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Results: How many officially recognized languages can you speak?

Published on 04/21/2024
By: Rolis
2190
Living
Due to a recent trip to Italy I have coming up I am starting to learn Italian in addition to the native language of my country English (Canadian).
1.
1.
How many officially recognized languages are you fluent in?
1
71%
1488 votes
2
15%
320 votes
3
6%
117 votes
4
2%
34 votes
Other (please specify)
0%
7 votes
Not Applicable
6%
134 votes
Other Answers Percentage Votes
0.10% 2
599 0.05% 1
15 0.05% 1
6 0.05% 1
Not fluent but can get by on my first language learned. 0.05% 1
5 0.05% 1
2.
2.
Are you currently learning a new language?
Yes
9%
199 votes
No
91%
1901 votes
3.
3.
If you answered yes to the above question or if you have learned a new language in the past do you mind sharing how you learned the language?
N/A
0%
19 votes
NA
0%
11 votes
none
0%
8 votes
Duolingo
0%
4 votes
French
0%
3 votes
Spanish
0%
2 votes
german
0%
2 votes
not sure
0%
2 votes
duo lingo
0%
2 votes
Thk
0%
1 votes
italian
0%
1 votes
Duo Lingo is what my boyfriend uses to learn Spanish
0%
1 votes
youtube videos, duolingo app
0%
1 votes
English born and bread for three generations in Canada.
0%
1 votes
french, years in high school university, being in France, and refreshing with online apps like Duolingo
0%
1 votes
Arabic from being around Saudis for years of me life.
0%
1 votes
x
0%
1 votes
learning to sign for the deaf.takeing a college course for it.
0%
1 votes
I learned French and Japanese in school. English, I leaned at home and in school.
0%
1 votes
Klingon
0%
1 votes
By watching shows and movies in the language
0%
1 votes
points
0%
1 votes
I am constantly expsoed to Spanish (sometimes I get surveys in Spanish) and am able to muddle my way through threm from Spanish learned in school and exposure to it when I worked as well a sbeing the unofficial interpreter because no one else where I worked knew more than a phrase or two.
0%
1 votes
Using Duolingo
0%
1 votes
Babble
0%
1 votes
No no
0%
1 votes
in person classes
0%
1 votes
I can share some common methods people use to learn a new language. Many people learn through immersion, where they surround themselves with the language by interacting with native speakers, watching movies or TV shows, and listening to music in that language. Others may take formal classes, use language learning apps or software, or practice speaking with language exchange partners. Finding what works best for your learning style and practicing consistently are key to making progress in learning a new language.
0%
1 votes
French and Latin
0%
1 votes
Trying to learn Sign Language. I taught meself the alphabet using encyclopedias in the school library when I was in Grade 4 or 5 (I think). Now I'm just using a book-alphabet, numbers, some key & common words, then some sentences on the last few pages.
0%
1 votes
I am learning Spanish with Duolingo
0%
1 votes
dad was only english and mom was english and very french
0%
1 votes
Spanish (mexican variant)
0%
1 votes
Repetition
0%
1 votes
I am an American I speak the language of our country. Wish those coming here to live would respect our country to do the same. I do not even talk to foreigners who call our home to sell us something because I am not going to take the time to understand them if they can not take the time to learn our language.
0%
1 votes
Have dated and sadly was married to a Latin man so I know more Spanish than I wanted to.
0%
1 votes
I would like to learn to speak Spanish most of the area I live is Spanish speaking people
0%
1 votes
Quia cillum sit labore nisi voluptas doloremque quos perferendis nihil commodi consectetur ullam
0%
1 votes
Learning French on Duolingo
0%
1 votes
French in school and in university before first visit Hebrew in after school classes
0%
1 votes
In school
0%
1 votes
No.
0%
1 votes
Id officia autem consequatur Nesciunt nisi enim non ipsum quidem nulla omnis dolorum officia illum consectetur corporis eveniet et non
0%
1 votes
Listening to grandparents.
0%
1 votes
Two years of Spanish in high school, then moved to southern Mexico.
0%
1 votes
I am learning Spanish on Duolingo
0%
1 votes
Duolingo and classrooms
0%
1 votes
Spanish in school
0%
1 votes
online and watching American popular movies in Spanish; also from Spanish songs by Shakira or classics like Sabor A Mi
0%
1 votes
Ma
0%
1 votes
School and now Duolingo
0%
1 votes
Eu pariatur Velit ea illum minim pariatur Quaerat dolore proident aut quia et distinctio Consequat Totam mollit
0%
1 votes
Practicing Scottish Gaelic, which I first started learning at St.Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada.
0%
1 votes
at school
0%
1 votes
I have not been learning a new language, just a few words when traveling.
0%
1 votes
Yes
0%
1 votes
french (canadian)
0%
1 votes
hangul/korean
0%
1 votes
I took German in high school and Spanish in college.
0%
1 votes
Ok
0%
1 votes
I haven’t learned a new language.
0%
1 votes
R
0%
1 votes
Watch tv shows
0%
1 votes
Spanish on free Duolingo.
0%
1 votes
Korean, workbooks, tv shows, audio
0%
1 votes
Spanish and chinese
0%
1 votes
Father in Germany with the military, learned the language by living in the country.
0%
1 votes
If none
0%
1 votes
I learned to understand some Spanish ( Puerto Rican) from my sons grandma and aunt.
0%
1 votes
I am learning Greek, so that I can read the New Testament in its original language. I tried a small "learn Greek in a week," book, to see if it was going to work. Then, I used RA Sheats book and workbook, and found they were teaching prepositional phrases in correctly: e.g. calling an infinitive (a verb form) a prepositional phrase, calling subordinate clauses (clauses have subjects & verbs) a prepositional phrase--prep phrases do NOT contain a verb. I wrote to the publisher about that; then I found conflicts with the workbook's answer key to what the text said, and wrote to the publisher about that, as well. In exchange the publisher sent me a Bible with Greek/KJV parallel. After that, I used several self-teaching texts/workbooks in tandem. Made a column for each text and indicated topics of Bill Mounce; then for each book, I wrote its corresponding pages for the same topic--to create a lesson plan. I did that for each text and studied one topic at a time from all the texts/workbooks. I made flashcards of vocabulary and carried with me in my purse, to review when in waiting places, etc, or during TV commercials, etc. We began doing simple translations with the vocabulary given from the beginning. It was challenging but satisfying. I used online sites to practice vocabulary with online flash cards that taught in levels. When successful with one level, the site would automatically move you to the next level of vocabulary words. Bill Mounce's site had brief lectures. I was more interested in learning to read Greek, but I did listen to a few site with vocabulary that included pronunciation.
0%
1 votes
I learned Italian in a specially designed course in Italy
0%
1 votes
No
0%
1 votes
Vitae at aut accusamus delectus cumque dolor minim blanditiis iusto
0%
1 votes
learned enough french to get dinner or rent a hotel
0%
1 votes
English, my original language is Japanese.
0%
1 votes
If you are in the minority where you live you just have to force yourself to start learning, carry a language resource/app for learning and translating can help but not accurate for some dialects much less tge root language. Set some time aside and do lessons on use in any free language apps for any age (if you’re just starting apps for youngster can be useful to understand some of the shy of a language and a good refresher for those out if practice.
0%
1 votes
I have not learned a new language
0%
1 votes
Duolingo, books, cassettes
0%
1 votes
japan
0%
1 votes
I'm doing refresher course in Korean probably Tagalog in a monitor so
0%
1 votes
Schools
0%
1 votes
I was born in another country
0%
1 votes
french at high school
0%
1 votes
DuoLingo, Rosetta Stone, Memrise, Busuu, children's programming in that language on Youtube
0%
1 votes
Started learning Spanish on Duolingo but I’m not too dedicated
0%
1 votes
Listen to music in that language and watch TV and movies I that language.
0%
1 votes
Traveling, YouTube, online social, libraries, bookstores
0%
1 votes
Learning Spanish again through Duolingo
0%
1 votes
Courses
0%
1 votes
software/online/classroom
0%
1 votes
classes given on the internet by a particular
0%
1 votes
School + Duo Lingo App
0%
1 votes
I have a basic understanding of Spanish. I learned it while traveling through South America many years ago. After that, I took a year of Spanish in university. I have been back to Mexico 3 times since then and that gives me an opportunity to try it out every now and again.
0%
1 votes
officially recognized?
0%
1 votes
Latin and German in high school
0%
1 votes
took 7 quarters to get through 5 quarters of Spanish in college
0%
1 votes
I learned Spanish because my husband refugeed from Cuba in 1961.
0%
1 votes
Language app
0%
1 votes
I learned Mandarin via formal classes when I worked in Taiwan.
0%
1 votes
from a friend
0%
1 votes
I am American and learned English at home and in school. My wife is Chinese, born and raised in Taiwan. I learned some Mandarin from her and took several year of classes. I also learned a few words and phrases in Taiwan dialect, but I can not speak it conversationally let alone being fluent.
0%
1 votes
Spanish on Duolingo, French German and Latin in high school
0%
1 votes
Swedish
0%
1 votes
I am using Duolingo free version.
0%
1 votes
I studied both Spanish and German in high school/college, but can no longer speak fluently.
0%
1 votes
Grew up in an area where I heard Spanish being spoken all around me; had 2 years of classes in high school. Then at least 20 years later began vacationing in places where Spanish was the primary language and found I'd retained enough actually to be approached by others on my tour and asked to translate for them in the market and at a dinner club.
0%
1 votes
I am not fluent like a native, but I learned Spanish and lived in a village in Spain. I had taken Spanish in 9th and 10th grade and then a year in college. My accent was good, I could mostly read it and be understood. But the hard part was slowing people down so I could understand. As I used the vocabulary I was taught in school which was probably old fashioned, when they'd repeat back to me, I'd learn a new word meaning the same thing. Or I'd hold up an object and ask, "que es esto?" (What is this?) I saw that no one expected me to speak like a native, that we were just trying to convey basic human needs, so stopped worrying so much about conjugating correctly and matching number/gender. If one person befriends you, he/she can become your translator. That sounds ridiculous, I know, but it seems to happen, even when your translator does not speak a word of English. your go-between, shall we say? Your friend.
0%
1 votes
Living in the Netherlands for three years
0%
1 votes
n
0%
1 votes
Not applicable
0%
1 votes
BY HELP OF A TUTOR
0%
1 votes
I learn English first thing I have to know as much as the vocabularies, then I have to listen to the video, watch TV, or talk with someone who speaks English.
0%
1 votes
Youtube
0%
1 votes
Aramaic,Arabic. Some Hebrew, Italian, French .
0%
1 votes
Before I graduated from high school, I learned a little pt of Spanish.
0%
1 votes
Learning Spanish
0%
1 votes
Enishies
0%
1 votes
Took classes in school. Learned German and Latin. The German class translated Goldilocks and Three Bears into German and put on a play.
0%
1 votes
dutch
0%
1 votes
School, we had to take French grade 7&8 and a language in grade 9.
0%
1 votes
In family and in school
0%
1 votes
Reading and writing which is not the correct way at all.
0%
1 votes
A local class
0%
1 votes
Italian ..my heritage..parent, relatives & friends all came From Sicily 1907 -1920 Learned English but, at home always spoke Italian..grew up hearing it & can pretty much speak & understand..but,what I know is a very antiquated dialect version compared to the “real Italian language of modern times. What is the dialogue in the “Godfather” movies is truly one & the same. spoke
0%
1 votes
English is my second language.
0%
1 votes
school, duolingo, church language school
0%
1 votes
4.
4.
I am using DUOLINGO(but the free version because I am cheap!). I think it is beneficial to use more than one. Do you mind sharing which program or app helped you to learn a new language. Please list them ranked from best to worst if you have used more than one.
Box 1 None
2%

Most Popular Answer

38 votes
Box 2 n/a
0%

Most Popular Answer

7 votes
Box 3 None
0%

Most Popular Answer

6 votes
Overall None
1%

Most Popular Answer

50 votes
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