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Notes -
Aren't continentals generally expected to learn their own country's official language, English, and a third language?
I live in Sweden. The vast majority of people I come into contact with speak English and Swedish. Almost none speak a third language (that I know of), unless they're originally from another country.
IME the whole "Europeans all speak 3-4 languages" meme is standard reddit European superiority complex.
Perhaps this is a class thing? Me and most of my friends can at least make our way in countries speaking our third language and understand media in it.
It is a broken form of the languages but enough of it is there to make yourself understood and would serve as a solid base for immersion based learning.
Yeah, me too, but all my friends are IT guys that moved to another country, so that lines up perfectly with what he said. Either way, it being a class thing throws a wrench into the "generally expected to" idea.
I responded more the "almost none speak a third language", which I found to be false. In my experience, plenty of people do but it's by no means some universal thing and is mostly restricted to a subsection of the university educated.
I'd say the third language education generally doesn't teach people a third language, it provides a base for effective immersion based learning.
I don't get it. Even though I'm in the same situation as you - my friends tend to know 2 foreign languages - that's still "almost no one".
I'd say it's perhaps 15-20% of the population without foreign parents. I would define almost none as <5%, IE lizardman constant territory.
I just disagree on the facts. I'd cut your numbers by half. That might be above your threshold, but not by much.
Could be a difference between countries as well. You're in Germany, are you not?
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