Subject: Well. . .
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Posted on: 2016-10-24 14:06:00 UTC

English is my first language, and that was picked up with relative ease. After that, I began developing an interest in alphabets and other languages, specifically dead ones.

Being obsessed with ancient Egyptian culture, I began looking into Middle Kingdom heiroglyphics, and became relatively capable of reading it. I still have a copy of the book I used. "Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs: A Practical Guide-" I used it all through middle school, and it's quite good. I could write to some extent, but it was easier to work in the non-symbolic transliterated form. To this day, I can sound out Tutankhamun's cartouche, despite his having been a useless bugger of a pharaoh whose name deserves to vanish.

I took four years of Spanish, and after a few minutes of conversation I can usually follow what's going on, and participate to a horribly stunted degree. Never got much practice using it in conversation.

I learned a little Hebrew syntax in the church I did setup for when I was younger. I can recognize basic words like Jerusalem starting with the yud on the far end, along with the more iconic characters like shin and lamed. From there, I have context, and I am VERY good with context.

I also took a year of Mandarin in high school, but my teacher developed cancer, and I was unable to complete the course.

I also have a strange ability to work out most German, and most romance languages I can pick up quite easily, thanks to my spanish and ability to recognize roots.

So I suppose you could sum my ability as a linguist up most succinctly with the phrase "Jack of all trades, master of none." If I get any ground whatsoever, I can usually read pretty much anything.

Maybe not the most relevant post, but I think it's interesting what you can figure out with a little basic knowledge.

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