ID:184944
 
Es ce qu il y a des Francais/Canadiens qui se connecte sur le site?
bonjour de Montpellier.
Je me rends.
Je peux ecris francais, mais je ne le parle bien. Ma classe de francais est tres penible, mais je doit prend un classe de francais pour le credit.

Excuse my lack of accent marks. They're hard to do on a keyboard.


--Vito
In response to Vito Stolidus
N'importe qui peut parler le français, utilisant un traducteur.
Oui je suis américain mais peut parler le français et les autres langues =)
Yo tengo hambre.
Oh wait.
Bonjour-r-r! Comment ça va?
In response to Artekia
Haha, that made me chuckle.
Je peux parler le français mais je n'aime pas parler le français.
También, puedo hablar en español. Soy un hombre muy loco, ¿no?

Yeah, 2 years of simultaneous French and Spanish classes, and I'm done taking both. 4 foreign language credits in 2 years pwnt my high school. I know some things here and there. ;)

Hiead
Mon francais n'est pas trés bien, mai je parle un(e? >_>) peu. =(

O-matic
In response to O-matic
Meh. Je déteste le Francais. C'est trés difficile >.>.
...

I hate this 3-languaged country.
In response to Mysame
Mysame wrote:
C'est trés difficile >.>.


To me, French isn't very hard - but it's my vocabulairy and grammer which decreased the past (well, nearly) 2 years. And I'm doing pretty well on school with French, but that's just learning words for a test and eventually forget them and their definition. I blame my teacher! He never explains anything, I never learn something - bleh. But in the first grade of secundairy school I had another teacher, of whom I learnt alot. Now my french is worse than two years ago. Quite sad, actually.

O-matic
In response to O-matic
Words are easy. Contructing a sentence is ... Quite difficult, indeed. (I mean, they have 173 grammar-rules. I mean, HUH?!)
In response to Mysame
Do you have any idea how many grammar rules and irregular verbs English has?
In response to DarkCampainger
Meh, English is an easy language to learn.
In response to Mysame
You probably live in an english-speaking country. If you're from a country with easier language rules you would probably be confused as hell trying to figure out all our irregular verbs and odd grammar rules. The spelling and pronununciation of some words are extremely confusing.

Example (I don't know the correct symbols for pronunciation, so I'll do my best):

Though - Pronounced as 'Thoe'

Through - This looks like it should be pronounced as 'Throw', even though it's actually pronounced like 'through'
In response to Popisfizzy
Naw. I live in a country where most people are HORRIBLE at English.
and I sort of figure out the pronunciation myself..
In response to Mysame
Well, then I assume you still live in an English-speaking country.
In response to Popisfizzy
Assume all you want.. o.o;;
TV ftw!
In response to Mysame
Mysame wrote:
Naw. I live in a country where most people are HORRIBLE at English.

Where I live, people with good english are quite rare. You won't easily find anyone with my english on paper. But when it comes to speaking, I'd rather pass. On paper my english is not bad, but when talk in english ...my pronuncation is quite compareable with one of those al-qaida people. ;-/

O-matic
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