Which language does highs schools in your country teaches?

which language does highs schools in your country teaches?


ARGIE:
-English
-French
-Portuguese and italian (In some schools)

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youtube.com/watch?v=I3HyOtzsnDY
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_Canadians
m.youtube.com/watch?v=2aWU4KzvBsU
m.youtube.com/watch?v=Bwkoq6olfew
welt.de/regionales/hamburg/article163481785/Arabisch-und-Farsi-sollen-jetzt-Schulfaecher-werden.html
m.youtube.com/watch?v=3OgIPqeuTcA
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

Mine had Spanish, French, Latin, Chinese, Japanese, and ASL.

ASL and Japanese is cool... Latin isn't a dead language? (serious question)

Mine had English, French, Italian, German and Chinese.
Los papas lo hablan.

usually only filipino and english, some schools teach mandarin and/or spanish.

First language: English
Second language: Malay, Mandarin or Tamil
Optional Third language: French, German or Japanese

Ah tenes razon! me habia olvidado de la ciudad del vaticano... siempre me la confundo con que hablan italiano.

English, Spanish
Some schools also teach German and Italian

>Georgia
Spanish and French

>PA
Spanish, French, Italian, German, Japanese, Latin

The most commonly learned languages are French, then Māori, then Japanese. More high schools are teaching Chinese and Spanish now as well. Private ones sometimes have German and occasionally Latin too

wow, so much countries are learning french... future language?

Spanish, French, German, and Latin. When I graduated they were trying to get enough interest to offer Chinese.

It's the normal second language in every Anglo country, apart from America. We inherited a British founded education system, and French was a major part of it.

English, French, Spanish and German, in tat order.

You have to have one from grade 5 to 11 (usually English) and a second one from 7 to 9 (usually French, but Spanish is gaining popularity, somewhat).

Most schools in France teach english, spanish and german.
Some teach italian and russian.
Chinese is on the rise.
Sometimes arabic can be an option.
And of course, latin and ancient greek as dead languages.

English, Arabic and Corporal punishment

Spanish, Italian, French, Latin

>elementary
English, German, Russian.
>high school
English, German, Russian, Latin (2 years only).

Dumb kids get 3 languages:
Dutch, English + German OR French

Normal kids get 4 languages:
Dutch, English, German and French

Smart kids get 5 or 6 languages:
Dutch, English, German, French and Greek and/or Latin

Only English and French. There are French Immersion school but it's usually only one French class in high school (that is required)

French, Indonesian, Japanese.

Mine had Spanish, French, ASL, and Chinese.

For gymnasium students 6 languages are obligatory.

As a matter of fact, Africa being at the same time the continent where french is the most spoken language and where the population grow the faster, there's a chance that, by 2050, french become the first mother language of the world.

Most schools offer French, Spanish and German. My school didn't have enough interest for German so no classes were formed.

Spanish and French are pretty standard. The other languages (if there are any) vary widely by school, but mine in particular had Chinese, Latin, and Arabic.

If a school offers it then you can replace French OR German, only one of them, with Spanish, Russian, Italian, Arabic or Turkish.

But it rarely happens that a school offers other languages than the standard languages.

It varies by school. French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin and Indonesian are all commonly taught. Private schools also tend to offer Latin and Ancient Greek.

My school had Indonesian, Mandarin and French. I took Indonesian.

What do you mean, canadians don't learn a foreign language beside their 2 national languages?

Seems very unlikely to me.

Mine had classes for German and French. My younger siblings apparently had/have Indonesian as an elective, but I'm not really in touch with them so maybe their school has more than Indonesian.

They had Latin at a high school, did you attend some sort of grammar school or something?

Is Gaelic taught in the education system in Ireland?

Yes. Irish, English and Maths are the three compulsory subjects. The standard of teaching for Irish is very very poor however.

Compulsory, I see. Is it a language which older generations would speak at home, sort of thing?

Indonesian and French like most other Aussies ITT. I can't speak either of them though. Language education in Australia is quite poor.

My school had English, Russian, German, French and then English and Russian for business.

It's pretty funny. The Netherlands has three large minority languages and they are all spoken way more often than Irish in Ireland.

>The standard of teaching for Irish is very very poor however.
That's sad t.bh

My high school
-German
-Spanish
-French
-Latin
-Greek...The Latin teacher was an ex-professor that was with the Classical language department.

I took German for 3 years and Greek for shits and giggles. I really wish we had Russian

English, German, rarely French.
Regional languages in some regions.

French, Spanish, Japanese, and Latin.

It was for us too, but then there was a blitzkrieg from Mexico and Spanish is more popular for stupid reasons.
Lmao

At least in the school board that I was educated in, those were the only two. Apparently there just wasn't a demand for other languages.

My school gave the option of French, German or Japanese. You had to pick one and study it for 2 years. The whole thing was basically worthless and nobody I know of achieved fluency.

You can't achieve fluency with what schools teach you anyway. As that requires some degree of immersion.

German
French
Chinese
Spanish
ASL

I think some neighboring schools had Russian and Japanese

In my area, you only take foreign language in high school.

>High School
Beginning, intermediate, and advanced Spanish (advanced meant you learn Castillian Spanish).

>University
Spanish, French, and now Japanese (you can probably guess what the class is made up of).

I live in a predominatley Hispanic area. My old high school used to have French and German, but the teachers that taught it are now retired. There was a time at my uni when they offered Mandarin Chinese, but the instructor couldn't get along with the deparment so she left the school after a year.

How do the Dutch learn English so well? I met a few Dutch that speak English at a native level with no accent.

English>>>German>Russian>Latin>French>Spanish

Sort of. English has been dominant in most of the country for about 150 years at this stage, so it's not even a generational thing at this point. There are small pockets where Irish is prominent as a community language (the Gaeltacht) where it is true that older people use Irish whereas younger people have the habit of using English because it better facilitates their interests (mass media). Migrations into urban areas also means the population in these regions are in decline.

Otherwise households that speak Irish are strewn across the country, and it may be fair to say the younger generations have a better standard of Irish than the older. There is a rising movement for more Irish-speaking schools, and the people who tend to speak Irish in urban areas are sometimes stereotyped as overeducated or pompous yuppies with affected Gaelicness. For example between Kevin O'Brien and Caoimhín Ó Briain, the latter is more likely to be a solicitor.

Immersion. In the Netherlands and Scandinavia English tv programs and movies are subtitled, while in Germany, France, Spain and Italy they are dubbed. Same goes for video games, where we also play on the same servers as the Britbongs.

Plus Dutch is very close to both English and German. It's very easy to learn for us.

At my University, we had: Spanish, German, French, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, ASL, and Arabic.
Kind of surprised that Latin isn't more popular due to the high level of Catholics. It would be cool to see a highly religious European country speak Latin along with the national language and English.

Well, yesterday I saw a Dutch person and American talking about this.

youtube.com/watch?v=I3HyOtzsnDY

That's what I thought. TV in Finland is subtitled and they speak English very well. I studied German for 3 years during my Bachelor's degree, even studied abroad in Karlsruhe, DE. Yeah Dutch is understandable for me....I would say that it is in between German and English.

I easily understand 75%.

That's also why it's possible for us to get so many languages in school.

If you teach a Spaniard both Italian and Portuguese it's really not the same as teaching a Spaniard Dutch.

>European country speak Latin along with the national language
Our national language is literally half latin, half polish vocabluary. We even use latin prepositions to create new words based on latin root together with polish ones. There is so much latin in our language that we should be considered bilingual.

Most popular are (in rough order):

- French
- Italian
- Indonesian
- Chinese
- Japanese
- Greek
- Latin
- Spanish
- Portuguese

A lot of nuances are also easily missed unless you are aware of them. For example kamer = chamber. But when you pronounce it it's more a difference in accent than that the word is different.

Oh I forgot German, it'd be about as popular as Chinese/Japanese

Man Dutch is such a silly sounding language, I love it.

Same goes for things like kleur = colour.

Sure. Germanic language speakers can, with focus, understand each other imo.
Now that's interesting!

Smal vs. small

English, Russian, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Turkish, Greek, Chinese

French, Spanish, Latin.

German
>power gap
English italian french spanish

Don't know about the rest of the country but my school offered French, Latin, and Ukrainian (I grew up in Alberta).

>Ukrainian
Wtf it is not even a real language. It is literally "Russian guy trying to speak polish"

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukrainian_Canadians

There are Hungarian and Ukrainian schools for minorities.

Normal schools offer Russian and German (compulsory to pick one in primary school), sometimes Spanish and French.

English, German, French, Spanish

That's not funny at all you liar.

> znaš Ruski jezik ??

m.youtube.com/watch?v=2aWU4KzvBsU

10/10 stara dobra nejlepsza pejsma
Kada ja I ti remuv turski musilmanski kabab ?? ???? Gotovo

Do they at least speak ukrainian at home?

French
Italian
Japanese in a few

French and German until you get near GCSE age, then you could choose between French, German or Spanish. Mandarin was offered too but not as a GCSE subject iirc.

I chose German and got a D in GCSE, proper fucked it.

I can remember the written exam being like 'Talk about your neighbour and a problem you have with them' made up obviously but fucking hell people were writing pages and I could only manage a paragraph that said something like
>My neighbour has a dog and it is noisy
in a few sentences.

yeah everyone is going to be rushing to parler francais just so they can communicate with a bunch of sub-saharans and arabs

> znaš Ruski jezik ??
>10/10 stara dobra nejlepsza pejsma
Kada ja I ti remuv turski musilmanski kabab ?? ???? Gotovo
What language is that? I understand everything.

Ahoj Govarisz na ruskim jeziku ?

m.youtube.com/watch?v=Bwkoq6olfew

10/10 piosenka

really wish language education was better here

I "learnt" italian from years 1 through to 8 and literally all we were taught is how to count to 29 (30+ is too much work), introduce ourselves and translate cosi cosi.

Italian, English and either French or German

>I took Indonesian
should have killed yourself

Just English mostly, some schools teach Japanese.

Yes, more than ukrainians in the Ukraine do. They praised Bandera way before it became mainstream.

almost all high schools only teach English for entrance examination to enter the university.

but, there is some schools, such as korean private school, adopt Korean language as a foreign language subject instead of English for the entrance exam
because they can take advantage of their educational, cultural background.

in the other hand, few school teach the other languages such chinese, French, German and Spanish, although they are permitted to be taken as a subject for the entrance examination.

Depends on the state you grow up in and the school type.

Usually it's English, Latin and French, with lesser school forms only enforcing English and higher school forms enforcing two foreign languages.
Spanish is also common and some more exotic languages depending on what the teachers can offer, like Japanese.

In Saarland, you learn French before English, because they are still frogs in mind.

In NRW, you might be able to choose Arabic, Farsi and Turkish soon, welt.de/regionales/hamburg/article163481785/Arabisch-und-Farsi-sollen-jetzt-Schulfaecher-werden.html

m.youtube.com/watch?v=3OgIPqeuTcA

Cpбијa и Pycијa cy пoвeзaнe мнoштвoм иcтopијcких вeзa, peлигијcким нacлeђeм и cpoдним јeзицимa !!!!!

...

Without that last Sup Forums-bait sentence you would have actually made a decent post

Mandatory: English and Swedish
Optional: German, Latin, Russian, Spanish, Italian, French and maybe Portuguese, I'm not sure.
The mandatory languages depend on your first language.

Actually, past language.
Many countries used to teach French, but slowly it's being phased out here in Australia because it's simply not relevant anymore

My high school offered:

Japanese
Italian
Indonesian
French

But they've now phased out Indo, and slowly removing French because no one enrolls in it.

>Private schools also tend to offer Latin and Ancient Greek

Not sure which fucking private school you're talking about.
Maybe the school that our politicians send their kids to. But most private schools don't teach those.
Latin is actually quite uncommon in Australia

German, french, spanish, latin, greek, arabic, russian, italian, chinese and turkish.
Ofcourse the higher your level of high school education the student is in the more languages you can choose from

apart from obvious Czech mine had
>English
>German
>French
>Spanish
and some courses on Latin, Polish and Italian

For me german sound like shit !!!!!

I dont know why even Pepole steady this shit !!!! 0/10 agly us hell dialect good only for black metal and screaming !!!!!

Russian ukrainan Bulgarian belarussian serbian Greek are 10 tims beter and have biger heart and feeling!!!!!

Isreali dialect is even shiter mixed with arabs asyrians iranian turks cultur and words agly as fuck !!!!! Spit tfu tfu tfu

Isreal is Only good for turk food and cring songs pita suarma kabab falafel

Isreal hate arabas but they are all fucking blood dna mideal East shitskins arabas with facec just like iranian asyrians arabs falstinians themselff !!! With out the askenazi Pepole from russia Ukraina belarus poland germania serbia larping us jews

The fucking secret need to be revild Jesus was black shit skin Niger

Isreal are mixed of askenazi fake jews larping Here

And shitskin midel East arabs thet know arabic but dont want to talk any more on this 10/10 bjutiful dialect but they are the real jews from Bagdad jaman Maroko and syria and Iran !!!!! Sand Niger scum

Slava nasim bogam perunu svarogu velesu jarilu triglavu stribogu radagostu surivcu mukasa !!

Isreal have 3 dialekts only hebrow russian and arabic thets it !!! No polish no serbian no ukrainian

So you can see a lot of german polacks serbs ukrainans tallking russian Here

In tel-Aviv evrey one speak English wona be americans

Other talk arabic

The guys thet dont want to work only read tora talmud gmara talk only hebrow they are the antihrist satanist scums Thet controll isreal (zion)

Other are Nigers itijupian sand Nigers from africa Sudan

A lot of blacks Here now evrey place you go you see drunk Nigers

I Hoph to fuck off from Here soon us the War in Ukraina over

French
powergap
spanish
german
powergap
i don't know latin or some shit probably

English from second or first grade

In seventh grade you choose either French or Arabic

Same here, except Frech was the go-to foreign language until the 70s, so only the newer generations are adept at English. We're a bit further away from it than Dutch is, so we always get a bit of an accent.

In order of most common:

French
Mandarin
Japanese
Italian
German
Indonesian
Spanish
Korean

It's also not uncommon for languages like Vietnamese, Arabic, Hindi etc to be taught in schools with lots of students from those backgrounds.

Schools in Abo communities teach their local languages, while leftist inner city schools sometimes also push for Abo-language classes, but that's really a meme.

>korean
last time I checked we have a total of 1 (one) high school in Australia that teaches it.

Also
I think Japanese is more popular than Mandarin, perhaps even Italian

That's why I put it at the bottom of the list. But it's growing. Lots of K-boos around.

>I think Japanese is more popular than Mandarin, perhaps even Italian
Maybe in the 90s, but definitely not now. Japanese is declining. Pretty much every reputable public school (in Sydney, at least) offers Mandarin while Italian is still common throughout Catholic schools.