• @Roundcat@lemmy.ca
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        519 months ago

        Make a joke about the British, they’re like “Yeah we do drink a lot of tea did a lot of imperialism, and our food sucks”

        Make a joke about the French, and they’re like “ho ho, we are rude and love wine non?”

        Make a joke about the Italians, and they’re like “Ay, we do love a pizza, and can’t fight a war!”

        Make a joke about Americans, and there’s always the “WHY DO YOU GUYS MAKE FUN OF US! NO FAIR! WHY DO PEOPLE THINK ITS FUNNY TO HATE US?!?”

        • @rosenjcb@lemmy.world
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          119 months ago

          I’ve experienced only the opposite. Americans love self deprecating humor but Yuros will literally cry about you “abusing my country” if you say one negative thing.

        • @Redditiscancer789@lemmy.world
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          79 months ago

          its also as if you’re being disingenuous, because try to say that shit to some hardcore right wing patriots of any country and see how fast you get your faced caved in.

        • @MrSqueezles
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          69 months ago

          Make a joke about Americans being fucking idiots and don’t expect Americans to laugh along. I mean what do you expect? Yeah we drink a lot of coffee and did slavery and use little creamer cups and eat lots of fried food and spend too much on our military. Americans, right? This? No thanks.

        • @juliebean
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          19 months ago

          jokes are funnier when they’ve got a nugget of truth i think. if the joke was about americans being fat and putting cheese on everything, or about how we’re the richest country in the world but people die all the time because they can’t afford basic medicine, i doubt there’d by any complaints. but saying that we can’t speak any language feels less like poking fun at regional differences, and more like just, idk, lying for the sake of being cruel?

          • @JoeyJoJoJuniour@lemmy.ml
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            109 months ago

            Yeah…it’s the French and capitulating to the Nazis, and they still take it better than Americans and any criticism

          • Fushuan [he/him]
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            9 months ago

            You mean the French with the white flag and baguette jokes? Spaniards with the lazy/siesta jokes? Italians with the pasta and pizza jokes? South europeans with the poor/debt jokes? Irish with the alcoholism jokes? British with their shitty food cuisine jokes? Swedish and their immigrant policy jokes?

            Americans are not special. Each country has their joke topic, yours in a nutshell are about yall being very self centered, and it shows tbh.

            • @Kurroth@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              Yer, I love how that comment completely ignores the same tired shit that each nationality hears over and over

              • An upside-down person who lost a war to birds.
          • @kameecoding@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            indeed, I guess I should have added /s or some pointers like >>> here is the joke <<<

            the original joke being that it’s seemingly always the Americans that are making the would of/should of/could of mistake

    • @marco@beehaw.org
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      59 months ago

      According to the U.S. Census Bureau, only 20 percent of Americans can converse in two or more languages, compared with 56 percent of Europeans.

  • DaBabyAteMaDingo
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    739 months ago

    Speak for yourselves. As a Latino born from Mexican immigrants, I speak English and Spanish poorly 😢

    • bob
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      9 months ago

      Lo siento amigo (o bróder )

  • Gormadt
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    569 months ago

    My 3 favorite experiences with language as an American:

    (1) My Jamaican coworker who I couldn’t understand for the life of me and my Ukrainian coworker who my Jamaican couldn’t understand at all, the Ukrainian coworker understood the Jamaican coworker just fine though and I understood my Ukrainian coworker just fine. Basically it turns into a fun game of telephone whenever we need to talk.

    (2) My former coworker from Haiti who no one but the hiring manager and I could understand, the best part about this is that I didn’t know he had an accent. I just didn’t hear it somehow. He was a great guy, he went back home a few years ago when his mother passed. Got stuck due to the pandemic and never came back to the company. I hope he’s doing well.

    (3) My former coworker from Guatemala insisting English wasn’t my first language as to him it sounded like English was my second language at best. I’ve been working on it since then. I still suck at it.

  • @Colour_me_triggered
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    509 months ago

    Um, plenty of Europeans speak 3 or more languages. Native language, language of the country you’re living in, and English.

    • @magicalbeast69@programming.dev
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      199 months ago

      This. I think european and asian should be swapped in this meme. I think its rarer to see asian speak 3 languages than seeing european speak 3 languages

      • @camillaSinensis@reddthat.com
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        249 months ago

        Surely that depends on where in Asia you’re looking at as well? On average, the number of languages people speak is quite different between, say, India and Japan. Or Switzerland vs Romania in Europe.

      • @Colour_me_triggered
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        129 months ago

        Meh I only speak English and Norwegian. I can (with extreme difficulty) make myself understood in German, but I wouldn’t say I “speak German” . Although anyone who speaks Norwegian can also understand Swedish and Danish (not easily in the case of Danish unless it’s written).

      • @CheshireSnake@lemdit.com
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        79 months ago

        As an asian, this has been my experience as well. Of course there are exceptions, but most asians I know (not just in my country) usually just speak 2 languages.

        • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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          39 months ago

          But which part of Asia are you from? Here in India, schools are required (at least on paper) to teach three languages, so most people are at least trilingual.

          • panCat
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            19 months ago

            Well yes but many schools teach sanskrit and its a dead language?

            • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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              59 months ago

              Sanskrit is still spoken in some parts of Karnataka state. Also, only some schools run by the federal government teach Sanskrit. Usually it is (1) the official language of the state, (2) English and (3) Hindi. (If Hindi is the official language of the state, then any other Indian language, or a foreigh language, would be offered. For historical reasons most schools in Tamil Nadu state do not offer Hindi, but will have another third language such as French.)

      • NoGodsNoMasters [they/them, she/her]
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        49 months ago

        I think it also really depends where you are, which is why generalising entire continents maybe isn’t very useful. Someone from Luxemburg or somewhere in the Netherlands with more recent immigrants is going to be a lot more likely to speak multiple languages than say someone from Russia or more rural France, just as someone from China is more often going to be monolingual compared to someone from India or Singapore

        • bob
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          29 months ago

          More likely to run into a Portuguese speaker in Luxembourg than Russia for sure.

    • OADINC
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      09 months ago

      Dutch, English (Traditional not simplified), and french, and I can understand german but not speak it myself.

  • @andresil
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    489 months ago

    Americans have trouble with any accent that isn’t the blandest, nails on chalkboard accent.

    Once had one ask me if I was speaking English when I spoke to him (for context I am Irish, the north bit)

    • @Mr_Blott@lemmy.world
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      449 months ago

      Well fucksake mate, when someone asks yous where you’re from, yous go “NornIrn”

      Naecunt can unnerstaund thon

      • @andresil
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        9 months ago

        Right so don’t really know if this is bait… but that’s one kind of accent (and the tickest pronunciation at that) in ulster, specifically greater Belfast/co. Antrim and very few people speak that thick. For the most part they should be quite understandable from the perspective of anyone who consumes any English language media outside of only American or only London (RP) English. The number of times I have had people have trouble with my accent in Europe and then I ask them what they watched when learning English and the answer is American TV is astounding.

        This is me getting on my wee podium now but I have a huge problem with the Americans and Brits for this, they marginalise the fuck out if our dialect, make fun of it for being unitelligible (after making no effort to understand it), and often deny it any legitimacy.

        In reality Irish English is spoken by 5-7million people, as large as some dialects of European languages (eg. Austrian/swiss German, Belgian/Swiss French, etc) and if you learn French or German you still get some exposure to those dialects and if you out your mind to it understand it.

        • @DudePluto@lemmy.world
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          199 months ago

          I have a huge problem with the Americans and Brits for this, they marginalise the fuck out if our dialect, make fun of it for being unitelligible

          I mean I know you’re talking about the wider world and not just this thread, but you started the conversation by being disingenuous about Americans and their dialects. It’s kind of hard for people to take “I have a legitimate dialect” seriously when you just got done trashing half a continent’s worth of dialects

          Maybe if we all broach the topic with a little more understanding, you and everyone will feel better about it. For example Appalachian English and Northern Ireland English are both dialects with their own rules of pronunciation and grammar. They’re both legitimate. But it’s not surprising they’d have trouble understanding each other because they have so little interaction. But with patience and mutual respect it can happen

        • @bufordt@sh.itjust.works
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          159 months ago

          Most German speakers make fun of how unintelligible the Austrian German dialect is. It’s so bad sometimes that translators are required.

        • pjhenry1216
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          79 months ago

          You just also seem to have a problem of marginalizing US English and UK English. They vary drastically. Just like how you just stated accents in your own country can vary.

      • @Gestrid@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        asks yous

        Before I read the rest of your comment, I thought you were going for a New York accent.

    • pjhenry1216
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      249 months ago

      Bland and nails on chalkboard? That’s like the opposite of bland. Not great, but definitely not bland. Bland is blunt and flat. Nails on chalkboard is shrill, sharp, and grating. I just don’t understand how you can believe both at the same time.

      • @andresil
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        19 months ago

        Here, I mean more the reaction to it, I sometimes cringe at the pronunciation or intonation in the way one would to nails on a chalkboard (the idiom can have more than one meaning or reaction attached to it)

        • pjhenry1216
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          59 months ago

          That doesn’t change the argument. Bland and cringe are also not like each other. I’m all for you criticizing something because it’s different than you, but at least use your language consistently and properly. How would anyone interpret a secondary analogy without knowing how you personally react? It already has a clear meaning on its surface. Occam’s razor would indicate that’s enough. Why would anyone invent a second possible scenario that’s only knowable if you have access to information that isn’t well known, and in this case, near certainty of being unknown? Just say hearing the accent from some other country makes you cringe. Communication doesn’t have to be difficult unless you make it so.

    • @RomanceDailies@beehaw.org
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      69 months ago

      I am dating a man from England and it’s amazing how many people don’t understand his accent. It might just be me getting to know him, but I don’t find his accent (or even tough accents like Irish or Scottish) hard to understand anymore.

    • notfutomes [they/them]
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      I mean if you never leave the US (easy to do, it’s gigantic and travel is expensive/people are poor), it’s kinda understandable that you’d struggle with accents because you rarely hear any, let alone other languages. I know americans that have trouble with english accents lmao

    • @ctobrien84@lemmy.world
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      19 months ago

      My god son, just how many marbles were you trying to eat while talking to those nice Americans? You do know that the untied states has around 30 dialects, and every accent from around the world, right? I’m sure you knew better than that when you generalized 300 million people into one anecdote.

    • Melllvar
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      -19 months ago

      You’ll probably hear more and more varied accents in an average US city than in all of Ireland.

  • @HurlingDurling
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    359 months ago

    Excuse me, but as an American I take offense to this meme. I speak 4 languages, English, Southern, Bostonian, and Spanish /s

  • Archlinuxforever
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    319 months ago

    Oh look, it’s the same old reposted garbage meme that I have seen on Reddit hundreds of times.

  • ElPussyKangaroo
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    299 months ago

    Well, as an Indian with a love for anime, I speak 3 languages and am learning a 4th (Japanese).

    मुळात माझी मातृभाषा मराठी आहे. आणि मी बरीच वर्ष महाराष्ट्रातच राहिलीय…

    लेकिन school और दोस्तों के वजह से हिंदी भी बोल लेता है. और तो और, इन दोनो की लिपी एक जैसी ही होने के कारण पढणे मे भी दिक्कत नही आति.

    わたしはあにめがすきですから、にほんごをべんきょうおします。今は、にほんごのうりょうくしけんのN5できました。今年の12月にN4できますよ。

    And I plan on learning more soon 🙃.

    • BrutalPoseidon
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      59 months ago

      This feels like I’m playing No Man’s Sky. Just a bunch of symbols I don’t recognize and then the word “school” in the middle without context hahaha.

      In all seriousness, good for you. That’s very impressive. I’m only bilingual with a basic understanding of a third language.

      • ElPussyKangaroo
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        29 months ago

        lmao. I feel you.

        Thanks man. I’m barely able to read at present…

        Also, that’s pretty cool dude! Nice.

    • ForbiddenRoot
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      9 months ago

      Hello fellow Indian. This is very similar to my linguistic capabilities if you substitute Japanese for the bit of French I learnt in school / college 30 years ago. Ok, I can’t really follow someone when they speak French, but I can read it well enough even now.

      • ElPussyKangaroo
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        39 months ago

        AYEEEEE wassup bruh.

        Does a namaste, then raises hand for high five

        Nice. I know every language is pretty difficult mostly, but as someone who’s had a hard time learning Hindi after realising it uses the same script and yet is a different language from Marathi, French just blows my fucking mind.

        • ForbiddenRoot
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          9 months ago

          French just blows my fucking mind.

          In my experience, it was reasonably simple to learn how to read / write French. We had it in school for 3 years and then college for a couple of years. The emphasis was on reading / writing and not so much on speaking / listening, though I remember we had to recite some French poetry once. The teacher’s ears must have fallen of hearing our impeccable accents :D

        • ForbiddenRoot
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          29 months ago

          Bonjour, aimez-vous les croissants?

          Un peu, mais je prefere les baguettes

          (and also I just realized I totally don’t know how to make acute / grave accents on my keyboard, if that’s possible at all with an en-US layout)

      • @Roundcat@lemmy.ca
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        29 months ago

        Perfectly acceptable for beginners to write in kana. Many of my students here primarily write in kana until up to 6th grade.

        • @Akagigahara@lemmy.world
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          19 months ago

          Definitely is. I forgot the actual name of the writing style, but for children’s books it is also not uncommon to have kanji with their hiragana transliteration above/beside it. Requiring someone to immediately write kanji when they learn japanese, especially as a secondary+ language is insane

    • @Pfnic@feddit.ch
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      09 months ago

      日本語のうりょうくしけんがんばってね!ぼくはそのしけんのためにぜんぜんべんきょうしないので、むずかしさわかりません。 もし、日本へりょこうしたいなら、外来語はとっても大切だと思ういますよ。かたかなをよめなければ、何も分かりませんでした。

      • ElPussyKangaroo
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        19 months ago

        あ。。。どうもね。 そうですね。。。たいへんですね。。。 ぼくはごいとぶんぽうがとてもへたですよ。。。 かたかなきらいですから、あまりしらないよ。。。

  • @BruceLee@lemmy.ml
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    289 months ago

    Meanwhile, many africans speak 2 languages in their family, a third one for people that don’t speak one of theses two and have studied french and english.

    • @nasi_goreng@lemmy.zip
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      So, exactly how it works in Southeast Asia, especially Indonesian.

      They speak native local language from their city, other two from other islands, English for international language, sometimes Chinese, Malay, Arabic, Korean, or Japanese. Not to forget the national language, Indonesian.

  • @BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works
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    The only good thing that the Americanization brought is, that, except the French, the world can communicate with each other in English.

    • ForbiddenRoot
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      I know you are joking but based on my purely anecdotal personal experience, the French (at least in Paris) can now speak and are willing to speak in English much more than a few decades back.

      The first time I went to France, almost 25 years back, I had a rough time communicating at restaurants or even buying tickets at the Paris metro stations. Not sure if the latter was an ability or willingness issue because even holding up two fingers and saying “two tickets” was apparently indecipherable. Had to muster my school days French and say “deux billets” to produce instant results.

      Edit: And no, the two fingers I was holding up were not the middle finger of each hand :P

          • @kameecoding@lemmy.world
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            39 months ago

            well because it’s kind of a forced adoption in an ideal world we would have developed a common tongue by slowly merging the languages, or at least would have taken one that’s pretty good and then improve on it. For example Hungarian is much better in the sense that what you write is what you pronounce, not the mess that is English, so in an ideal common tongue I feel like that aspect would be adopted.

            Of course Hungarian also has stupid parts, ly (<- that’s supposed to be indeed one letter) and j is the same thing. x is just ks, y is pronounced the same as i and w is just v so there is some extra fat on it, but other than that the 44 letters cover all the sounds you make while pronouncing words.

            • @BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works
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              19 months ago

              Hungarian is like Chinese to most romanic / germanic languages.

              While being excellent in describing every little thing pretty efficiently and short, the problem I see with highly advanced languages is imho that they are pretty complicated to learn.

  • panCat
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    239 months ago

    Many indians speak 4+ languages easily , and we dont even notice that 😅

      • @VikingHippie@lemmy.wtf
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        9 months ago

        Last I checked.

        Fun fact: when you say “Asian” to an American, their first thought is East or Southeast Asia, but a British person’s primary association with “Asianness”, for lack of a better term, is India and Pakistan.

      • Roundcat
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        69 months ago

        Geographically it is a subcontinent that slammed into Asia to form the Himalayas, so you could make the argument it is its own thing.

      • CandyDumDubOP
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        19 months ago

        Clearly, this dude voted to become mr. worldwide

      • @MrSilkworm
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        -29 months ago

        India and Pakistan are considered to be in Asia but more accurately they are considered to be in the Indian Subcontinent. The same way Iran, Saudi Arabia and the rest are also considered to be in Asia but they are more accurately considered to be on the Middle East.

      • panCatQ
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        -49 months ago

        SEA PROBABLY , however India , pakistan , sri lanka and bangladesh are considered a subcontinent coz similar cultures , and are different from rest of asia !

    • Dr. Moose
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      89 months ago

      Not to take away from this but often these 4 are very similar languages that could be easily interpreted as dialects if not the identity politics.

      • @emergencyfood@sh.itjust.works
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        19 months ago

        It is complicated. India has at least four language families - Indo-European, Dravidian, Austroasiatic and Sino-Tibetan. So Hindi (I-E) is closer related to English or Greek than to Tamil (Dra), Santali (AA) or Zeme (S-T). While it is rare for people to speak languages belonging to all four families, I know at least three people who can passably speak six languages from two or three families.

        • panCat
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          29 months ago

          Well most indian languages are not even mutually intelligible so idk if its about identity politics or what not !

    • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
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      How well do you speak those languages? For example, can you order pizza with pineapple and olives in any of those languages? What if the pizza you get is cold, there’s only one olive on it and the crust is soggy, could you get your complaints through in any language?

      Or perhaps will the explanation be more like: “Pizza bad, no good. Want money back.”

      • rakyat
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        179 months ago

        I’m not from India but as another Asian, yes, we can have fluent conversations in several languages. (I grew up speaking English, Mandarin, Malay, Cantonese and a bit of Hakka)

        • @Hamartiogonic@sopuli.xyz
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          09 months ago

          That’s pretty cool. Took a quick look at the relationships those languages have, and it seems that Malay is the odd one out, all the others are in the sinitic family. I would expect that if you learn one, your mind isn’t going to explode if you try to learn the other two. However, Malay is completely different, so jumping into that world may require some extra effort.

          To give a European example, if you already know Norwegian, learning Swedish it’s only one step away. Jumping into Danish or German at that point can be done, but it will require some extra effort. A similar situation exists between Italian, Spanish and Portuguese.

          • rakyat
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            39 months ago

            It’s more to do with my multicultural upbringing - Malay is the national language here in Malaysia, so it’s pretty much compulsory to learn & speak. My parents are Cantonese & Hakka Chinese, I learnt to speak Malay & Mandarin in school (where ethnic Chinese kids from different dialect groups as well as ppl from other ethnicities mingle), and spoke mostly English in college & work. We also have Indians and other minorities who speak even more dialects/languages than I do.

      • panCatQ
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        59 months ago

        Well most of us speak a mother tongue , and english ( since ex britt colony ) very fluently , but there are times when both parents speak a different language and the city /state you live in has a different language and hence they speak it very close to native fluency !

        • panCatQ
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          69 months ago

          My bf and his family for instance speaks 6 languages for the reasons listed above !

  • Melllvar
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    I’ll never understand this attitude that Europeans have towards Americans. I thought we were friends.

    • Aubrey Strip Mall
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      339 months ago

      North Americans and Europeans are only friends when someone from a different continent is in the room.

    • @cazssiew@lemmy.world
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      99 months ago

      I’m franco-american, living in france, and I regularly get people telling me they’re sorry for insulting me for being american. It’s so ingrained in the culture here to shit on americans it’s something of a knee-jerk reaction. I get it, america’s the hegemon, we’re the big baddy, I just wish that didn’t spill over into a kind of xenophobia that people are so comfortable with they regularly catch themselves being openly insulting to people they call their friends.

    • @Kiosade@lemmy.ca
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      89 months ago

      I remember back in high school there was this Danish foreign exchange student one year, and she would not shut up about how this or that was better in Denmark.

      • SoyViking [he/him]
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        149 months ago

        The average Dane is firmly convinced that Denmark is the most perfect place on earth, a paradise that the rest of the world can only dream of. It follows that any reasonable person who’s not already a Dane must have a desire to become one. If they don’t, there must either be something wrong with them or they simply haven’t heard enough about how good Denmark is.

          • SoyViking [he/him]
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            19 months ago

            The upper class in Denmark are just as big piss babies about paying their taxes as they are anywhere else. Ordinary Danes might like to say they’re happy to pay taxes but in reality few of them would pass the opportunity to have their car fixed off the books or to buy beer in Germany to avoid the Danish alcohol tax.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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        119 months ago

        Well in fairness if you came to America and saw what a depraved, decaying shithole it is after being raised on a diet of airbrushed American media you’d probably be appalled, too.

        I can’t count how many stories I’ve heard of people visiting from civilized parts of the world and breaking down crying in the street when they see how American’s treat homeless people.

      • paurix
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        119 months ago

        Those kind of people exist anywhere, that isn’t tied to any nationality. Guess it stemms from insecurities and chasing some weird need to feel superior about something.

    • bob
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      79 months ago

      They can’t talk to eagles 🦅 so they don’t count that as a language

    • @Stuka@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      My theory is they don’t like constantly seeing us in their news and entertainment when we rarely see anything at all from their country.

      • @RushingSquirrel
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        59 months ago

        Thing is, there’s not much American news outside of the US. I live in Canada and have far less news about America than I’d thought there should be given how we are neighbors and partners. Most of the news I used to hear about the USA is from Reddit. And when I visit France (which I do regularly, bring born there), there’s almost nothing about the US there.

        Recently though, Trump was also over and it wasn’t pretty. Also when going on Reddit, it’s 80% about US News and content, but not necessarily the best news.

        Overall, what bothers me and others is how much patriotic a lot of the Americans seem to be and how great they seem to think they are, even when you hear how bad the society is in terms of healthcare, pension, divided politics, crimes, conspiracy theory, etc.

        But everytime I’ve been to the US, I’ve only met great and friendly people and have always appreciated it. You usually hear about the bad parts in the news.

    • Lifted_lowered
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      59 months ago

      They believe themselves superior in every way, including racially. Look up the racist “le 56% face” Nazi memes to see what they think about that.

      • Melllvar
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        9 months ago

        Look up the racist “le 56% face” Nazi memes

        Wow. I had no idea this was a thing.

      • @TheOakTree@beehaw.org
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        29 months ago

        Modern neo-nazis and white supremacists just don’t really understand that the Nazis from WWII would reject and enslave a majority of them… mainly for having Jewish, Slavic, Roma, or other ethnic groups’ blood.

        Turns out post-WWI/WWII economic crises lead to a lot of migration and mixing of groups, who woulda thunk?

        The “le 56% face” meme, on both sides of the coin, is just a precursor to the world’s greatest Leopards ate My Face meme.

    • @BigBen103
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      -19 months ago

      We are only friends because the other big guys look way because out of the big guys the usa look the least scary.