tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-911604654446032587.post1913768996599145408..comments2024-03-22T03:38:55.611-07:00Comments on MacQue : LanguagesMac n' Janethttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05732924562630675589noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-911604654446032587.post-48686586066070218542013-04-30T12:26:10.593-07:002013-04-30T12:26:10.593-07:00Thanks for mentioning me :) It's really only E...Thanks for mentioning me :) It's really only English I feel quite fluent in (besides Swedish). No problems reading German but as you say about Spanish, one forgets a lot when not frequently using a language, and German grammar is a lot to keep in mind! French I've hardly used at all since I stopped learning it at school i my mid teens. (French was my third language and German my fourth, but abandoned French and continued with German...) Forgot to say in that post that Norwegian is not too different from Swedish, we usually understand each other well enough in the spoken language. But I could not write correct Norwegian. Danish is hard to understand when spoken (it's got a very blurry sound to our ears), but when I studied a term of history at University, we had to struggle through a textbook in Danish... I'd certainly not think of you as uneducated if you've taught Spanish and know some German too! DawnTreaderhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04533307672147117843noreply@blogger.com