this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2025
85 points (94.7% liked)
Map Porn
350 readers
143 users here now
A place to post interesting maps!
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Isn't it taught in school to everyone nowadays? I'd assume that most Irish people know at least a couple of words such as ''hello", "please" and "thank you" that allegedly make you everyone's BFF in the map's dark bluegreen area.
Yeah and pretty much all of America kids have to take multiple years of foreign language during school.
Doesn't mean they learn it unfortunately
Lol I took 5 years worth of foreign language during high school just because I could
1 year French, 2 years Spanish, 2 years Latin. IIRC i took French 1 and Spanish 2 in the same year. And then both Latin classes in senior year (changed schools, block schedule). I'd have taken German too if it wasn't for, you know, graduating.
Languages are fun
My understanding is it is taught like Canadian kids get taught French but that it doesn't tend to stick with most unless they make an effort.
I was taught Spanish in school, it was mostly a failure but I still know hola, por favor and gracias - and that's without having any connection to the spanish-speaking world whatsoever, neither through personal relationships nor through the state (my country doesn't have many spanish-speaking immigrants and doesn't share a border).
Do you think your handful of phrases counts as "speaking" the language? Most of the Irish people I know would know a bit of Irish but most could not have a discussion about anything significant in it.
Language skills fade if you do not use them.
I've been talking about the standard that the map applies to the dark bluegreen area, specifying it multiple times.
And my point is many Irish people know a handful of phrases and cannot hold conversations
Who are you arguing with? I never disputed that.