Poll: Do/did you speak more than one language at home?
Autor da sequência: ProZ.com Staff
ProZ.com Staff
ProZ.com Staff
STAFF DO SÍTIO
Feb 17, 2025

This forum topic is for the discussion of the poll question "Do/did you speak more than one language at home?".

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Muhibullah Hussain
 
neilmac
neilmac
Espanha
Local time: 10:08
Espanhol para Inglês
+ ...
Other Feb 17, 2025

When I was a child, my mother had studied French and German, and sometimes she would say to my dad "Pas devant l'enfant" ... and somehow I intuitively knew what it meant. Apart from that, no, we were a monolingual family.
However, since coming to live in Spain as an adult, there has often been a lot of switching between Spanish and English, or French, depending on the company.


 
Lieven Malaise
Lieven Malaise  Identity Verified
Bélgica
Local time: 10:08
Membro (2020)
Francês para Holandês
+ ...
No Feb 17, 2025

No, I didn't.

Interesting topic, though. Growing up learning 2 languages has advantages, the most important one ultimately being very fluent in both.

But if I'm not mistaken the big disadvantage is that most of those people end up with bad writing skills in both languages. This would be at least true in Belgium for the French/Dutch combo.

[Bijgewerkt op 2025-02-17 09:11 GMT]


Enrico Zoffoli
 
Maria Teresa Borges de Almeida
Maria Teresa Borges de Almeida  Identity Verified
Portugal
Local time: 09:08
Membro (2007)
Inglês para Português
+ ...
No Feb 17, 2025

My father was born in Cape Verde but at home he only spoke Creole very occasionally. When I was living in Belgium I did a lot of switching between French and Portuguese, even now when I struggle to express my thoughts some words come into my mind more easily in French than in Portuguese…

[Edited at 2025-02-17 10:34 GMT]


 
WolfgangS
WolfgangS
França
Local time: 10:08
Inglês para Alemão
+ ...
Yes Feb 17, 2025

I met my (French) wife in Italy where we lived for a long time. Now we're in France and speak both Italian and French, some German, too.

[Edited at 2025-02-17 13:27 GMT]


 
expressisverbis
expressisverbis
Portugal
Local time: 09:08
Inglês para Português
+ ...
No... Feb 17, 2025

... and it depends on the situation... while I don’t regularly speak other languages at home, working as a translator sometimes requires me to use my working languages in spoken communication.
It's more a practical necessity rather than a natural multilingual household environment.
Sometimes, I speak one of my three working languages to my cat and he picks everything 😂
Having a multilingual conversation with him from time to time is another way to keep my working language
... See more
... and it depends on the situation... while I don’t regularly speak other languages at home, working as a translator sometimes requires me to use my working languages in spoken communication.
It's more a practical necessity rather than a natural multilingual household environment.
Sometimes, I speak one of my three working languages to my cat and he picks everything 😂
Having a multilingual conversation with him from time to time is another way to keep my working languages fresh!
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Ma. Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
Vanessa Dias
Maria Laura Curzi
 
Carla Selyer
Carla Selyer  Identity Verified
Local time: 10:08
Membro (2006)
Português para Inglês
+ ...
Immersion in two languages Feb 17, 2025

We grew up in a strict home where we were only allowed to speak Portuguese, although we were living in a predominantly English-speaking country. It was very strange to be immersed in English outside of home and then to be immersed in Portuguese at home, and the immersion extended to cultural influences, too. Nonetheless, it was fun to grow up bilingual and then to later study languages in a formal environment and it did put a love of all Romance languages and culture in me!

Ma. Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
 
Juan Jacob
Juan Jacob  Identity Verified
México
Local time: 02:08
Francês para Espanhol
+ ...
Sure! Feb 17, 2025

French with father, Spanish and Catalan with mother, English with The Beatles!

Ma. Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
Kay Denney
 
Ma.  Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
Ma. Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
Estados Unidos da América
Inglês para Espanhol
+ ...
Sort of Feb 17, 2025

Grew up mostly in Argentina so Castilian Spanish is really my native language. But my father's side of the family was all educated in British schools, and my grandfather, from Chile, would only speak to us in English.
My father and aunt who lived at home did so at least half the time.
My siblings and I did the same - mainly when we did not want our mom to know what we were planning
We were educated in Briti
... See more
Grew up mostly in Argentina so Castilian Spanish is really my native language. But my father's side of the family was all educated in British schools, and my grandfather, from Chile, would only speak to us in English.
My father and aunt who lived at home did so at least half the time.
My siblings and I did the same - mainly when we did not want our mom to know what we were planning
We were educated in British schools as well, and this is probably why we use a mixture of both languages in the same sentences. Either we don't remember the word in the language we are using, or our brains think the other language describes it better. Friends laugh & complain about this "quirk", and find it funny that we had a good education and still are "unable" to speak "normally".

P.S.: My dad had Alzheimer, and in the last 2 years of his life he suddenly started speaking only in English. This caused quite a bit of a problem with the nurses and doctors. Always marveled at the mystery of our brains & their relation to words & languages, probably part of why I love being a translator.
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Maria Laura Curzi
 
Vanessa Dias
Vanessa Dias
Brasil
Local time: 05:08
Inglês para Português
+ ...
Not as a child Feb 17, 2025

But I've lived with italians for a while and felt this weirdness of, sometimes for days, using my mother tongue only in my thoughts.

[Editada em 2025-02-17 18:29 GMT]


Ma. Alejandra Padilla-LaCour
Christine Andersen
 
Novian Cahyadi (X)
Novian Cahyadi (X)  Identity Verified

Local time: 15:08
Yes Feb 18, 2025

Standard Indonesian and Javanese.

 
Kay Denney
Kay Denney  Identity Verified
França
Local time: 10:08
Francês para Inglês
. Feb 20, 2025

Only English when growing up, then with my children there were always three different languages on the go.

We lived in a quaint little street with hardly any cars passing through, so children played in the street just like when I was growing up in the 60s. My son played with children of all sorts of different nationalities: our next door neighbours were Vietnamese, round the back they were Moroccan, opposite they were Serbs... The kids would play outdoors and sometimes go into each
... See more
Only English when growing up, then with my children there were always three different languages on the go.

We lived in a quaint little street with hardly any cars passing through, so children played in the street just like when I was growing up in the 60s. My son played with children of all sorts of different nationalities: our next door neighbours were Vietnamese, round the back they were Moroccan, opposite they were Serbs... The kids would play outdoors and sometimes go into each others' homes for glasses of water, plasters for scraped knees, and to raid the biscuit tin.
One day we were invited to dinner with the French couple who lived next door to the Serbs. My 4yo son heard the daughter speaking to her parents in French and asked "but why don't you speak to your parents in *your* language?"
He apparently thought that French was the lingua franca everyone used to communicate outside but at home everyone had a language of their very own.
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Poll: Do/did you speak more than one language at home?






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