<p>English + Chinese (native)
French (somewhat fluent)
Italian (a few phrases)</p>
<p>English and Chinese (native)
Spanish (conversational)</p>
<p>English
A little bit of Telugu, an Indian language
A tiny bit of Spanish
Some German</p>
<p>Yoruba (native)
English (fluent)
Latin (intermediate)</p>
<p>5.
'murrican (with a touch of English)
HTML
CSS
JavaScript
PHP</p>
<p>English (native)
Spanish (fluent)
Korean (conversational)
Japanese (conversational)
ASL (conversational)</p>
<p>English-fluently
Spanish-Proficiently (should be fluent next year)
French and Japanese- A little bit, conversationally. My dad is fluent in french and my brother in Japanese.</p>
<p>English- fluently
Spanish- advanced (hopefully fluent if I can just get some immersion)
French- a bit, just started learning this year but knowing Spanish helps a lot
Arabic- beginner (plan on studying in college)</p>
<p>@SaraCo</p>
<p>Lol XD Just because we know many languages doesn’t necessarily make us smart Every human has the ability to pick up and interpret a language may it be their own or completely foreign. Every brain has that ability XD and you do too.</p>
<p>@SaraCo - I was born in China, so naturally I would be fluent in Chinese. I moved to the US when I was about 5, which is young enough to remember Chinese but old enough to learn English at a pretty fast pace. (:</p>
<p>I only know Spanish because I’m taking it in school. I don’t think you have to be a genius to be bilingual (fluent in two languages, not fluent in one and still learning another) - a lot of it has to do with culture and how young you started the language.</p>