Do you speak another language?

I'd use Irish on a daily basis. It's compulsory in the Republic so it's been drilled into me since playschool. I also did French for 12 years and still can't speak it. I should really make an effort to learn more French, it's a nice language, but I never really made any French friends :/

I'm now learning Spanish and I'm finding very easy - thanks to http://www.michelthomas.com/ :D. It also helps that I have lots of Spanish pals around.

Portuguese is a very romantic language, hmm, maybe someday.

Anyone know if Welsh is compulsory in schools?
 
I was taught Spanish for 5 years - and can barely say my name is etc. Awful teaching - lack of real motivation (albeit regretted now).
 
I speak fluent English (obviously), a fair bit of Welsh, some German, French and oddly enough a bit of Swedish. :p

Morlan said:
Anyone know if Welsh is compulsory in schools?
AFAIK it was compulsory up until the third year of secondary school here, and then as an optional subject thereafter. That was the situation when I was doing Welsh but I left school 10 years ago so its probably changed, hated it because we had such terribly backward teachers. :D
 
daz said:
Hoping to learn French over the next 6 months...

Hoping to learn french over the next 4 years... :p

The problem is, now I cna ask for beer, food and attempt to chat up girls, I really have no desire to learn any more. :D
 
I speak German to a just passable standard, even if there are pauses while I think of words / how to get around ones I don't know.

Also know a bit of French - like how to order of coffee or something.

I would love to learn Chinese (well, Cantonese), though. That's an amazing language.
 
I speak French to a GCSE level. Has anyone got any idea how to improve my French now that I'm out of education? Ideally including a qualification, something like an evening course that ended up giving you an A level maybe? I'd like the option of moving to France many years down the line if I fancied it.
 
burns said:
I speak French to a GCSE level. Has anyone got any idea how to improve my French now that I'm out of education? Ideally including a qualification, something like an evening course that ended up giving you an A level maybe? I'd like the option of moving to France many years down the line if I fancied it.
Evening courses at your local college? You should be able to study for an AS/A level qualification.
 
If you want to learn a language I thoroughly recommend spending time in the country where it is spoken. I could hardly speak a word of French but having spent a few days in it here and there I find it coming almost naturally to me, memories flooding back from the GCSE days.
The only problem I have is that I get my languages mixed up. When trying to speak French I usually get it mixed up with Irish, e.g ...

"Bonjour monsieur, cad é mar atá tú?" and "Je m'appelle agus je suis Éirreanach"

It confuses the hell out of the poor Frenchies :p
 
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Tiny bit of French (remembered from school) and a tiny bit of German (basically what i've heard on the telly!). Nothing really. Never been much good at other languages, don't seem to have the head for it.
 
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