I'm bi many things, but lingual isn't one of themI met a couple of bisexual-bipolar-bilingual people who found that they had a lot in common.
I met a couple of bisexual-bipolar-bilingual people who found that they had a lot in common.https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/a/forum/8/86a5ff96.jpg
It turns out that being Bi Bi Bi makes it easier to beNSYNC.
After 3 years of high school Spanish, not at all.
The teacher was an old white lady who had zero Spanish accent. It almost sounded like she was making fun of the language.
After 3 years of high school Spanish, not at all.I had one of those.
The teacher was an old white lady who had zero Spanish accent. It almost sounded like she was making fun of the language.
I'm bi many things, but lingual isn't one of them
I met a couple of bisexual-bipolar-bilingual people who found that they had a lot in common.
It turns out that being Bi Bi Bi makes it easier to beNSYNC.
Hey, wait a minute, did I mean to say that?
Spanish is my native language, but I never learned it that well
i took numerous Spanish classes in my high school year, even took AP Spanish but even then I just could never pick up on it.
i suck at speaking Spanish, I ended reading and writing in Spanish a lot better than I did than actually speaking in Spanish >__>
No, I'm just monolingual CE.
I can read Spanish much better than understanding it when spoken. I've tried to have brief conversations with native speakers and just stood there looking like an idiot mostly. Spanish speakers love to clown you to find out what you really know.
Im cunnilingual.
I could speak Spanish well enough to teach English to ESL Spanish speaking students and could speak Japanese well enough to teach introductory courses for Americans and talk politics to Japanese people (I lived in Nagoya). Sadly, Im out of practice on both.
Fair point, but I feel like it gives you an edge. I understood a LOT more about English when I started learning other languages. It helps you explain things better.In fairness, most ESL teachers dont speak the language of the people theyre teaching, in my experience.
Fair point, but I feel like it gives you an edge. I understood a LOT more about English when I started learning other languages. It helps you explain things better.
Oh, I have no doubt that it does. Unfortunately though, while there are good ESL teachers, theres also a lot of people doing it where its basically a con and theyre in no way capable of teaching. Theyve been clamping down on it here in recent years but theres still plenty of dodgy centres.Thats incredibly sad. I wish teachers were paid better. There are a lot of intelligent and caring people that would make for great teachers, but they gravitate to better paying jobs.