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English!!! Do you speak it???!!!

GFR

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I am sick of all the people in Arizona who do not speak English, or they speak it so poorly it sounds like spanish. I just dread how this part of the country will be 20 years from now. When I was a child I thought I lived in America, now I realize I do not.








015113_Spelling-English-Jules.gif
 
ForemanRules said:
I am sick of all the people in Arizona who do not speak English, or they speak it so poorly it sounds like spanish. I just dread how this part of the country will be 20 years from now. When I was a child I thought I lived in America, now I realize I do not.




True Story, Amigo.
 
Sí Señor
 
ForemanRules said:
I am sick of all the people in Arizona who do not speak English, or they speak it so poorly it sounds like spanish. I just dread how this part of the country will be 20 years from now. When I was a child I thought I lived in America, now I realize I do not.

You are from Arizona I take it?
 
heeeeeeey bendeco,,,u incredeble stupid amigo
 
DOMS said:
Why don't they get the fuck out of my country?



"Why don't you get out of my country?"

native-american.jpg
 
cappo5150 said:
why don't you move to wyoming then
It is over in America, I will probably move to Australia in the next 5-10 years.
 
DOMS said:
Hey, they fought to keep the white man out. Now it's our turn to fight to keep the brown man out.


RACIST! :banned:
 
ForemanRules said:
I am sick of all the people in Arizona who do not speak English, or they speak it so poorly it sounds like spanish. I just dread how this part of the country will be 20 years from now. When I was a child I thought I lived in America, now I realize I do not.
Mexicans are going to take the white man country. I mean they reproduce more than my two balls after a load then been shot.
 
ForemanRules said:
It is over in America, I will probably move to Australia in the next 5-10 years.

I pulled in there for port calls on my way down to Antartica, great place in my book :thumb:
 
joesmooth20 said:
I pulled in there for port calls on my way down to Antartica, great place in my book :thumb:
thats if you like women who can drink you under the table.
 
American English, in all its diversity, is unquestionably our dominant national language, yet the United States has had a complex multilingual history. Long before European settlers colonized North and South America, thousands of indigenous languages thrived from coast to coast. As European colonials and African slaves populated the land, multilingualism increased, with provincial American English dialects dominating. With each new wave of immigrants from every conceivable point on the globe, the nation???s linguistic and cultural diversity continued to grow.

Language planning tended to be neglected during the birth of the American nation. As a result, the political and economic clout of the early English settlers in the original 13 colonies established a sociolinguistic hierarchy that still prevails.

Today, the academic endeavor called linguistics helps us to understand our polyglot nation. Scholars who study applied linguistics, anthropological linguistics, educational linguistics, historical linguistics, dialectology, sociolinguistics and more, have contributed to our understanding of multilingual America.

Although many citizens are deeply committed to the role played by American English as our pre-eminent national language, we should never lose sight of the fact that this nation of immigrants continually experiences ever-changing linguistic tides as new residents yearn to share the American dream. A dream that often exceeds their English fluency.


http://www.pbs.org/speak/speech/sociolinguistics/multilingual/summary/
 
The other day I saw the local gardener mowing the lawn across the street. He waived to me and yelled something in Spanish, sounded like "Pendejo" or something like that. Anyway, I'm sure he was just saying "Hi" or "Good Afternoon", but I'd still feel more comfortable if we were all on the same page linguisticly.
 
IRMonk said:
The other day I saw the local gardener mowing the lawn across the street. He waived to me and yelled something in Spanish, sounded like "Pendejo" or something like that. Anyway, I'm sure he was just saying "Hi" or "Good Afternoon", but I'd still feel more comfortable if we were all on the same page linguisticly.

no-one cares about your "feelings"!!! :rolleyes:
 
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