I speak English, I’m learning my heritage language Norwegian.
english, hungarian, some dutch. if I’m pressed, i also know a little german.

Bojler eladó!
Fluently? Hungarian, English, German, Romanian, and French, in that order.
Hát itt mindenki magyar?
Just one, American.
and then I told that teaching lady the only crayons I need are the red, white, and blue
uuuh… spanish?
Finnish, German, English, Ukrainian, Estonian, Swedish, Latvian, Dutch, Lithuanian, Russian, Polish, Spanish, French. A little Italian and Portuguese as well. I did manage to explain some simple things in Czech some days ago, and I can read south-Slavic languages surprisingly well. And often decipher the main point of a text in Romanian.
Almost no Hungarian or Mandarin, though very simple questions are possible anyway. And then of course I can read Norwegian and Danish reasonably well, because if you know Swedish, English, German and Dutch, you already know Danish. And for a similar reason, Slovak goes.
I can speak less than five words of Albanian, Basque, Greek, Welsh, Breton, any Gaelic language or any Sámi language. Those are something should probably learn a bit, at least.
Perhaps asking which languages you don’t speak woulf work better in your case, holly shit.
Haha, there are 7000 languages on our planet. Would be a looong list :)
We all have different standards of what “speaking a language” means, but good on you.
Diction needed.
One of the languages I am not sufficiently fluent in, yet, is that of Australia and USA. What does “Diction needed” mean in this context?
Diction is speech (like dire in French), and it was a bit of wordplay on the common expression ‘citation needed’ like the other commenter said :) Basically joking that a claim to speak a language should be backed up by saying something in that language to be believed.
I could be wrong but I think it’s a play on “citation needed” (i.e., they don’t believe you)
Hungarian, English and passively German.
Can say basic phrases in Spanish, in Italian and in Japanese.Bojler eladó!
Mi a helyzet a szesz kazánnal?
Native Dutch, fluent English, fluent German and French, I can carry a conversation in Spanish and Italian, and some baby steps in Japanese.
The Dutch are so dope, I feel every Dutch person knows like at least 5 languages
Native english speaker, B1 spanish.
Pero todavía olvido palabras por algunas cosas y cometo errores. Entiendo más de lo que hablo.
Jajajaja
Holaaaa, hablante de español!
¡Hola! Todavía estoy aprendiendo español pero puedo hablar en español bastante bien también
I can read, write and speak 3 languages.
English.
हिन्दी - Hindi.
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ - Punjabi.
I know a bit of Sanskrit, but cannot actually converse in it.
Native Portuguese, “decent “ English
é isso aí caralho
Eu falo português bastante bem, oiii
I’m a native English speaker, 但是我可以說一點中文。
Toki a! Mi kama sona e toki pona. (mi sona toki ike)
toki a! mi kama sona e toki pona kin. lon tomo sona mi la, kulupu pi toki pona li lon a!
I only speak two languages, English and bad English
Super green, Korben my man.
Native English speak (Australian) and I didn’t get full marks when I did my Canadian permit residency English test. That’s all I speak and apparently not well.
OnO
i found a german (federal republik of germany) text once that quoted a german text published in switzerland marking a word that was written with double-s instead of s-z-ligature (ß) with “[sic!]” as if the orthography of their neighbours was a mistake.
(´°̥̥̥̥̥̥̥̥ω°̥̥̥̥̥̥̥̥`)
English and swearing.
Used to be fluent in French, but nobody to talk to to practice so I’ve lost a lot of it. Basic Mandarin, Cantonese, Japanese, German. Learning Gaeilge.
For anyone looking for more related content, here is a relevant community:
That’s a curated place for people who enjoy language learning. This community offers a broader and more diverse sample
That’s my bad, I didn’t mean to say the post belongs elsewhere. I’ll edit the comment
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