I am from time to time confronted with the question, "How many languages do you speak?" and the answer is usually difficult because I'm not sure what level of proficiency people are asking about. I suspect that a lot of people around here speak more than one language and that many people have some knowledge of a language but would pause and say "er..." or some variant of that if someone asked if they knew or spoke it.
Indeed.
The thing is that I think the answer to the question varies, depending on why you're being asked. For business purposes, I list several languages in my bio because I want to get as much business as possible. Even there, though, I don't list all the languages that I've studied (and that's not restricted to the dead languages). On Facebook, I haven't listed any languages because the people who do are usually (but not always - I add that because I haven't looked at what all my friends listed ) also the same people who are bragging about this, that and the other and so it seems a bit pretentious.
Yeah. One of my friends had ten languages listed on her Facebook last I saw. Now, there's no question that she's brilliant in languages, and she's a Fleming who grew up in Luxembourg, making her quadrilingual or quintilingual almost per definition, and most of the other six are Slavic languages that are all related to each other, but even so it seems like a bit of a stretch if your criterium for "knowing" a language is to speak it fluently and understand/read it without effort.
Of course, I also remember when I started working at my first law firm. They had a "face book" (physical thing, not social media) for all the new attorneys, and a very nice young woman listed as her languages "French, Ancient Greek, Latin" when I am fairly certain that only living languages were requested (for purposes of staffing attorneys to particular transactions - perhaps she was angling for a nice deal with the Vatican).
Heh. I think that's something Americans are more inclined to do - since Americans often take only one foreign language in high school, and sometimes that one language is Latin, so it makes sense for them to list it somehow, to show they did learn something in their one foreign language class. Or at least that's the impression I get.
1. How much of a language should you know to tell someone you know it?
I'm inclined to say the most crucial criterium would be basic conversational fluency. Which is why I hesitate to state that I "know" Arabic, even after all the effort I've put into it, and despite the fact that I know certain words or grammatical things about standard/Classic Arabic that even many Arabs wouldn't know.
But of course it depends on the context. If the context of the conversation is clearly about being able to read, you might claim to know a language even though you can barely speak it.
2. How much of a language should you know to list on a resume or work bio?
Apparently I'm the only one here who does this, judging by the answers, but it's quite common here... on my resume, I distinguish between the different aspects of knowing a language when listing my language abilities. For instance, I can read books and texts in German, and with some more effort in Portuguese and even Italian, which might be useful to my employer for some purposes, even when my conversational German is dubious and my conversational Portuguese non-existent. Of course, for jobs that have nothing to do with Italian or Portuguese, I won't bother listing that. If I listen every language I "know" to any degree on my CV, it starts to look absurd, particularly when half of them are followed by qualifiers. So I list the ones I speak at a decent level, and those of the rest that might be relevant to the job in question.
3. How much of a language should you know to list on social media?
That entirely depends on how much it's about bragging.
4. How many languages do you know and what are they?
There are four languages that I feel I can say I "know", without too many qualifiers. From best to worst: Dutch, English, French, Spanish. Then if you go into the more dubious cases, German, which I read nearly as easily as I do French thanks to its similarity to Dutch, but can't write or speak too well, and Arabic, which is a complicated case. And then the ones that I'd only list in very specific circumstances: Portuguese, Italian, Turkish, Finnish, and the dead languages Latin, Ancient Greek and Ancient Hebrew (with the dead languages I suppose my criterium is being able to read a text given a good dictionary, a grammar for occasional consultation and huge amounts of time - i.e., knowing the alphabet, the most important grammar and some amount of vocabulary).
/Simple Question: at what point do you tell people you "know" a language or "speak" it?
24/06/2011 02:49:51 AM
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Here's what I tell various people
24/06/2011 03:09:45 AM
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It's interesting that you focus on the literary side
24/06/2011 03:29:36 AM
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I do that because I make some money from translations, so I have to "know" at least one other, no?
24/06/2011 03:41:24 AM
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Re: /Simple Question: at what point do you tell people you "know" a language or "speak" it?
24/06/2011 01:21:52 PM
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I think if you would be able to make not just basic needs known...
24/06/2011 04:58:05 PM
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Very good question.
24/06/2011 08:22:47 PM
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I had a feeling you might enjoy the survey.
24/06/2011 10:50:47 PM
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What can I say, I'm predictable?
25/06/2011 01:00:49 AM
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Two words: constant practice
25/06/2011 02:34:52 AM
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"Sank beneath the the waves of the Lethe" is an incredible phrase. *NM*
26/06/2011 06:01:00 AM
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If you have at least an elementary school understanding of the language
24/06/2011 10:19:45 PM
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My own survey answers
24/06/2011 11:07:12 PM
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Funny how your taste in languages still to learn parallels mine to a great extent.
25/06/2011 01:04:36 AM
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Yeah, and I realized that last list should include Farsi and Arabic.
25/06/2011 02:24:06 AM
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Oh, and Hawaiian. I have about seven books on Hawaiian. All bought in Hawaii, of course. *NM*
25/06/2011 02:35:43 AM
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I suppose Farsi must be easier than Arabic.
26/06/2011 11:18:23 AM
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Re: /Simple Question: at what point do you tell people you "know" a language or "speak" it?
29/06/2011 11:25:42 PM
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