06 07:37 ID:yr46OX1x

>>248
If what you've just said is true,there seem to be about 250 patients in the U.S. I don't believe it.
you know,winning the lottery is happiness,but suffering from the disease is unhappiness.
By the way,I've been buying lottery tickets for about ten years.I don't feel like winning it forever.

250 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-06 08:45 ID:Heaven

>>249
Out of 300 million people in the US, only 250 got it?
If we assume that everyone in the US eats beef, the ratio almost works out.
So yeah, lottery.

251 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-06 16:57 ID:BBkHkE/C

me spek al langueages flunently

252 Name: 249 : 2006-08-06 21:05 ID:IDr8ZomT

>>250
That's funny.I have an american elementary school textbook.
and it says that the population of the U.S.is about 250 million.I think almost americans eat beef except a few people
who have religious reasons or are vegetarians.
you also eat beef ?
Be careful not to win the lottery ! lol

253 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-06 23:48 ID:2jA58uhh

Anyways, >>242, please listen to me. Not that it's really related to this thread.

I went to Yoshinoya a while ago; you know, Yoshinoya?

Well anyways there was an insane number of people there, and I couldn't get in.

Then, I looked at the banner hanging from the ceiling, and it had "150 yen off" written on it.

Oh, the stupidity. Those idiots.

You, don't come to Yoshinoya just because it's 150 yen off, fool.

It's only 150 yen, 1-5-0 YEN for crying out loud.

There're even entire families here. Family of 4, all out for some Yoshinoya, huh? How fucking nice.

"Alright, daddy's gonna order the extra-large." God I can't bear to watch.

You people, I'll give you 150 yen if you get out of those seats.

Yoshinoya should be a bloody place.

That tense atmosphere, where two guys on opposite sides of the U-shaped table can start a fight at any time,

The stab-or-be-stabbed mentality, that's what's great about this place.

Women and children should screw off and stay home.

Anyways, I was about to start eating, and then the bastard beside me goes "extra-large, with extra sauce."

Who in the world orders extra sauce nowadays, you moron?

I want to ask him, "do you REALLY want to eat it with extra sauce?"

I want to interrogate him. I want to interrogate him for roughly an hour.

Are you sure you don't just want to try saying "extra sauce"?

Coming from a Yoshinoya veteran such as myself, the latest trend among us vets is this, extra green onion.

That's right, extra green onion. This is the vet's way of eating.

Extra green onion means more green onion than sauce. But on the other hand the price is a tad higher. This is the key.

And then, it's delicious. This is unbeatable.

However, if you order this then there is danger that you'll be marked by the employees from next time on; it's a double-edged sword.

I can't recommend it to amateurs.

What this all really means, though, is that you, >>242, should just stick with today's special.

254 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-07 03:43 ID:IDr8ZomT

>>253
lol Well,I remember you posted this kinf of stuff everywhere
in 2ch.so I read this story in Japanese.
I expect you to post another funny story next time.

255 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-11 16:14 ID:SCQFYVnj

よしのやのはなしはよそでやれ

256 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-13 03:51 ID:KX/XWGx4

English, Japanese, Engrish, Singlish

257 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-14 04:28 ID:Heaven

>>254
Im looking for a bento box, it cant be pinku (thats japanese for pink) or any girl color. It has to be of 2 or more kotoba (thats japanese for 2 compartments) and has be be chibi (small) sized. And has to be really kawaii (cute). Also It has to be about 10-20 bux. And you have to post pics of it first (i want to make shure it's kawaii [cute]). And it would be nice if it came with matching chopstick holder (WITH chopsticks). OH! and it CANNOT have any cartoon pictures, or be made out of plastic. It has to be made of ceramic, or something like that. Also it would be nice if it was made in japan. and not in china or corea (korea) or whatever. I have found a bento box similar to the one im describing in e-bay, but it was 1 kotoba, and i dont want my gohan (rice) to touch my other things (it can get wet and i would not like that, plus 2 compartments looks more kawaii)

258 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-15 09:14 ID:IkCNICPt

そんなこと、私に相談されてもww

259 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-24 16:49 ID:gjzsWeR4

Japanese native
English not so bad
German very little
French very little

260 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-25 07:10 ID:0062vdL1

English
Japanese (intermediate)
French (used to know it very well, but now just a little)

261 Name: Haiiro : 2006-08-25 23:32 ID:g8tHYHlB

English (mostly american): Somewhat native.
Spanish: Native.
Japanese: Currently learning.
Mexica: What we speak in our mexican spanish and words I have learned at school or books.
German: A word or two.
Totonaco: Just a few words (haven't really focused on it really).
l33t: It takes time for me to decypher it, but I can manage.

Languages I would not like to learn (but could):
French!!!!(I detest those gutural sounds, sorry if I insult anyone)
Italian

262 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-25 23:45 ID:Sg9dyBmj

>>English (mostly american): Somewhat native.
>>Spanish: Native.

What do you sneak in and out?

263 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 12:22 ID:TvFCw6WB

>English, Japanese, Engrish, Singlish

Singlish? Would that be Chinese English or something else?

264 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 14:09 ID:Heaven

>>263
Singaporean...?

265 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 14:56 ID:Heaven

lol I thought this thread was in DQN

266 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 16:41 ID:Heaven

>>264
I don't think there's such a language as Singaporean.

267 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 20:53 ID:5m0vV1H0

>>257 didn't i just see this post in the food section...? it's nearly the exact same post, using the same annoying japanese terms followed by a parenthetical translation. why do you need a bento box, anyways? just buy a lunchbox and use Ziploc bags for sandwiches and things. you don't need to make your own asian-style food for lunch every day like some japanophile.

268 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-27 21:36 ID:Heaven

>>267
legendary kopipe fools another

269 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-28 00:08 ID:Heaven

>>266
Way to be pedantic, you know what I meant.

270 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-29 14:31 ID:yxKUS+Sj

Singlish is like "YA LA YA LA YA LA YA LA YA LA YA LA". God that's annoying.

271 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-30 09:29 ID:ursc5U24

English -- native
Filipino (Tagalog) -- beginner
japanese -- just a few words..

272 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-30 15:24 ID:TvFCw6WB

English - native
Spanish - a little, studied Spanish for three years and all I can say is a little?
Mandarin - a few words/phrases
Tagalog - a few words/phrases
Japanese - a few words/a phrase
Hawaiian - a few words

273 Name: Anonymous : 2006-08-31 22:29 ID:n8B23aYl

As a native English speaker from the US, I must say that I find Singlish to be FREAKIN' HILARIOUS.

Dun be so cheem oneh! Funny lah!

274 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-01 06:55 ID:2n/wFT9/

Farsi ( Persian )
sample:
سلام به دوستان سگ صحاب 4 چن.
and also English...

275 Name: Love fiasco-guy : 2006-09-08 16:49 ID:iBCcOJtT

Russian - native
German - fluent
English - fluent
Spanish - a little
French - a little
Greek - couple phrases

I can also more or less understand most slavic/latin languages

276 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-08 18:29 ID:c+9NaSFS

Spanish - native
English - native
French - a little
Russian - a little

I learned both english and spanish at the same time in my childhood. I guess it's kind of weird when you think about it though, as it feels entirely natural to talk in either, but I don't get them confused. Even when I think to myself I'll do it in either language for no particular reason.

277 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-08 19:29 ID:ZLRyHYKm

English- native
Vietnamese- native
Cantonese- native
Spanish- semi-fluent. ^^ I'm getting there for Spanish.

278 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-10 13:17 ID:dG8lkP2c

Japanese - native
English - learning
Hintabo - fluent

279 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-10 18:12 ID:Heaven

English - native
Japanese - learning
Esperanto - a little (but thats easy)

280 Name: Anonymous : 2006-09-11 14:29 ID:Heaven

>>275

That is because you are Russian, whose language is also in the slavic family, correct?

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