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By weird language, I mean a language not typically learned by people. (This isn't supposed to be a controversial question, please don't make it so)

2006-10-06 23:31:09 · 26 answers · asked by The Great Walrus 5 in Society & Culture Languages

Like I said, NOT CONTROVERSIAL, and by the way, I obviously speak English, what I am speaking right now.

2006-10-06 23:39:55 · update #1

Like I said, NOT CONTROVERSIAL, and by the way, I obviously speak English, what I am speaking right now. The language can be different from what you are used to, not just me.

2006-10-06 23:40:40 · update #2

I speak some Turkish. A bit, but not much.

2006-10-06 23:48:44 · update #3

26 answers

In my country your language is weird.
I speak Romanian........

2006-10-06 23:34:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

I'm a Turk and the weird language I speak is English. Ahah wait but English is not weird, it's typically learned by people. But then I speak a little German, hmm is that typically learned by animals?

Man, your wording in this question is just weird.

2006-10-07 08:39:57 · answer #2 · answered by Earthling 7 · 1 0

well i speak a language that no longer is taught to schools

It is the language of people once lived in Pontos (now belongs to Turkey)

my people lived there until 1922.

their language is based on ancient Greek (totally greek alphabet) with a few Turkish words - it is Greek but now days Greeks cant understand that language (Pontiaka is the name)

i am Greek but this is my ancestors language
we keep alive Pontiaka through our songs, books and traditions - there is no place where you can learn to speak or write this language
some people in Tabzon (city in Turkey near Black sea) and in some villages in Greece still communicate in Pontiaka

i wish i could use this language more cause it is a historical one. it is still alive but difficult to remain cause as i said, their is no schools for it

Regards

2006-10-07 02:50:40 · answer #3 · answered by ..Tolia.. 5 · 1 0

i think that there are a lot of people who know languages including Auslan and lots people living near me talk in the aboriginal local language and use some as slang
eg for small use nini which means tiny baby
i have studdied basic wangatha but no way would consider myself speaking but many do

2006-10-06 23:40:30 · answer #4 · answered by barb 1 · 0 0

Bibbel Cobosbeebee Speebeek
It is a language invented in America of all places, broadcast to millions of people, but only a few of us remain who can still speak it.

2006-10-06 23:59:46 · answer #5 · answered by Big Blair 4 · 0 0

Indonesian, Hokkian, Geijia

2006-10-06 23:37:25 · answer #6 · answered by Papilio paris 5 · 0 0

well, my mother tongue greek in not very common like the others i speak (french, spanish, english)..i also speak some urdu which is spoken by 130 millions of pakistanis but here in the west is kinda rare

2006-10-07 01:23:16 · answer #7 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

My language here in Australia isn't weird.
ITS ENGLISH, but I speak a cross between UK english and NZ english, it just depends on what I'm saying at any one time.

thanks

2006-10-06 23:39:36 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

inde kuziwa chichewa kwambili
I know chichewa very much
inoso pangono senna, lomwe, yao
as well as a little senna, lomwe, yao
a weird language would be Xhosa it is all clicks

as well as speaking in tongues (glossalalia) now thats weird

2006-10-07 08:00:36 · answer #9 · answered by proscunio 3 · 0 0

I only speak normal languages, but my kids speak Swiss-German. It is typically learned by people who move here as children, otherwise not. (I'm really only learning High German.)

2006-10-07 00:00:39 · answer #10 · answered by Goddess of Grammar 7 · 0 1

I speak Vogon fluently, but it is not so easy to write on a human keyboard.

2006-10-07 00:12:11 · answer #11 · answered by Vogon Poet 5 · 0 0

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