I took French forever at school, so I'm good enough at that to get by. I also know some Japanese and Spanish, though not nearly enough to be considered fluent.
I really want to learn Russian, though. About half my customers at work are Russian, and it would be really helpful to be able to do more than point at things and ask, "да?" or "Нet?"
English as first language, German to a reasonable degree, as my mum tried to bring me up bilingual; it didn't work, but I'm still quite good at German.
Aaaand GCSE French, of which I can only remember how to conjugate verbs and make the past perfect, sort of... Ish...
I can also say I have a headache in French. Or that my knee hurts.
Oh, and I can do a very limited amount of BSL signs - basically, "scared", "sad", "I love you", "noise", and I like to think I know "underground train" too, but I'm not sure I do.
If the bombs go off, the sun will still be shining, 'Cause I've heard it said that every mushroom cloud has a silver lining.
Well sometimes you just profess your love for them in general :P
Yes, yes I do. Quite often. Did I forget to mention my general love of them in this thread? How could that be possible? :O Shocking, I tell ya, shocking.
Polyglots are awesome. In fact, polyglots occupy a special super-awesome room in the world of awesomeness. Yes. However, I am not a polyglot myself, which is sad. I need to become fluent in another language, just so I can use that word in relation to myself.
Oh haiii - English as a first language and then Welsh - enough to get by on when I need it, I had a flatmate last year who forgot his English when drunk/tired, so my Welsh got alot better then!
that sounds familiar, i picked some welsh up off my un housemate but in the many years since i left uni i've forgotton a lot i used to know other than random bits n bobs