play Outbreak :wacko:
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play Outbreak :wacko:
I signed up with Onlive, why I don't know :shrug:
:lol
Since people were trying to speak french earlier.
Ma batterie est sur le point de mourir
Au revoir
Later Zal. :wav:
Internet speed where i'm at.
http://www.speedtest.net/result/1500678955.png
:]
I remember enough that I can recognize what part of speech just about everything is in writing, but meanings tend to escape me. From context clues, I end up with about a broken English understanding of the sentence, unless it's extremely simple.
As for speaking, I can never get the meaning. It goes by too fast for me to parse it.
Yeah, speech is a little bit difficult for me to understand. I can usually pick out a few words here and there, but I don't have enough time to really figure it out. I understand most of the meaning, some of it from knowing the words and some of it from basically just figuring out the context of the sentence and applying the only thing that makes sense. It's not a perfect system, but for the amount that I ever really need to read French (re: hardly ever), it serves me well.
I wish I could say the same. My mother's entire family is French-Canadian, so at family reunions I'm a bit useless. I understand a few key phrases, like "Donnez-moi un bier froid." But trying to have a conversation with someone generally ends up with broken English mixed with French.
Pineapple is there with all the salad stuff at Subway here in Oz (it doesn't exist elsewhere?) :revwacko:
I usually get chicken on white untoasted......I usually get Swiss cheese, and I get all the extra stuff except pineapple.
Salt and pepper, but no sauce usually.
I don't eat Hawaiian pizzas either >_<
But I will eat pineapple in a sweets/dessert theme........like fruit salad.
"Biere," with one of dem accent things over the first "e." But yeah, that's a pretty important phrase for French-Canadians. :wacko:
Honestly, the only reason I have been any kind of understanding of French (outside of the classes I took in high school for three years) is from just being bored and reading the French information on products and trying to figure out what it means, then jumping to the English information and looking over it. :shrug: I've never actually had to talk to anyone who only speaks French and fumble my way through a conversation. And even the French-Canadians that I know speak English very well.
Where I live, it would actually be more helpful to learn Mandarin that it would to learn French. :lol
Yeah... they don't offer pineapple here. I don't mind them on certain Hawaiian pizzas, but it really depends -- if they are still holding a lot of liquid and kind of mushy, I don't like 'em. Cooked to shit and dried out from the heat of the oven? Sure, I'll eat 'em. :wacko:
Our Subway choices (at least in my city and every Subway I've ever been to, ever):
Spoiler warning: