1. You are country

1. You are country
2. What language are you currently studying and what's your proficiency level

1. Poland
2. Spen A2

Israelo
Esperanto - komencanto

Is Esperanto really popular? I thought it's a meme language spoken by like 1000 people in the whole world.

Makes sense for a meme country to study a meme language.

wtf rude

Germany
Want to start to learn Japanese but I am not sure if its worth the effort.

It's not

It's only got a few million speakers.

I really feel like there's an Israel/Holocaust joke to be made here.

It is a meme language, but estimates go from between 100k to 10m speakers, plus around 2000 native speakers(!).

It's a very simple language, and it has a unique charm.

Kial vi devas dolori min, Singaporo?

>2000 native speakers(!)
how
where
bilingual kids of esperantoboo parents?

Considering almost all of Zamehof's family died in Auschwitz, you are right

>Native speakers
>Of an invented language

Exactly.

There is no record of monolingual Esperantists, but my life goal is to find a qt esperantist, have a native child, and set them up with another native child to have monolingual esperantist grandchildren

>Wanting to literally control your wifes language

Sounding dangerously close to spousal abuse there, Israel.

nice
godspeed

There are native speakers of standartized languages, like Standard German, or simplified Chinese.

In a sense, all languages are constructed

Yet not out of nothing.

BTW esperanto looks close to an average romance language.

I mean find a qt who already speaks Esperanto

It wouldn't match the spirit of la internacia lingvo to just TEACH it to her. She needs to also not be Israeli, so Esperanto is our common tongue

The vocabular is very Latin, but the grammar is considered Slavic with Germanic influences

>Ricespeak
>English, currently between advanced - expert level, would like to achieve 8.5 IELTS score
>Swedish, beginner
>Japanese, beginner

1.Ger
2. Portuguese A2, did Spen B2 in the past

why the fuck are you learning swedish? Wish to immigrate?

1. Ukraine
2. Gathering courage to get into Japrunes

My wife is Swedish and I'm waiting for my residential permit.

wtf vietnamese manlet marrys swedish wife, how low can you go, Sweden

1. France
2. Old French, Old Provençal(aka Old Occitan), and Latin

>Latin
had Latin for 7 years in school, what a waste of time

Is old French to modern French like old English to modern English?

>File: 1461861041704.jpg (128 KB, 540x529)
Old French sounds and looks like (a barbaric version of French) Orcish , while Old English sounds like Elvish.

Dutch. Don't know my language level. I'm guessing A1 or A2

what for? wouldn't learning one of trillions of indian languages be more useful?

1. Hungary
2. Finnish and Estonian

1. USA
2. Türkçe B2 and Укpaїнcькa A1

I know two of them spoken in my area
Also from an economic perspective it's not very useful cause most of the work is done in English.

bump

kek

> Portuguese
Learn the EU variant

Simplified Chinese is not a language, but a sort of modernised writing, what you mean is Putonghua aka Modern Standard Chinese. Both - continental Chinese and Taiwanese speak Putonghua, but when they write it then they use simplified (mainland) or traditional characters (mostly Taiwan).

Fleg
Currently not learning any languages, but I might start again soon.

Saluton, isreala amiko! Kiel vi fartas?

1. Israel
2.
English - would like to think I'm at a near-native level, but honestly I have no idea. I speak the language pretty well, however.
Yiddish - a technical native speaker, used to almost only speak Yiddish as a child. Pretty much forgot how to speak it though, I'd say I'm at the "advanced" level as of now.
Japanese - intermediate, can understand shows without subtitles, but Kanji a shit. After having failed to study them using RTK, I'm now trying the radicals approach.
French - intermediate
Esperanto - mi komprenas gxin kaj povas paroli la lingvon iome bona.
Russian - a complete beginner, following a textbook atm

I would also like to learn Arabic one day.

1. Flag
2. Fluent in French and German, passive knowledge of Latin and near-native level English.

You don't speak Hebrew, only Yiddish?
Are you ashkenazi?

Oh, what. I do speak Hebrew, it's just that when I was younger I spent a lot of time with my grandparents, and they'd speak a lot of Yiddish.

and I'm 7/8 Ashkenazi and 1/8 Sephardic. Basically, yes.