View Poll Results: Is English your first language in your `real' life?

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  • Yes

    339 40.65%
  • No

    495 59.35%
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Thread: Is English your first language?

  1. #181
    who me?? optimisticnad's Avatar
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    I'm from Asia so I can speak two languages but I was born and brought up in England so I'm not sure if it is my first language or not! All I know is Im grateful that I didnt have to learn it!
    We can never know what to want, because living only one life we can neither compare it with our previous lives, nor perfect it in our lives to come'
    Milan Kundera,The Unbearable Lightness of Being


    Parce que c'est toi, parce que c'est moi

  2. #182
    Registered User thuraiya's Avatar
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    guess what my first language is ?
    my language is arabic..
    it is my second year in learning enlish ..*_^
    i learning it just 2 understand the west ..(religion ," political ,social realationships" )
    Some books leave us free
    and some books make us free

  3. #183
    Dutch Devil Dorian Gray's Avatar
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    I'm Dutch so English is my second language. I'm a student English teacher though so I'm fluent. I speak German as well and a bit of Spanish and French.

  4. #184
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    Hi! It's my first post. My name is Maximiliano, but is too large, so my friends call me Max.
    I speak spanish in my daily life.

  5. #185
    No, it isn't. My mother tongue is portuguese. I started learning english when I was still in primary school - didn't learn in the school itself, though. I'm basically a self taught english speaker, because one day my parents bought a computer, and got internet (oh, the old days with 56kb!). At the age of 7/8, I was this little girl running through thousands of websites dedicated to kids (you know the type..those with all sorts of silly games) - most of them in english.
    Sometimes I was really annoying, asking almost uninterruptedly my parents and sister the meaning of a certain word or whole sentence.

    I guess only a couple of years later I realized how playing online games and communicating with other kids in chats was important - in my school life I've always had excellent grades in English subject .


    (Recently I've tried to do the same with French, but it didn't work. I'm not smart anymore .)

  6. #186
    Registered User Laurette's Avatar
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    It's interesting to see that the majority of people aren't mother tongue speakers. I'm not one either - my mother tongue is Afrikaans, but living in South Africa means that my English is ok. I love the language for its history and its concise and elegant way of saying things.
    Last edited by Laurette; 04-01-2007 at 04:20 PM.
    "There lies the port; the vessel puffs her sail:
    There gloom the dark broad seas."

  7. #187
    Registered User tamta's Avatar
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    I'm from Georgia, so my first language is Georgian. I speak English (I've been studying it since I was 7 ). Right now I'm studing Russian and Spanish

    I love Spanish

  8. #188
    Registered User pinkmoon's Avatar
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    My mother tongue

    My mother language is Arabic...
    I like it very much, but I study English language and literature
    and I like English too. And I hope to learn some Spanish toooo.
    It is never too late to live and create


    http://www.online-literature.com/for...ad.php?t=24699

  9. #189
    Registered User Ceinwyn's Avatar
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    My mother tongue is Portuguese. I don't use English in my everyday life. It's useful to comunicate with people from all over the world, but I don't do it very often. I hardly ever speak the language. I've never talked to a native speaker, for instance.

    I didn't expect to find so many people from different language backgrounds. I thought most of them here would be from English-speaking countries, and I would be an exception. I think I was wrong.

  10. #190
    Registered User brunosr's Avatar
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    I'm not a native speaker either and, as ceinwyn, I thought I would be an exception, hehehe.Anyway, my mother tongue is Portuguese.Ah, I do speak spanish too.
    Os bons vi sempre passar
    no mundo graves tormentos;
    e, para mais me espantar,
    os maus vi sempre nadar
    em mar de contentamentos.
    Cuidando alcançar assim
    o bem tão mal ordenado,
    fui mau; mas fui castigado.
    Assim que só para mim
    anda o mundo concertado.

    Camões

  11. #191
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    It is hard for me to think of English as of "foreign" language. Even though I have never been schooled in English, nor have I ever visited any anglophone country - let alone lived in an area where English was spoken - nor have I grown up speaking it at home as heritage language, and despite the fact I do not get to actually speak English a lot, over the years it has crept into me so profoundly that I never quite considered it "foreign". I have been studying it since I was 4 years old, and I early began to use English as medium for reading [I have been reading books in English since I was 7-8], even as medium for thinking, and I always end up a bit shaken and surprised when I remember that it was actually not my native language.

    My native languages were Croatian and/or Serbian* [* for cultural and personal reasons I do view them as separated languages, despite them being mutually intelligible] and Russian. The latter one is a complex issue, as I grew up outside of Russia I never quite reached a native-like command of it [I would even go as far to claim to be more comfortable with English than with Russian, to my great shame] and in my childhood Russian has always been that neglected "secondary" native language, something reserved for relatively small circle of people and something of sporadic use, something I de facto knew, but hardly ever used. In the recent years [at the moment of writing I am 17 years old] I have been using it more intensively [mainly through reading, as I have got perfect comprehension of written Russian], but I am yet to use it flawlessly myself.

    Apart from these languages, I can also speak Italian reasonably well [years of formal education, and extensive reading in it and usage outside of the class].
    Due to the beauties of solid old-fashioned classical education I am also taught Latin and Ancient Greek. I also study French and Modern Greek, but these two are the languages I would not dare to claim any command of [yet].

  12. #192
    TheFairyDogMother kiz_paws's Avatar
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    I am a dog whisperer...

    just kiddin.

    English is my primary language, but I have a reasonable background in French (if people don't mind communicating a bit slower, than I'd be ok, methinks...) and a wee bit of Icelandic. I tried to learn German and I tried to teach myself Spanish with books (which turned out to be a disaster, though I did make friends with a super Venezuelan who speaks English very well)...

    This place is awesome, full of such a wide variety of cultures. Yup, we rock!
    Our task must be to free ourselves by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and its beauty
    ~Albert Einstein

  13. #193
    Ataraxia bazarov's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Anastasija View Post
    My native languages were Croatian and/or Serbian* [* for cultural and personal reasons I do view them as separated languages, despite them being mutually intelligible]
    AND

    I had to wait until 2006. to get Zhivago on Croatian, I just didn't want to read it on Serbian; they are similar but in the essence and the sound they are so so different!
    At thunder and tempest, At the world's coldheartedness,
    During times of heavy loss And when you're sad
    The greatest art on earth Is to seem uncomplicatedly gay.

    To get things clear, they have to firstly be very unclear. But if you get them too quickly, you probably got them wrong.
    If you need me urgent, send me a PM

  14. #194
    Registered User whatsername's Avatar
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    I'm not sure what my first language was, my mom told me that I used to speak a bit of Serbian(since I was born in Serbia) when I was little like at the age of one or something but I seriously can't remember at all.So to me my first langauge is English(because later in my life I moved to Canada) and it's the language I speak most of the day.
    Last edited by whatsername; 04-07-2007 at 10:07 AM.

  15. #195
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    Wow. I'm really impressed that so many people have English as a second (or third or fourth) language. Not only to post intelligably (sp?) but to also read, understand, and discuss English-language classics (that are sometimes not that easy to understand even for native speakers.

    I speak English as a native language, and also conversational (but not quite fluent) Spanish.

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