You mean in London, where many high-class and entrepreneurial Parisians have been migrating to in order to escape high taxes. French is the new Latin. Pretty dead other than for specialized purposes. |
| I'd rather be the new Latin than the old pig-Latin. #Spanish |
If anyone is a pig here, it is you. |
Number of people who are native French speakers: 75 million Number of people who are native Latin speakesr: 0 |
That doesn't even make sense. |
Number of people who are native Spanish speakers: 405 million. French is indeed closer to Latin than to Spanish. Sorry. |
If you want to say that there are more native Spanish speakers than native French speakers, all you have to do is say that there are more native Spanish speakers than native French speakers. I don't think that French will become a dead language any time soon. 75 million is still a lot more than zero. |
Umm--then why were we one vote away from speaking German??? |
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In any case, bilingual French-English woman here (an accident of birth). While I would want my kids to go to a French immersion school (because I'd like to know that part of their heritage), I use my Spanish (the one I learned in school) every day at restaurants, the grocery store, on the bus, you name it. I would say, if you're living here in the US, make it Spanish first. If they end up interested in the Francophone world, it will be easier with a Spanish leg up.
Oh and to those who say you shouldn't have to speak Spanish: grow up! It's reality not dreamland. Sheesh. |
We weren't. http://www.snopes.com/language/apocryph/german.asp |
Absolutely true! My point is Spanish -- in my opinion -- is easier to learn than French. I would suggest having a child start with French and learn Spanish afterwards. And why are we discussing learning French OR Spanish. I truly hope my child learns French AND Spanish AND something else. Outside of the U.S. people are multilingual not just bilingual. |
I agree with this 100%. Intrinsic motivate is a critical factor. Here's why -- a kid that WANTS to learn a language because they LOVE it will find opportunities to do and will enjoy it and therefore more likely to stick with it and be successful. I studied Spanish because it's practical NOT because I love the language. My cousin loved the way French sounded and wanted to learn it. Everyone told her it was a waste of time. She did it anyway. She went to McGill University in Montreal and got a job where French is required. I barely speak Spanish now outside of necessity and I am not fluent by any stretch-- and I took Spanish in college too. My cousin has like-native fluency in French and uses it daily at work and in daily life (she's lives in Montreal). Motivation was the difference. |
All our neighbors in Montgomery County speak Spanish. It is like Mexico around here |
Then how come every immigrant from Central America can't speak English? Why do we have ESOL. Why do we have "For English, press 1" in our own country? Give me a break on most people are multilingual. Maybe in a few rich areas of the world but it is not the norm. |
Please expand your geographical knowledge of Latin America. |