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#1 |
Banned
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English is my first language too.
This is an actual valid sentence: Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo...uffalo_buffalo WTF ENGLISH |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#11 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() I think English is easy to learn but extremely difficult to master, due to its complicated rules and esoteric exceptions. |
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#13 | |
Banned
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I think English is an easy language to speak but harder to write with. |
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#14 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() Quote:
![]() I've been around some people with such think Boston (and some Southern) accents that I couldn't make out some of their words and had to ask them to repeat it. I find Korean very difficult to pronounce. One of my favorite experiences was when I was in Iraq. Obviously, everyone was trying to teach each other the languages. There was a Texas contractor who worked directly with an Iraqi. I almost lost it when the Iraqi spoke in english (after learning it from the contractor) and he spoke it with a thick Southern accent. ![]() |
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#16 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Our grammar is different than many other languages I think. Also, we have many words that sound the same, but have different meanings which would be confusing. I learned German in high school, and would love to learn some other languages. Sign language would also be very cool to learn.
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#18 | |
Gaming Moderator
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People in other parts of the country can not tell Midwest dialects apart, either. Wisconsin is different from Minnesota is different from Missouri is different from Ohio is different from Lower Michigan is different from Upper Michigan. When I first moved to Alabama in 1999 some mistook me for a New Yorker. I grew up in Metro Detroit (Scream 4 is being filmed in my hometown as we speak). A friend I trained with in Birmingham, Alabama is from Panama. He has been fluent in North American English for as long as I've known him. He described coming to interview in Birmingham and taking a taxi from the airport and being immediately terrified that he could never succeed in the US, because he could not understand the local accent of the cab driver. No worries, though. Even I was often disturbed by those who decided to speak to me in elevators leaving me only to nod and smile, because I could not understand their Alabama country dialect. Parts of Louisiana are like a different country. Birmingham is also where I had a similar experience to yours in Iraq. The first Asian person I met there (a Vietnamese or Laotian woman) spoke like a native. A Chinese guy I trained with was in a hurry to finish up and move away, because he did not want his Chinese boys to have southern accents. It's a funny thing what part of the dialect you take with you when you move around the country. People in the Detroit area find humor in Canadaspeak, specifically "eh!" But after I moved away, I noticed my family (and myself) using "eh" all the time. I spend time in Idaho in the early '90s, and when out running by the river, passing individuals would often greet with "Howdy!" I still use that one. And I definitely brought "Y'all" with me from The South. Last edited by jsteinhauer; 07-08-2010 at 10:54 PM. |
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