- #1
bagasme
- 79
- 9
Hello all,
Let's say that we had Raul, a random student from a random place. He wanted to study in Quebec (Canada).
Someday, he responded to an online forum thread, stating that learning Spanish is useless if someone is about to move to Canada. But he was curious whether his proposition is true or not.
So instead of learning French (as he is going to Quebec), he learned Spanish, and got good mark on language exams. Then he moved to Quebec for enrolling to a top-tier university in Montreal.
Assuming that Raul only spoke Spanish while Quebecois only spoke French, and they didn't speak English at all during this experiment, could Raul understand what Quebecois said to him? Could he survive his college years with this language gap?
Bagas
Let's say that we had Raul, a random student from a random place. He wanted to study in Quebec (Canada).
Someday, he responded to an online forum thread, stating that learning Spanish is useless if someone is about to move to Canada. But he was curious whether his proposition is true or not.
So instead of learning French (as he is going to Quebec), he learned Spanish, and got good mark on language exams. Then he moved to Quebec for enrolling to a top-tier university in Montreal.
Assuming that Raul only spoke Spanish while Quebecois only spoke French, and they didn't speak English at all during this experiment, could Raul understand what Quebecois said to him? Could he survive his college years with this language gap?
Bagas