Do you speak spanish?

   / Do you speak spanish? #31  
<font color="blue">"nerve damage" </font>

I understand. I have problems with my right ear due to shooting indoors without hearing protection. When I listen to people in a noisy environment, I tend to cock my head so my "good" ear can hear them better. So sometimes it looks like I'm giving people a sideways look. Kind like this... /forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #33  
I certainly understand the comments from those who say ‘if you live here learn the language’ and for the most part agree. I have found that much of the Hispanic population in my area is trying at least on some level to learn. My wife and I also travel out of the country often; she goes several days a week as a fight attendant. In my travels I have been struck by how limited we as Americans are with languages outside of English. In every country I have been in there were people who were willing to help and spoke at least limited English. I think our friend 1948berg from Southern Norway could walk my county for weeks without finding the bathroom if he only spoke Norwegian. Maybe it is time for us to become more bi-lingual if we are going to keep up in the global economy we all speak of.

MarkV
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #34  
Yea Pete, that oilfield Spanish will get you into trouble. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

I took 2 years of Spanish in school in Scotland. That was Castillian Spanish. When I worked in Venezuela and Peru, eveyone said I spoke Spanish like a priest so there is a very marked difference betwen the two. My Spanish still isn't very good. I always say that I speak enough to get fed, get drunk and get my face slapped. You just can't use that oilfield Spanish in polite conversation very often.

What I've noticed in our area is that second and third generation Hispanics speak English very well, especially the 3rd generation. In fact some of them don't speak Spanish very well at all. I know some that can understand it, speak it a little but can't write it. Strange isn't it? It's a product of our educational system where they have to learn English to participate in school and that ends being their primary language. They only speak Spanish to communicate with their grandparents.

It's always amazed me just how many people in other countries can actually speak English and what I've found is that learning even a few words of a foreign language helps in getting along with the locals. In fact my French is so bad that it can even force the French to speak English. Now, that's an achievement. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #35  
Two old Norwegians sitting on a bench watching traffic pass by. A car with foreign plates stops and a young man comes to ask for the direction to the nearest town. He tries english, no answer, he tries german, no reaction, he tries french and spanish, but the two guys just keep shaking their heads, so the foreigener drives on. "Sometimes I wish I could speak a foreign language" said one of the old guys, "nope" said the other," that young man that just drove away knew four, it didnt help him much!" /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #36  
Yeah I agree we (US) would benefit from knowing a foreign language. However in our defense figure out how much area we can cover with one language and then compare European areas for each language. Over there you can hit several languages in the time it take us to get out of one state. So not as much need here, in the past, for multi language talent. How many did have foreign language instruction in school but lost it due to lack of opportunity to use it.

(this is from someone who's parents were told by the French teacher to get him out of the class after the first quarter so he did not get a failing grade on his record. Shoulda taken Spanish but the teacher was Japanese, go figure.)
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #37  
In high school we had a Spanish teacher with a southern drawl...

Se habla espanol, y'all?
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #38  
Bird,
I am pretty good wih understanding people with accents, espcially since I arried my husband and he has a storng French accent. What I really love now days for tech support is on the internet where you can have a chat session. I find it much esier, een though I am pretty good with accents, to type out my requests and to read the responses rather than, especially the telephone makes an accent worse, trying to speak over the phone to anyone who is not Aerican. Even the British on the phone can be hard to understand.

I love the new Chat features so many businesses have now.
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #39  
Oh my gosh, Moss Road, when you wrote about a southern drawl and y'all. It brought back a funny memory.

When my daughter graduated form college, she wanted to get here first teaching job in a warmer climate. She was hired as a French teacher in Hampton Virgina. One day we are chatting ont he phone and she says, "mom, did you know that y'all is singualr?" Being from Wisconsin we didn't hear many "y'alls" I replied, "Really it is singualr, hmmm isn't that interesting"

She continues, "mom do you know what the plural of 'y'all' is?"
Me- 'Why no I don't think I do"
Daughter- "Mom you are never going to believe it, it is 'All y'all"
We laughed so hard our sides almost split, "All y'all" is plural for "y'all!!!" /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif To a non southerner, it is just so funny.

She heard another teacher use it and cracked her up.
So I guess even in the USA we have some local variences that make life interesting.

it was interesting to hear abot the Chineese, though wasn't it? How they jsut write it down, since they all read it the same but speak it different. I didn't know that!
 
   / Do you speak spanish? #40  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I took 2 years of ...Castillian Spanish. When I worked in Venezuela and Peru, eveyone said I spoke Spanish like a priest so there is a very marked difference betwen the two. ... You just can't use that oilfield Spanish in polite conversation very often. -EastTexFrank)</font>

True!

In the 60's I spent 2 years in Venezuela as a Peace Corps volunteer. After about a year I was eating lunch in a boondocks bar, a couple hours out of Maracaibo, and the waitress was fascinated with my accent. She finally asked 'Are you from Spain or someplace? You sure don't sound like from around here!' That made my day, it was the first time I wasn't immediately pegged as a NorteAmericano.

After I got back and returned to college I enrolled in an upper-division Latin American Literature course to meet the graduation requirement of a foreign language. The class was mostly sheltered girls 3 years beyond HS and every time I would start a sentence with the conversational Spanish I had learned overseas, they would blush and giggle. I guess they just weren't used to talking about their body parts as punctuation in ordinary conversation.
 

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