04-09-2014, 05:25 PM
Sate watashi wa ikutsu ka no nihongo o hanasu
But I often make mistakes and phrase things odd sometimes, but I've been doing it for 3 years. I can read Romanji nearly perfect(non-slang/formal-romanized Japanese) but I still have loads of trouble with Kanji (語.
I was never taught to read or write Kanji, so I can hold up a conversation...in Romanji lol , but I guess I'm only "half" fluent since there are 2 ways to visually communicate in Japanese.
Speaking it is still a bit of an issue because of my own accent/vernacular, but I'm fairly adept at it.
I also did 4 years of French and can speak it moderately well, I'm not fluent anymore, but I think I could get around in Paris ;p
I also am now learning Dominican Republic Spanish(with help from our very own SouthB), as I have a house guest from there and I can so far ask and answer simple phrases and such. Not exactly fluent, but apparently Me Hablar Español Bien.
Not to mention I can speak and understand the different variations of Patois from the other islands, such as Jamaica and Trinidad. Including our own(vernacular) obviously
But I often make mistakes and phrase things odd sometimes, but I've been doing it for 3 years. I can read Romanji nearly perfect(non-slang/formal-romanized Japanese) but I still have loads of trouble with Kanji (語.
I was never taught to read or write Kanji, so I can hold up a conversation...in Romanji lol , but I guess I'm only "half" fluent since there are 2 ways to visually communicate in Japanese.
Speaking it is still a bit of an issue because of my own accent/vernacular, but I'm fairly adept at it.
I also did 4 years of French and can speak it moderately well, I'm not fluent anymore, but I think I could get around in Paris ;p
I also am now learning Dominican Republic Spanish(with help from our very own SouthB), as I have a house guest from there and I can so far ask and answer simple phrases and such. Not exactly fluent, but apparently Me Hablar Español Bien.
Not to mention I can speak and understand the different variations of Patois from the other islands, such as Jamaica and Trinidad. Including our own(vernacular) obviously