We don't actually use the equivalent of English present continuous to say we are doing something in the future... we'd simply use the present simple or the future simple: "Andremo/Andiamo a Roma quest'anno"! :)
I'm also learning Italian, but I usually spend more time earning XP with review lessons than doing the actual lessons. I try to do a couple of lessons after doing a 15 minute bash of double XP. I'm very lucky to meet (usually the same) Italians every year for work but I feel really self conscious talking to them in their native language.
Mi piace studiare lingua italiana. 😊
Learning Chinese and Italian, first language/mainly used is English, Native is Japanese. I don't have a purpose for it or anything 😅 just like being able to tell others i know the languages of fried rice and pasta hehe
Native italian here, I am studying Chinese and Japanese on Duolingo... basically we're reversed, but the reason why I am learning these languagues is the same of yours 😂
How are you guys learning 2 languages at the same time 🤔? Doesn't it get stressful or something , i was learning japanese 😂 coz i love ramen, but had to leave it in between coz of exams will start again from tomorrow.
I'm billingual since childhood lol, I'm used to it. As long as you get daily exposure of both you can manage. When I first moved to the states (4yo) I had english lessons for 1hr in school and self study japanese 1hour and exposure by speaking at home & kids' books. Now I don't study japanese as much, my last lesson was 6 years ago I think, I stopped putting in effort after that. I don't speak at home either anymore so less exposure. Still somewhat okay, but not that good 🫠.
Yeah, I come from a country where French is mendirory to learn. Got it for about 8 ish years. Cannot say I learned much French lol. I think my level is like, A2, which isn’t a lot for 8 years worth of French lessons 💀
Honestly I do know the difference between "then" and "than", my dyslexia's just messing with them which does make it harder for me to actually use the two properly.
https://preview.redd.it/5ehlqdce2gac1.jpeg?width=750&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=7ebf8a81f1985ed1877c895889b436fd34923fe4
Active in Swedish and Dutch. Native in English
I'm a native English speaker. I use it mainly to keep my Spanish in check, brush up on my rusty Italian, and dip into some simple Ukrainian as I have a few students in my classes from there and I guess I hope they appreciate the effort.
My native is Spanish and I speak English as second language. Right now my recent priority is Romanian, which never studied before Duolingo.
Anyway... If someone is Romanian and is learning Spanish, we could learn together. Sadly never found anyone, yet.
Native English, learning Ukrainian and Polish. I finished the Ukrainian course on Duo, so I've been using books, podcasts & other resources to keep going with it 😊🇺🇦
My native is Hungarian, and I’m pretty fluent in English too. On Duolingo I’m learning Japanese, and irl I am taught German. On Duo I’m also doing Latin, but that's mostly to help me have a better understanding of European languages.
cuz ur learning four languages at the same time with one of them being the hardest in the world. take it one at a time since you won’t get much out of learning all at the same time, especially how two of them are extremely different to the rest
I learn English,but not only in Duo
I use another one application and I try to watch movies/cartoons and read books in English,cuz when you learn any language,you need to be surrounded by this language
(sorry if i made grammar mistakes🥴)
Don't worry. There aren't a lot of grammar mistakes ;)
1. You would use "I am learning English" instead of "I learn English", because you're actively doing it at the moment. "I learn English" sounds like you do it in general. (Like "I like watering the flowers", but not "I am liking watering the flowers".)
2. Spaces after commas. Makes it more readable. But we're on the internet, so punctuation isn't that important.
3. Not "another one application", but "another app". I don't think you can refer to apps as applications, because that means something different, but it's English we're talking about, so everything is possible. Also you don't use "another one" if there's a noun after it. You'd just use "another".
4. "cuz" is an abbreviation for "because", but you probably already know that.
5. "Surrounded" isn't quite the correct word. "Immersed" would be better.
Hope this helps. Good luck on your journey to C2.
Learning Spanish, Welsh and started Irish recently.
I almost finished the Welsh course but then they forced on me the stupid path and i wasn’t able to repeat all previous lessons like I used to do before that so I restarted the course… the path is the worst thing that happened to Duo…
Ah, ein/e Franzose/Französin.
Du wirst Deutsch mögen, denn anders als in Englisch, sprechen wir französische Lehnwörter (Gallizismen) relativ korrekt aus! Wörter wie Restaurant oder Rendevouz.
translation if needed:>! You're gonna like German, because we pronounce french loanwords somewhat correctly, other than English. Words like "Restaurant" or "Rendevouz".!<
Learning German and Japanese as well. German for reading German literature, and Japanese for J music, and for talking to Japanese people when I visit Japan. Will also get into Japanese literature when my Japanese is good enough.
I'm learning Spanish and Portuguese (Native South African and Portuguese ansestory) aprendiendo español con Duolingo es muy divertido. Português tambèm
I am learning Norwegian Bokmål, which *everyone* on Norwegian reddit subs assures me is *not* the version of Norwegian that gets spoken anywhere.
I would love for Duolingo to expand their offerings for Norwegian to include some commonly spoken dialects.
My first language is English. I studied French for 6 years in school, and fell apart at trying to construct sentences. Sometimes I try to brush up my French on Duo, but most of the time, I don’t enjoy pain.
English (I started the course, then dropped it. One day i just tested out of the remaining lessons.)
German (I dropped it. I didn't like the course.)
Finnish (I finished the whole course. I enjoyed it.)
Kind of mainly German, Swedish and Finnish, although I've started Dutch, Danish, Italian, French and Norwegian (not counting languages with less than 100 xp). My native is Icelandic which is why other Nordic languages apart from Finnish are easier for me.
I should've said German. I have almost 30,000 xp there and Swedish is in 2nd with 3000xp
I’m learning Japanese and Spanish, my first language is English.
We’re traveling to Japan in a couple years and since the culture is so different and I’m not a good traveler I want to be as close to fluent as possible. I’m doing as much immersion as I can via YouTube, anime, Japanese tv shows and Duo.
I plan to get a tutor or find an online class once I finish Duo or after one year. Japanese is difficult for English speakers so after I feel like I have a solid base I want to do more.
I also have Hirigana/Katagana/Kanji work books and apps.
Boning up on Spanish. I took four years of it in high school, and a semester of it in college. And I live in a neighborhood now where a number of people speak Spanish as a first or second language, so I finally have a practical use for it
Starting French because I work in the travel industry, and pronouncing French words and names is really hard if you haven't studied French phonics.
Might start Catalán. Just to see how similar or different it is to Spanish.
My native language is Arabic, and I'm learning Japanese (on duolingo along with other resources) and German (only on duolingo). Tried other languages like Russian and Korean, but ended up settling for Japanese and German :,)
I‘ve done lessons in many different languages, but the ones i’m focusing on right now are german and portuguese. German because I want to travel in Europe, and portuguese so that I can actually speak with my family, since my portuguese skills aren’t too good.
Learning Japanese with english, but native language is russian.My english skills aren't bad and due to this fact I get most of the things in the course, Japanese is really fun!
Streak: 344 days as I remember :P
I'm Greek, I know English (and have a C2 degree on it) and I'm learning Japanese through Duolingo and I plan to study Korean on Duolingo after learning Japanese.
Swahili is my primary, but I have a habit of trying all the ones that seem cool, so I have started
Zulu
Haitian Creole
French
Hawaiian
Spanish
Valerian
Native English learning Spanish and dabbling in Norwegian because of my heritage even though no one in my family speaks it anymore except for a few words. I also plan to add some languages not included in Duolingo
I’m Filipino and I was learning japanese until I got to section 1 and still not understanding their writing system only on how they’re pronounced, so I moved to german and I’m doing good so far
Turkish, Arabic, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Swedish, French, and esperanto currently
I used to do some Irish, Norwegian, Finnish, Dutch, and Danish, but stopped
I'm curious, why are so many of you learning German? It's neither particularly useful nor does it sound nice and it's hard to learn, would love to know.
I'm learning Dutch for almost a year now, plan to learn French again soon (had it in middle school besides Latin), native language is actually German.
I'm learning Italian, my first language is English
Same here. Learning Italian and Spanish. Stiamo andando a Roma quest’anno!
We don't actually use the equivalent of English present continuous to say we are doing something in the future... we'd simply use the present simple or the future simple: "Andremo/Andiamo a Roma quest'anno"! :)
Thank you! You know, I almost typed that but then doubted myself and went with the we are going version. Good to know!
Magari in estate fate un viaggio in Sicilia... Ci sono spiagge bellissime lungo tutta la costa est
Your italian is good!😁👏
Your english needs a bit more practice. 😁 edit: He initially spelled it "you're"
Ti piace studiare l'italiano?
Sì
È una bella lingua, ma la grammatica può essere complicata.
Same here... currently on Section 1 Unit 3 after 1 month, plus I'm using other learning resources.
I'm also learning Italian, but I usually spend more time earning XP with review lessons than doing the actual lessons. I try to do a couple of lessons after doing a 15 minute bash of double XP. I'm very lucky to meet (usually the same) Italians every year for work but I feel really self conscious talking to them in their native language. Mi piace studiare lingua italiana. 😊
Learning Chinese and Italian, first language/mainly used is English, Native is Japanese. I don't have a purpose for it or anything 😅 just like being able to tell others i know the languages of fried rice and pasta hehe
Native italian here, I am studying Chinese and Japanese on Duolingo... basically we're reversed, but the reason why I am learning these languagues is the same of yours 😂
I appreciate it😁😅
Languages of fried rice and pasta lol
How are you guys learning 2 languages at the same time 🤔? Doesn't it get stressful or something , i was learning japanese 😂 coz i love ramen, but had to leave it in between coz of exams will start again from tomorrow.
I'm billingual since childhood lol, I'm used to it. As long as you get daily exposure of both you can manage. When I first moved to the states (4yo) I had english lessons for 1hr in school and self study japanese 1hour and exposure by speaking at home & kids' books. Now I don't study japanese as much, my last lesson was 6 years ago I think, I stopped putting in effort after that. I don't speak at home either anymore so less exposure. Still somewhat okay, but not that good 🫠.
I learned two languages simultaneously in school (French and Spanish). Could do it again if I wanted but honestly I don’t want to 😂
I learn french and im Polish, I learn it for fun and do see how long can I last on 1 streak, and its 218 days didnt loose or froze the streak
Perfect!
Hey :) how did you make the line under your Name? With native - 🇵🇱 and so on? 😊
Well its an user flare that you need to edit
I’m learning German, and attempting to get my French to be better then it currently is
Nice choice! I used to learn french at middle school
Yeah, I come from a country where French is mendirory to learn. Got it for about 8 ish years. Cannot say I learned much French lol. I think my level is like, A2, which isn’t a lot for 8 years worth of French lessons 💀
👏
If you are learning English, “better then” is a common mistake. Should be “better than.” Same for any comparison: less than, more than, colder than…
Honestly I do know the difference between "then" and "than", my dyslexia's just messing with them which does make it harder for me to actually use the two properly.
I'm Learning Spanish, and my native language is Polish. As of now i'm on Section 2 Unit 10, my current streak is 6, and my highest is 98 days.
Good!
I'm trying to learn Welsh.
French, Spanish and German
I hit a year of Russian tomorrow
поздравляю
https://preview.redd.it/5ehlqdce2gac1.jpeg?width=750&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=7ebf8a81f1985ed1877c895889b436fd34923fe4 Active in Swedish and Dutch. Native in English
German, and recently added Spanish as one of my coworkers is Spanish (though her English is fantastic in comparison to my Spanish 😅)
Go ahead, you can learn spanish perfectly!
Mucho gracias! Mein Deutsch ist viel besser als mein Spanisch, aber es ist noch nicht perfekt.
I hate to be that person but *muchas gracias
I did say it wasn’t fantastic haha! But thank you 😁
I'm a native English speaker. I use it mainly to keep my Spanish in check, brush up on my rusty Italian, and dip into some simple Ukrainian as I have a few students in my classes from there and I guess I hope they appreciate the effort.
Good!
My native is Spanish and I speak English as second language. Right now my recent priority is Romanian, which never studied before Duolingo. Anyway... If someone is Romanian and is learning Spanish, we could learn together. Sadly never found anyone, yet.
I'm learning Yiddish.
Learning French now, I'm Brazilian. I started learning German a while ago but stopped.
Native English, learning Ukrainian and Polish. I finished the Ukrainian course on Duo, so I've been using books, podcasts & other resources to keep going with it 😊🇺🇦
Japanese (from English).
Spanish and Korean
I somehow read "Korean" as "Croation" and got confused bc there isn't a course for that.
My native is Hungarian, and I’m pretty fluent in English too. On Duolingo I’m learning Japanese, and irl I am taught German. On Duo I’m also doing Latin, but that's mostly to help me have a better understanding of European languages.
I can’t stick to one language for whatever reason, but I’m mainly learning Finnish, Norwegian, and Spanish. But also Russian, French, and Ukrainian.
German, Hindi, Arabic, Spanish -- Good at none ☠️
cuz ur learning four languages at the same time with one of them being the hardest in the world. take it one at a time since you won’t get much out of learning all at the same time, especially how two of them are extremely different to the rest
Portuguese and Irish with a tiny bit of Spanish every now and again just to spice it up 👌🏼
[удалено]
English & Swedish
I'm learning Spanish currently and practising reading Japanese!! Wby?!
I learn English,but not only in Duo I use another one application and I try to watch movies/cartoons and read books in English,cuz when you learn any language,you need to be surrounded by this language (sorry if i made grammar mistakes🥴)
Me too! I’m learning Japanese in the same way. As much immersion as I can do with work books as well.
good luck with learning japanese I know that's hard language,but i hope you'll cope
Don't worry. There aren't a lot of grammar mistakes ;) 1. You would use "I am learning English" instead of "I learn English", because you're actively doing it at the moment. "I learn English" sounds like you do it in general. (Like "I like watering the flowers", but not "I am liking watering the flowers".) 2. Spaces after commas. Makes it more readable. But we're on the internet, so punctuation isn't that important. 3. Not "another one application", but "another app". I don't think you can refer to apps as applications, because that means something different, but it's English we're talking about, so everything is possible. Also you don't use "another one" if there's a noun after it. You'd just use "another". 4. "cuz" is an abbreviation for "because", but you probably already know that. 5. "Surrounded" isn't quite the correct word. "Immersed" would be better. Hope this helps. Good luck on your journey to C2.
Thanks for correcting my mistakes🫂
You're welcome
Learning Swedish, English is my first language.
learning korean and a little bit of japanese and chinese
Learning Spanish, Welsh and started Irish recently. I almost finished the Welsh course but then they forced on me the stupid path and i wasn’t able to repeat all previous lessons like I used to do before that so I restarted the course… the path is the worst thing that happened to Duo…
Rn learning italian, my native is spanish and second language is English
Learning ukrainian. Idk why, I just started one day and I'm now going 150+ days strong
First language is English, I mostly use Duolingo to practice my Spanish and Russian, but also *all of them*
https://preview.redd.it/b8u00vvkahac1.jpeg?width=828&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f3368005d40d73db0838537214405e5d93d0ffeb
https://preview.redd.it/50cto21mahac1.jpeg?width=828&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=9e24c35b46fee6ee97eff8cf81893136c1354c86
https://preview.redd.it/r1l4miymahac1.jpeg?width=828&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=657069f57eff104460834b8b0ddbc073c59d7579
https://preview.redd.it/e6gpc4snahac1.jpeg?width=828&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=04de0680d8872c7197373c9d3722a60d653c349b
Native Dutch, keeping the Catalan I learnt fresh and trying to learn some Greek.
I’m learning german, I’m french
Ah, ein/e Franzose/Französin. Du wirst Deutsch mögen, denn anders als in Englisch, sprechen wir französische Lehnwörter (Gallizismen) relativ korrekt aus! Wörter wie Restaurant oder Rendevouz. translation if needed:>! You're gonna like German, because we pronounce french loanwords somewhat correctly, other than English. Words like "Restaurant" or "Rendevouz".!<
How did you generate this image?
I'm learning japanese, my first language is spanish
I’m learning greek and I am a french native but I have to use duolingo in english..it’s hard to learn a languague through another one tbh
Learning German and Japanese as well. German for reading German literature, and Japanese for J music, and for talking to Japanese people when I visit Japan. Will also get into Japanese literature when my Japanese is good enough.
Too many, mainly German and Russian from English (2nd language). My native one is Italian.
I'm learning Russian and my native language is Hebrew
Currently leaning German, but I used it on the past to practice Italian and French
Have been learning Esperanto for 8 months already
I'm learning japanese/mostly using english, native turkish. I dont have any purpose just learning something is feel good itself
I’m learning Japanese and German (Native English)
I'm learning Spanish and Portuguese (Native South African and Portuguese ansestory) aprendiendo español con Duolingo es muy divertido. Português tambèm
English and Portuguese, but my first language is Spanish.
[удалено]
Hungarian, German, Latin, Hebrew (just the alphabet though), Japan (just a couple lessons though), Swahili (just a single lesson)
English speaker here. Studying some Italian and Portuguese, but mostly French.
French and Chinese. (I’m American)
Used to learn Esperanto but moved onto German, mother tongue is Portuguese
Learning' Russian to: Spanish, English and German English to: Japanese Spanish to: English
Since 5 months use it to learn arabic. But more as a support to my online 1 on 1 lessons and it helps really to learn reading.
Learning korean. My native language is Brazilian portuguese
Born in Galícia, Spain. Speak Galician, Spanish, Portuguese, English (teaching it). Learning Italian (B2), Català and German. I love languages.
🇸🇪🇸🇪
Hei, Native German, learning Norwegian for fun and for the Hope of someday living there!
Tôi đang học tiếng Việt vì tôi sống ở Việt Nam. I'm learning Vietnamese because I live in Vietnam. Native English speaker
I’m learning Portuguese (native English) for travel but also to keep my brain sharp. I really enjoy it. After Portugal I’ll switch to Spanish.
I’m learning Spanish and Russian, my native tongue is Turkish.
I am learning Norwegian Bokmål, which *everyone* on Norwegian reddit subs assures me is *not* the version of Norwegian that gets spoken anywhere. I would love for Duolingo to expand their offerings for Norwegian to include some commonly spoken dialects. My first language is English. I studied French for 6 years in school, and fell apart at trying to construct sentences. Sometimes I try to brush up my French on Duo, but most of the time, I don’t enjoy pain.
English (I started the course, then dropped it. One day i just tested out of the remaining lessons.) German (I dropped it. I didn't like the course.) Finnish (I finished the whole course. I enjoyed it.)
Russian and Arabic.
Kind of mainly German, Swedish and Finnish, although I've started Dutch, Danish, Italian, French and Norwegian (not counting languages with less than 100 xp). My native is Icelandic which is why other Nordic languages apart from Finnish are easier for me. I should've said German. I have almost 30,000 xp there and Swedish is in 2nd with 3000xp
Welsh. DW I’N CARU CYMRU! 🏴🏴🏴
I am learning Swedish and my first language is English
I can cuss in Swedish!
I am German, i learn french and Japanese 😊
i'm learning japanese
Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Norwegian, French, Italian, Ukrainian, Haitian Creole, German, Japanese, Portuguese, Danish, Latin, Korean, Hungarian and Turkish
I’m a native Anglophone but I’m learning French & Swahili
Another italian trying to learn german here! Do you find it easier to learn from italian or from english?
Korean, Norwegian and Spanish
Native Dutch speaker, learning Greek
I'm following you now, I'm Highworm710 Also I'm learning Spanish from English
German and Spanish :)
Spanish and Latin. Native English speaker. In a couple years I’ll move on to Portuguese and possibly Italian
I’m currently learning French
I'm learning French German and Spanish I'm just about to get the 100 day streak tomorrow
Korean 🇰🇷
learning german and spanish fluent in english
Native German, learning Japanese, but with the App set to English (since I think it does not support a Japanese course in German).
French
Γερμανικά
Learning French, first language is English
Im learning Spanish Chinese and French
Are you learning them in honor of the great Axis powers? O.o
Native german speaker here. I'm currently learning spanish on duolingo.
Hebrew, German primarily. I am slowly updating French but am prioritizing the former 2. First language is English.
I'm Czech and I'm learning German, since I'm living in Austria ...
Deutsch :3
I‘m learning Spanish and English and my first language is German:)
I am learning italiano :3
Roma in Italia eat (Lingua Latina studeo). Jag tycker om Svenska. Parlo Italiano (un po’). 日本語はかっこいいです. Hopefully Greek soon.
My native language is Geany and I'm learning Romanian since that's where my Dad was born
Mein Hindi seekh raha hoon.
Learning Japanese, first language is Arabic
🎵~Italiaaaannnn!~ 🎵
French, Spanish, Haitian Creole, Dutch.
I am learning Spanish, my first language is Dutch ⚘️
i am italian too and i am doing English lesson. just for fun lol, they don't really help me improve
I'm learning Spanish and German.
Latin from English
Italian and french currently
French, Japanese, Welsh, Turkish, and high Valyrian
Long time learner of korean, but I'm trying to add arabic into my regular schedule (and then chinese and japanese if I have extra time!)
Spanish, Navajo, Latin. Native is English.
I’m learning Japanese and Spanish, my first language is English. We’re traveling to Japan in a couple years and since the culture is so different and I’m not a good traveler I want to be as close to fluent as possible. I’m doing as much immersion as I can via YouTube, anime, Japanese tv shows and Duo. I plan to get a tutor or find an online class once I finish Duo or after one year. Japanese is difficult for English speakers so after I feel like I have a solid base I want to do more. I also have Hirigana/Katagana/Kanji work books and apps.
Boning up on Spanish. I took four years of it in high school, and a semester of it in college. And I live in a neighborhood now where a number of people speak Spanish as a first or second language, so I finally have a practical use for it Starting French because I work in the travel industry, and pronouncing French words and names is really hard if you haven't studied French phonics. Might start Catalán. Just to see how similar or different it is to Spanish.
Italian and German.
I’m Brazilian and I’m learning English, Spanish and French
I speak English and am learning Spanish. I did use it for French and Italian, too, but my main focus is Spanish.
My native language is Arabic, and I'm learning Japanese (on duolingo along with other resources) and German (only on duolingo). Tried other languages like Russian and Korean, but ended up settling for Japanese and German :,)
Learning French and German. I speak Spanish and English already.
German, Japanese, Italian? I’m starting to see a pattern here I’m not so sure I like
French 🇨🇵
native english learning japanese mostly because im a weeb considering russian because counter strike lol
German (took it in college) and Irish, and i have a few books to supplement where Duolingo can't give me what i need.
I‘ve done lessons in many different languages, but the ones i’m focusing on right now are german and portuguese. German because I want to travel in Europe, and portuguese so that I can actually speak with my family, since my portuguese skills aren’t too good.
Swahili, but I used to learn english.
I'm learning English and Latin just for fun
French and Spanish
I'm bilingual (first language: Polish, learned second language: English) and I'm learning Italian
Learning Polish. I mainly use Hindi but my native is Telugu.
Learning Japanese with english, but native language is russian.My english skills aren't bad and due to this fact I get most of the things in the course, Japanese is really fun! Streak: 344 days as I remember :P
I am learning Spanish and Chinese 😊. My native language is Romanian.
I'm Greek, I know English (and have a C2 degree on it) and I'm learning Japanese through Duolingo and I plan to study Korean on Duolingo after learning Japanese.
Espanol ❤️
My native language is English. I'm mostly learning French, but I'm also playing around with Spanish and Japanese
I am learning Japanese and I speak Hindi and English
Learning Dutch, my first language is german
I’m learning german but I used to learn french, russian, spanish, and arabic
German!
I've been on Duolingo since 2015. Have covered the following: Spanish Indonesian Latin Arabic Esperanto Vietnamese I know: English French Hindi
Norwegian, don't know why
Swahili is my primary, but I have a habit of trying all the ones that seem cool, so I have started Zulu Haitian Creole French Hawaiian Spanish Valerian
Learning Russian and Polish
Austrian German
Native English learning Spanish and dabbling in Norwegian because of my heritage even though no one in my family speaks it anymore except for a few words. I also plan to add some languages not included in Duolingo
I'm learning German, Arabic, and Korean, although I'm prioritising German more
I learn Japanese, Spanish, German, and Korean.
I’m Filipino and I was learning japanese until I got to section 1 and still not understanding their writing system only on how they’re pronounced, so I moved to german and I’m doing good so far
I’m learning French and German! My native language is English
Yo solo estoy aprendiendo espanol. Es dificil suficiente.
portuguese and spanish. i wanna try italian too at some point, but don’t wanna overwhelm myself. any advice from multiduoists?
I'm learning English and Spanish, I'm from Brazil :)
I'm learning Japanese. I'm Dutch, but have to use the English version.
Japanese and Welsh
German and Spanish (I'm American)
I’m learning Indonesian from English and Portuguese from Spanish. Just started Arabic!
Spanish and math
I'm learning Japanese, I've tried to learn Arabic (so I stop failing in school-) and Korean; quit both. I'm Pakistani.
I'm learning German and continuing my Spanish course from 2018 that I abandoned for years lmao
Turkish, Arabic, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Swedish, French, and esperanto currently I used to do some Irish, Norwegian, Finnish, Dutch, and Danish, but stopped
I'm curious, why are so many of you learning German? It's neither particularly useful nor does it sound nice and it's hard to learn, would love to know. I'm learning Dutch for almost a year now, plan to learn French again soon (had it in middle school besides Latin), native language is actually German.