Yo hablo ingles en mi casa pero yo y muchos de mis amigos estudiamos espanol en nos escuela. Yo hablo un poco in mi casa porque mi madre estudia espanol en escuela cuando de nino y mi hermana estudia espanol en los dos grados detras de yo. Yo y mis amigos hablamos espanol en escuela cuando no estamos en clase porque es divertido. Nosotros hablamos en ingles pero de vez en cuando se llama una cosa en el nombre espanol. Espanol es muy divertido para estudiar y yo recibi una nota muy buena en mi examen final para este ano.
This reads like one of those cheesy Spanish II textbook exercises
I speak : English, Dutch, Indonesian, South African, A little bit of German.
And i am only 10!
Fun fact, it's easier to learn language the younger you are, so take advantage of your youth! For someone my age learning language is an uphill battle, and learning it can seem impossible more than easy a lot of the time.
People say "American", "Canadian" and "British". It's called English, lol.
Most people who said that were using it as a description for the specific dialect of English they speak. Those of us who weren't...well, I thought the joke was pretty obvious, at any rate. >_>
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
"Most plans are critically flawed by their own logic. A failure at any step will ruin everything after it. That's just basic cause and effect. It's easy for a good plan to fall apart. Therefore, a plan that has no attachment to logic cannot be stopped. The success or failure of any given step will have no impact on the macro level."
-Red Mage, 8-Bit Theater
"90% of the Internet's statistics are made-up, and 7/8 of its quotes are misattributed."
-Abraham Lincoln, 16th US President
Enough Spanish to understand that the people who speak it where I live do not follow any of the conventional lessons taught in school. Completely different dialects and vocabulary. That said I avoided it in school... Wish I made effort to learn more languages when I was younger, learning German even in high school was more difficult than I imagined.
Ich spreche Englisch, ander Englisch, und ein bisschen Deutsch.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
You may want to read my post while you still can, some of them have been randomly disappearing lately *cough*
Quote or reply my post if you expect a response, thanks!
English (prefer UK spelling), Indonesian and by default, understands Malay. Understands Sundanese and self-teaching Japanese which I currently understand basic sub-conversation level sentences and some random words although I can read hiragana and some katakana.
English (prefer UK spelling), Indonesian and by default, understands Malay. Understands Sundanese and self-teaching Japanese which I currently understand basic sub-conversation level sentences and some random words although I can read hiragana and some katakana.
Anda berasal dari mana? Indonesia?
Japanese seems pretty good, just ungodly difficult. My friend (who is Japanese) was telling me about it and I also read up about it. Lots of grammar things, but the same could be said for English, I suppose.
Japanese seems pretty good, just ungodly difficult. My friend (who is Japanese) was telling me about it and I also read up about it. Lots of grammar things, but the same could be said for English, I suppose.
I'm not sure what exactly my nationality is. My parentage is Indonesian but I was born and lived most of my early life in Australia but Indonesia would be more correct. Surprised anyone wanted to learn more about it.
I never really was interested in Japanese until spending some time in Indonesia because of the somewhat high amount anime fans. Yes, learning a language that doesn't use Latin characters is quite difficult especially the kanji, which may have different meaning based on the sentence but hey, I guess English does that as well. Also because I'm learning by my own. And another thing I find hard is the lack of an absolute word for 'you' which is commonly used in everyday conversation.
I'm not sure what exactly my nationality is. My parentage is Indonesian but I was born and lived most of my early life in Australia but Indonesia would be more correct. Surprised anyone wanted to learn more about it.
I never really was interested in Japanese until spending some time in Indonesia because of the somewhat high amount anime fans. Yes, learning a language that doesn't use Latin characters is quite difficult especially the kanji, which may have different meaning based on the sentence but hey, I guess English does that as well. Also because I'm learning by my own. And another thing I find hard is the lack of an absolute word for 'you' which is commonly used in everyday conversation.
One of my parents is Indonesian and one of my parents is Irish. I'm technically 50/50 but I've spent most of my life here in Ireland so I'd identify Irish first, then Indonesian.
Australia is a rad place, lots of Irish there, we bring the craic. I agree there are lots of anime fans in Indonesian high schools! I wish it is easier to make friends with them. Not many here in Ireland. Most people think its tentacle-pornography and the people that do like it are A. embarrisingly weeb (narutu run, japanese words in english) and the second half are people that actually only watch hentai.
I wish I could learn more Indonesian. There aren't many Indonesians in Ireland and online learning material is limited. I do watch lots of Indo-vlogs and utaite youtube music videos. Indonesian TV is awful :/
My favourite utaite is Rachie, she sings in Indonesian, English and rarely Mandarin. She is very active and has a face!
I have a big interest in foreign cultures so I think its awesome when someone has a split ethnicity or if they also like different countries like myself!
Wow, I never thought you'd have Indonesian blood. It's just great if someone else behind the monitor is relatable.
Australia is full of different cultures and it's nice to learn about them. Most of my friends were from different countries, sadly I haven't been in contact with them for a long time.
Most of the anime fans here are legit fans of anime and watch it as a hobby and talk about it as if it was a regular TV show. I also had a friend that act somewhat weeb-like since but he can speak and write Japanese.... well, good enough but most of them are weeb stuff. And if they are not an anime fan, they are most likely a gamer or a drama lover (mostly Korean along with its music but occasionally Indonesian and other countries as well like Turkish). There are some that don't fit into any of the three categories.
I doubt you'd find material about a Southeast Asian country in most places unless it's part of your curriculum but the internet is your friend. Yes, Indonesian TV is just bad. The generic dramas can reach almost 1000 episodes (and it's getting more watched by schoolkids rather than actual cartoons), bad special effects and absurd horror. The comedy is mostly fine though, sometimes it's pretty good. Action is rare but the few action movies are quite good to say the least.
I also like learning about different cultures and different parts of the world so geography is a hobby of mine even though I don't take classes. I know all the flags and most of the locations, shapes and capitals.
Wow, I never thought you'd have Indonesian blood. It's just great if someone else behind the monitor is relatable.
Australia is full of different cultures and it's nice to learn about them. Most of my friends were from different countries, sadly I haven't been in contact with them for a long time.
Most of the anime fans here are legit fans of anime and watch it as a hobby and talk about it as if it was a regular TV show. I also had a friend that act somewhat weeb-like since but he can speak and write Japanese.... well, good enough but most of them are weeb stuff. And if they are not an anime fan, they are most likely a gamer or a drama lover (mostly Korean along with its music but occasionally Indonesian and other countries as well like Turkish). There are some that don't fit into any of the three categories.
I doubt you'd find material about a Southeast Asian country in most places unless it's part of your curriculum but the internet is your friend. Yes, Indonesian TV is just bad. The generic dramas can reach almost 1000 episodes (and it's getting more watched by schoolkids rather than actual cartoons), bad special effects and absurd horror. The comedy is mostly fine though, sometimes it's pretty good. Action is rare but the few action movies are quite good to say the least.
I also like learning about different cultures and different parts of the world so geography is a hobby of mine even though I don't take classes. I know all the flags and most of the locations, shapes and capitals.
Most of the Indo-Pop I've seen online is all about love. I'm unromantic so it kind of annoys me!
If you don't know much about anime & manga here and are a teenager then either
A. You call anyone who watches it a weebo and tell them the should hang themselves.
B. You call anyone who watches it a pedophile and tell them to go to jail.
English, native, French, and a bit of Japanese and German.
I was born in and live in a country that has Spanish as its national language but I prefer to use English.
My battle.net is Kirbyintron#1254, if you want to play some Overwatch with me.
This reads like one of those cheesy Spanish II textbook exercises
Fun fact, it's easier to learn language the younger you are, so take advantage of your youth! For someone my age learning language is an uphill battle, and learning it can seem impossible more than easy a lot of the time.
Helping raise Dragons
isn't a huge pain! Just
give 'em a click!
Most people who said that were using it as a description for the specific dialect of English they speak. Those of us who weren't...well, I thought the joke was pretty obvious, at any rate. >_>
"Most plans are critically flawed by their own logic. A failure at any step will ruin everything after it. That's just basic cause and effect. It's easy for a good plan to fall apart. Therefore, a plan that has no attachment to logic cannot be stopped. The success or failure of any given step will have no impact on the macro level."
-Red Mage, 8-Bit Theater
"90% of the Internet's statistics are made-up, and 7/8 of its quotes are misattributed."
-Abraham Lincoln, 16th US President
Pretty much just English and Finnish.
Great tip for Japanese, just put kawaii or desu every sentence and you'll be speaking like a native in no time!
Stop it Giselle, your advice is bad desu.
- C.C.
What a kawaii desu comment desu.
Enough Spanish to understand that the people who speak it where I live do not follow any of the conventional lessons taught in school. Completely different dialects and vocabulary. That said I avoided it in school... Wish I made effort to learn more languages when I was younger, learning German even in high school was more difficult than I imagined.
Ich spreche Englisch, ander Englisch, und ein bisschen Deutsch.
You may want to read my post while you still can, some of them have been randomly disappearing lately *cough*
I can read and write in English and Chinese, I understand a bit of Malay too.
You live in Singapore? Cool!
Are there many Indonesians around?
- C.C.
Any nationality you name, they are here. There are absolutely so many different people from all around the world
Singapore seems like a grand place. I've only been there when I was very young so I don't remember it :-)
- C.C.
English (prefer UK spelling), Indonesian and by default, understands Malay. Understands Sundanese and self-teaching Japanese which I currently understand basic sub-conversation level sentences and some random words although I can read hiragana and some katakana.
Anda berasal dari mana? Indonesia?
Japanese seems pretty good, just ungodly difficult. My friend (who is Japanese) was telling me about it and I also read up about it. Lots of grammar things, but the same could be said for English, I suppose.
- C.C.
I'm not sure what exactly my nationality is. My parentage is Indonesian but I was born and lived most of my early life in Australia but Indonesia would be more correct. Surprised anyone wanted to learn more about it.
I never really was interested in Japanese until spending some time in Indonesia because of the somewhat high amount anime fans. Yes, learning a language that doesn't use Latin characters is quite difficult especially the kanji, which may have different meaning based on the sentence but hey, I guess English does that as well. Also because I'm learning by my own. And another thing I find hard is the lack of an absolute word for 'you' which is commonly used in everyday conversation.
One of my parents is Indonesian and one of my parents is Irish. I'm technically 50/50 but I've spent most of my life here in Ireland so I'd identify Irish first, then Indonesian.
Australia is a rad place, lots of Irish there, we bring the craic. I agree there are lots of anime fans in Indonesian high schools! I wish it is easier to make friends with them. Not many here in Ireland. Most people think its tentacle-pornography and the people that do like it are A. embarrisingly weeb (narutu run, japanese words in english) and the second half are people that actually only watch hentai.
I wish I could learn more Indonesian. There aren't many Indonesians in Ireland and online learning material is limited. I do watch lots of Indo-vlogs and utaite youtube music videos. Indonesian TV is awful :/
My favourite utaite is Rachie, she sings in Indonesian, English and rarely Mandarin. She is very active and has a face!
I have a big interest in foreign cultures so I think its awesome when someone has a split ethnicity or if they also like different countries like myself!
- C.C.
Wow, I never thought you'd have Indonesian blood. It's just great if someone else behind the monitor is relatable.
Australia is full of different cultures and it's nice to learn about them. Most of my friends were from different countries, sadly I haven't been in contact with them for a long time.
Most of the anime fans here are legit fans of anime and watch it as a hobby and talk about it as if it was a regular TV show. I also had a friend that act somewhat weeb-like since but he can speak and write Japanese.... well, good enough but most of them are weeb stuff. And if they are not an anime fan, they are most likely a gamer or a drama lover (mostly Korean along with its music but occasionally Indonesian and other countries as well like Turkish). There are some that don't fit into any of the three categories.
I doubt you'd find material about a Southeast Asian country in most places unless it's part of your curriculum but the internet is your friend. Yes, Indonesian TV is just bad. The generic dramas can reach almost 1000 episodes (and it's getting more watched by schoolkids rather than actual cartoons), bad special effects and absurd horror. The comedy is mostly fine though, sometimes it's pretty good. Action is rare but the few action movies are quite good to say the least.
I also like learning about different cultures and different parts of the world so geography is a hobby of mine even though I don't take classes. I know all the flags and most of the locations, shapes and capitals.
Most of the Indo-Pop I've seen online is all about love. I'm unromantic so it kind of annoys me!
If you don't know much about anime & manga here and are a teenager then either
Sweden is a grand place. Good craic there and great a great bunch of lads.
- C.C.