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Librarians volunteering language skills: The Volunteer Thread
message 101:
by
Martha
(new)
Mar 06, 2009 08:28AM
Spanish--Intermediate
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Hi,I am fluent in Dutch, Papiamento and English. I have a good grasp of German. And I have a little bit of Spanish and French.
French - basic: I can read it better than I speak it.Dabble in a smattering of other "romance" languages, including some 15th century French. Willing to give it a go if assistance is required on some titles, maybe some content...from language to English. Can't really go the other way, it's been a long time.
I don't think there are many books written in Gaelic. I am far from an expert, but my impression was that the language tended more to being spoken (and sung) than to having books written in it. At least in the past few hundred years.
Maybe. I don't know, I'm not an expert either. I just know some people who speak it (sometimes in shows, singing) and thought it might be a somewhat known language. One of those people wrote a story in Gaelic, though not published (yet, she's still working on it). That's all I know about it.
The Irish tend to call the language "Irish", not "Gaelic", when speaking English. (When speaking Irish, it's "Gaeilge".) And there is no shortage of books written in Irish.
By the way:http://www.litriocht.com/shop/
I can't tell from that how many are written in Irish and how many are translated into Irish, but cool nonetheless.
(Sorry for the tangent, but thought some might find it interesting.)
Dutch - fluent (my knowledge of Dutch includes Medieval and 17th century Dutch)
German - basic
German - basic
Spanish: fluent (native speaker)French: basic (better at written, not spoken level)
Do you still need help with those two, especially Spanish?
Tess wrote: "Do you still need help with those two, especially Spanish?"We've had a lot of people listing French, Spanish, and German language skills and I wouldn't expect people with only basic knowledge of those languages to be called upon, really. Fluent speakers can hardly go wrong, though!
French: fluentGerman: fluent
Turkish: basic
Russian: basic
Danish: basic
Italian: basic
Well, most are somewhat in between :-D
Portuguese - br - fluent
English - intermediate
Spanish - intermediate
Italian - intermediate
Russian - basic
English - intermediate
Spanish - intermediate
Italian - intermediate
Russian - basic
German: fluent (mother tongue)French: fluent (mother tongue)
I could also help out with my very basic Icelandic, at least it is enough to file, add info and discover mistakes. Actually, I've already been pretty active on Icelandic books and authors.
I can offerGerman - fluent
French - fluent
Finnish - basic
Swedish - basic
if needed Latin - intermediate
and Old-Icelandic - basic
:)
I'd like to volunteer...Bahasa Melayu (Malay) - Fluent
English - Intermediate? (I'm non-native speaker)
- I think, if you rate fluency on non-literacy basis... I was never good at Malay Literature lol... Never good at English Literature either... But, I - I mean, my mother, have a collection of Malay books dated from, I dunno, even before I was born I suppose, I'll look through and keep adding as I go.
Just to say -- English has been our common language for discussion in the Goodreads Librarians group here, so if you're participating here then you don't need to restate it!
German: FluentNorwegian: Intermediate (for the purposes of combining and updating records, I would say fluent)
For the purposes of combining and updating records, I can also get along fine (intermediate:) in Swedish, Danish, and Dutch, as well as some (basic:) French and Spanish.
Put me down however/wherever needed. Thanks.
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