Canada. better
2007-07-13 11:48:46
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Germany
2007-07-13 23:13:01
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answer #2
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answered by cheri h 7
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Canada
2007-07-06 22:32:16
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answer #3
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answered by Pinar 6
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Germany
2007-07-06 22:27:50
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answer #4
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answered by Mary (dokhtar aryaei) 5
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Germany
2007-07-06 22:27:41
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answer #5
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answered by † Iríšh † 7
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Canada.
2007-07-14 21:45:39
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answer #6
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answered by ? 6
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I think I'd go with Germany. This being as I have been to Canada but not Germany. And a while back I had a woman who I was in touch with on line who was from Taxas but lived in Germany. She told me how much she loved living there and actaully got my interest up in seeing and going there. So I'll go with Germany.
2007-07-06 23:26:40
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answer #7
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answered by GRUMPY 7
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Probably Canada
2007-07-14 20:16:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I was a graduate student in Germany for a year and I learned a lot about how Germans are and their attitude to the rest of the world, so...Canada
2007-07-06 22:28:10
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answer #9
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answered by Superdog 7
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As an individual who speaks English and French, but is three quarters German, I would chose Canada. It would be easy to find Germans who speak English or French. I could learn to speak German from a German and not a wannabe teacher.
Canada is closer to friends and family that I want to keep close too. Now, would my wife move for this? Of course this would be open to wild speculation on my part.
I do know that German has three conditions for its nouns: ferminine, masculine and neuter. La Francais has two, L' Espanol has two also, where as English as none. An example is most nouns are feminine in French because they start with la, the feminine article. A small abount start in Le, the masculine article. La France; feminine, le magazin; masculine.
German might be harder to learn or converse in because of having to rotely memorize them. The could be easy because like in French, the endings give clues: la plage, le garcon; the beach has a feiminine ending iand the boy has a masculine ending. La jeune fille, the young girl ends with two l's in the ending which connots feminine. Men words end in re: pere (father, le fils, the brother ends in ONE l in the ending.
Of course all those say that it would be easier to plunge into the language with a native speaker and experience it and converse rather than learn how to read it. This must come later.
After experiencing the German language from a native German, then I could make the choise if it would be worth it for me to go.
2007-07-14 22:20:29
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answer #10
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answered by vibimmix 1
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Canada! I don't reckon I'd be able to hack it in Germany, the fact that I don't actually speak German certainly wouldn't help it's such a funny language though!
2007-07-06 22:29:48
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answer #11
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answered by spidermonkeyface 1
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