I am a native English speaker and recently started learning Esperanto a few weeks ago. I was inspired by a TED Talk that explained how Esperanto is an excellent first choice for those interested in acquiring multiple languages.

Due to its relative simplicity, learning Esperanto effectively prepares your brain for learning additional languages, making the process quicker and smoother.

So how many here speak different languages and what are they?

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    20 days ago

    Ojibway … or a dialect of Ojibway in northern Ontario. It’s my first language I spoke for about the first four years of my life and dominate language I spoke until I was about 13, then I started actually speaking English all the time starting at about 18. It took me years to get used to full on English conversation but now I’m comfortable in it. I still remember my Indigenous language but I seldom use it because I have no one to talk to any more. I don’t live close to my family or friends who speak it and even in my home community and group, the language is dying out. I think I’m pretty much the last generation who fully spoke the language because everyone after me speaks prominently English and Ojibway second (if they speak it at all).

    So I can safely say that Ojibway is my first language and English is my second.

  • viking@infosec.pub
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    20 days ago

    Native German, fluent English, conversational Norwegian (and by extension passable Swedish; and I read 100% Danish but suck at speaking/listening comprehension), passable Dutch, Luxembourgish and French, and basic Chinese (mandarin).

    Edit: And I passed Latin in high school (grades 5 through 10), so I do manage to read inscriptions in old buildings and churches, and pick up written Italian and Spanish because of it.

  • Ilandar@lemm.ee
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    20 days ago

    Only very basic Korean, in addition to my native English. I have studied four languages (Mandarin Chinese, Italian, German and Spanish) but I’ve forgotten pretty much all of it because I haven’t been able to use it in the real world like I can with Korean. I don’t think I’ll ever bother with learning another language. Getting my Korean up to a proper conversational level would be a big achievement so I’ll aim for that instead.

  • NorthWestWind@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Cantonese, Mandarin and English. This is the basic languages for Hongkongers (which I am) and I refer to this as 2.5-lingual, because Cantonese and Mandarin are both Chinese.

    • Annoyed_🦀 @lemmy.zip
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      20 days ago

      Dialect is their own language. Don’t sell yourself short, because i can’t understand a word of hakka despite knowing mandarin and a little bit of cantonese and hokkien.

  • MudMan@fedia.io
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    20 days ago

    Man, TED talks suck.

    That guy scammed you into learning a conlang with the excuse that it does something that all languages do and nobody is even telling you.

    Just learn a romance language if you want access to a family of concepts that will carry over easily, friend. It comes with the bonus of being able to talk to people.

    Anyway, I’m often light on personal info here, but I’m in a bilingual territory, learned English as a kid, the basics of a couple others through life stuff and I get a few more through osmosis because all languages do that Esperanto trick.

    • Zloubida@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      All languages do that, yes, but as Esperanto is easier than the others, it makes it a very good first language.

      I learnt English at school for almost 10 years without being able to have a discussion. I learnt Esperanto in a few months, actually used it to communicate with foreigners, and a few months after I was able to communicate in English. My English is still far from perfect, but without Esperanto I wouldn’t even be here.

      • MudMan@fedia.io
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        20 days ago

        That seems more like a teaching methodology problem than a target language problem. Honestly, I don’t know where you are, but the way English is taught in schools in many regions is terrible, so that doesn’t tell you too much about the relative merits of learning Esperanto.

        But hey, if you got it out of your system that’s good for you. I don’t begrudge anybody learning a language, even if it’s a made up one. I just wouldn’t want to support the idea that monolinguals should go out of their way to tackle conlangs, or Esperanto specifically. Go learn something you’re curious and motivated about.

    • Well here in the US, and in the state I’m in, not a lot of bilingual needs. I know Spanish is pretty popular in a lot of places, and I’ll eventually learn it. But since I’m 55 years old, esperanto seemed more fun. And it’s got an interesting history. Thanks!

  • python@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Russian at a Native level, because my parents speak it (so I can barely read)

    German at a Native level, because I’ve been living in Germany the past 20 years.

    English at a C2 level, just from school and because all my online activity and all my entertainment is in english.

    And some French and Latin back from school, but learning those was horrible and I’d like to forget as much as I can.

    I absolutely hate learning languages and hope that I will never have to do it again. But the reality of living in Europe is just that you never know whether you’ll wake up one day and decide to move to the Netherlands or Denmark because there are great jobs there 🤷

  • inlandempire@jlai.lu
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    20 days ago

    French is my native tongue, I learned English, Spanish, Italian at school (in that order), few words of German later on my own, learned some Swedish vocabulary on Duolingo, Icelandic basics for when I visited, I can only read Cyrillic.

    I’m interested in Korean lately, but haven’t even started

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    I wish I could speak multiple languages. I’m envious of people who have this skill. I’ve tried repeatedly to learn other languages and I still struggle. The education system in the US has failed so many of us on this front

  • Zloubida@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    French native, Esperanto and English conversational. Good notions of Italian. Notions of German (the language I’m trying to learn), Luxembourgish and Norwegian. I learnt but forgot Latin, Ancient Greek and Biblical Hebrew (I still can read them if I have a lot of time and a good dictionary).