> avogadro wrote:
> lets take primo for example because he is the only european that listed the languages he speaks. he knows his native tongue, and is fluent in english; so far reasonable consistent with the "Our aim is to be able to communicate with other people, regardless where they're from" claim... but then he learned german, italien, and estonian? those languages don't travel well, and at very least germans and italians are far more likely to know english or spanish or french then say chinese or indians would know english, spanish, or french... those languages are wasted ones if his aim was to be able to communicate with other people regardless of where he's from; so either Primo is an idiot who thought those would be the next obvious choices or his goal wasn't to be able to communicate with as many people as possible regardless of where they are from...
German used to be the language of the sciences for a long time, so learning german could be useful for a scientist who has to look into older sources.
Italian closely resembles Spanish, I have found that most Spanish people understand some Italian (also works the other way around), so this might help him communicate with Latin American people as well.
So i wouldn't say those languages were wasted...
Estonian however... i can't really think of a language that's closely related to Estonian that isn't in Europe. As Finnish is in Europe as well and there aren't really a lot of people outside of europe who speak finnish...
Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.