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Well, there's this idea that I'm going to use spanish more.

I live in California.

2006-06-12 14:40:31 · 31 answers · asked by Coffee-Infused Insomniac 3 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

31 answers

Spanish is one of the most spoken languages in the world. Especially living in California. You are way more likely to speak Spanish. Most likely within a few years in California, you would be most likely to speak Spanish that English.

2006-06-12 14:44:12 · answer #1 · answered by L 619 2 · 3 2

Spanish

2006-06-12 14:44:06 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Spanish

2006-06-12 14:42:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Spanish

2006-06-12 14:41:49 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You learn French if you live in Quebec or France. You wouldn't learn Spanish. However south of the border, you would learn Spanish. You wouldn't learn French. In California, as well as other states, wave after wave of Hispanics have swept in. So as a matter of pure practicality, learn Spanish. The more you are immersed in a language the better the odds of truly learning it becomes. Not much chance of becoming fluent in French in California. Lots of chance to become fluent in Spanish in California, and perhaps trips to Mexico and beyond. I do recommend a Spanish school if you have such a desire. It is Proyecto Linguistico Francisco Marroquin in Antigua, Guatemala.
Ambassadors send their aides there to learn Spanish. The Peace Corp sends there people there to learn Spanish. You pay for a block of time (X amount of weeks). You stay with a family. Each week you are assigned a teacher. You meet with this teacher one on one. She does not speak English. Every week you get a different teacher. The teacher/student ratio is always one to one. Antigua is a lovely place. You would thoroughly enjoy it. Antigua es la tierra de la eterna primavera, según la gente alla.

2006-06-12 14:59:33 · answer #5 · answered by pshdsa 5 · 0 0

I studied, talk and train each Spanish and French. I taught very younger secondary college boys (eleven years historic) who studied each Spanish and French in combination. That was once the curriculum in our college method. And so, I would not hesitate to propose each directly. Both languages have many elements (notably grammar and idioms) in ordinary, and if lecturers are good knowledgeable and adequately grounded in overseas language guideline ways, they may be able to emphasize the ones connections. In that manner, they will make finding out less difficult and high-quality amusing for the pupils. But If I needed to opt for one earlier than the opposite, I'd do Spanish first, as it's the less difficult of the 2, notably in pronunciation. it's not real to mention that the 2 languages are not anything alike. They each derive from Latin/Romance roots and maintain many ordinary vocabulary phrases (most likely with best mild alterations in inflections).

2016-09-09 00:38:28 · answer #6 · answered by marceau 4 · 0 0

Spanish would probably be the best choice. But only choose one! See, I took four years of french and loved it. Then I had to take a foreign language in college and french was full so I took spanish...it's similar so I was mixing it all up. I wrote french on my final exam! Also, you'll probably use more of the spanish. I never use my french and if you don't use it, you lose it. I've almost forgotten all of it!

(yea yea I know my ID is Spanish but I married a hispanic man and had his child..I'm trying to learn!)

2006-06-12 14:50:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Both if you can - although here you would use spanish more

I am fluent in both - Native spanish speaker & I studied french for 6 years (including high school) then got a French Minor

Knowing Spanish, French was easy for me to learn

2006-06-12 17:58:18 · answer #8 · answered by arge 2 · 0 0

French is an awesome language (I'm currently studing it) but Spanish would be good to know since the border of Mexico is really close.

If you are ever going to live or visit France, consider learning French. If not, take Spanish!

2006-06-12 14:44:42 · answer #9 · answered by Katie 3 · 0 0

Yeah i have no doubt its gonna one day be the second language. I mean all other countries school children learn two -three different languages and in the USA we complain about one! I think Spanish is definitly a plus in any business from construction to white collar workers..invest in the time it takes to become bilingual in any language. Spanish is definitly easier coming from someone bilingual in Spanish who also tried French.

2006-06-12 14:46:39 · answer #10 · answered by kristenbeiza 2 · 0 0

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