I can only speak English fluently however I do know quite a bit of French but not enough to be semi-fluent or fluent. If I read something that's in French I can just about get the gist of what's being said and then eventually put the sentence together with the words I didn't understand before but I wouldn't say i'm fluent or semi fluent.
i live in the netherlands so i can speak dutch and also english both very fluent. also trying to learn my mother language portuguese since im half dutch half portuguese and trying to learn japanese but damn i never will be able to read all those kanji.
I speak Dutch (obviously.) and English. I can also understand German, but I can't speak it LOL. but it sounds a lot like dutch so. I have been to Japan so I know a few words. AND I speak veterinary terminology XD which is a language on it's own. (lot of Latin tho)
German, English, Italian and French. German is my mother tongue, and I have a pretty good command of English. French works fairly well, too, and I'd love to perfect my Italian skills as I'm a big fan of Italy and my ancestors have been from Italy. I would really appreciate if somebody who wants to write in French or Italian sends me a message
I'm a native English speaker. I took Spanish and Italian classes in high school but had no interest and remember none of it. I'm now learning ASL to help me with my job (I work with disabled people who communicate through asl).
german and english fluently. german is my first language.
and i can a little bit of french. i had it in school for 4 years but i forgot most of it xD
oh and i had latin for two years if that counts haha
My native language is Polish, but as a result of living in England for most of my life I'm more fluent in English. I can speak some French as I learnt it in school for 3 years, but I had a gap of around 9 months because when I moved to Poland my school didn't do French, but I'm moving to a school that has French, so I'll be studying it again from September.
I can speak a bit of German after studying it for a school year, but only enough for simple communication.
I'm learning Japanese in my free time, I suppose I'm doing quite well xD
As for learning a slavic language- stay away from Polish unless you really want a challenge. The grammar is challenging even for native speakers who have spent their whole lives in Poland, and in school we study grammar until the age of 17. The cases, aspects, seven grammatical genders, and so much more can be super difficult to grasp for non-native speakers. We have textbooks and tests for grammar, and I know that some people in my class struggle with the tests despite being native speakers who have lived there and attended school there all their lives.