Just say where you are from and what languages you speak.
#1
I was born in Germany, then i immigrated to the U.S. I speak English, German, French, and albanian
#2
English, Sarcasm, and D**k-ish
#3
My grandparents are from China I speak Mandarin Chinese and I am from America
#4
I speak English, Spanish, and gibberish…
#5
I live in Sweden so I speak Swedish and English. English is so weird.
#6
I’m fluent in German, English, Spanish and Italian (I’m Italian tho so I don’t think it counts!).
I know a bit of french just enough for small talk and basic touristy things, but I really disliked my middle school teacher so much I made a point on never learning it well.
I undestand (85% of the time Dutch) (if someone speaks or I read it), but can’t speak it..
#7
English but then I’m American and I’m speak fluent sarcasm
#8
I’m from Guadeloupe (French west Indies Great place to live 😊!) And I speak:
– Creole (mother language)
– French ( beautiful and happily mother language because it is so hard to learn so complicated!)
– Fluent English
– Bad Spanish for work sometimes (thanks Google tranlation)
– German (College class)
– countdown in Japanese
#9
English, and ASL(American Sign Language).
#10
Salut, je parle un peu francais. That means I speak a little french, so I’m currently learning French and am fluent in English. Man autocorrect really wanted to correct peu to pie 🥧
#11
Im from the USA and I speak a little Spanish, full English, French and Italian. :)
#12
English, Candadian and American
Very fluent in all three
(Kidding if anyone takes this seriously)
#13
I speak English, American, British, and Canadian
👍🏻
#14

#15
German and English. Also once learned Latin and French, and a little Spanish, though there´s little left of all that.
#16
I am from India so I can speak
1) English
2) Hindi
3) Tamil ( mother tongue )
4) Spanish
5) Klingon ( Klingons vut )
Oh and I almost forgot I am most fluent in sarcasm
#17
Dutchie here : Dutch, English, German (all fluent), Spanish and enough French to stay alive when in France ;-). I grew up in a part of my country that has it’s own language/dialect, so that also counts as a language.
#18
Norwegian (duh) and English. People in Scotland thought I was American, some people in England thought I was Scottish (I doubt they had ever been to Scotland :p )
– I can, like most Norwegians, usually understand both written and spoken Swedish without any problems (though a word here and there might escape me), and written Danish, since that is what Norwegian is based on. Spoken Danish is….difficult.
– I also understand some German and Dutch (which are related to Norwegian, but with more complex grammar), so I can read fairy tales, but the newspapers get too complex for me.
#19
english and korean, my mom is from from south korea
#20
I’m an American, so I’m fluent in American and Canadian English, as well as pretty dang close in other Englishes. I can speak enough French and Thai for travel purposes but cannot actually converse. I used to be able to count in Putonghua, but I would need to review my numbers really closely to pull it off these days.
#21
I am Bulgarian and my mother was Belorussian.
I am fluent in English, Russian and French. I also learned a little German (because I love Rammstein) but now I have forgotten almost everything.
#22
I speak fluent german (I’m german haha) and english. I can read and understand a little italian.
#23
I’m from India and I know English, Hindi, a little bit of Sindhi, a little bit of Sanskrit, a little bit of Marathi and Gibberish.
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