| Welcome to Modena. We hope you enjoy your visit. You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free. Join our community! If you're already a member please log in to your account to access all of our features: |
| To Paj: And his chat comment | |
|---|---|
| Tweet Topic Started: Feb 14 2012, 10:01:48 PM (102 Views) | |
| Matarchi | Feb 14 2012, 10:01:48 PM Post #1 |
|
Texas is part of America that used to be Mexican, therefore Spanish is more common there than outside of US Mexico. Augustus dosen't live in US Mexico, as he lives farther north. Statistics then state that he is subject to a lot less Spanish than you are. As a result, it would be harder for him to learn Spanish since he has less immersion in Spanish than you do. You may counter with the statement about why Pelhafor is affluent in multiple languages, is because chances happen, otherwise statistics would be meaningless. All I'm saying is that you are way more likely to find it easier as we do not all possess the same potential or ability. Even minuscule actions can change your personality in such a way that crosses over into other things, and affects them. Since personality is created by immersion into reality, his personality is different than yours so you have the easier time learning Spanish than does according to statistics. There, I explained it. |
![]() |
|
| pajaritos | Feb 14 2012, 10:19:57 PM Post #2 |
|
Statitics have nothing to do with where you live just becasue they say you should something doesnt mean you will learn it , you can learn these three languages any where in the US Spanish, French and English it has nothing to do with where you live in the US |
![]() |
|
| Matarchi | Feb 14 2012, 10:30:39 PM Post #3 |
|
I know you can, but you have more of a drive to learn Spanish if you hear it every day. Augustus probably dosen't. Statistics can be accurate representations of the percentage of people who have any relevance or irrelevance to a subject that they are surveyed for. So yes, you can learn it anywhere in the United States, but then why is it that you almost never hear Spanish in the South? Or the North? Or the Bowl? Or places like that? It's because groups develop "personalities" depending on influencers of the group. The "personalities" tend to affect the people's personality. It gets complicated, but history says that Mexico never owned Oklahoma. Mexicans speak Spanish, they did reach Texas, so Mexicans remained in Texas, while integrating and keeping Spanish. |
![]() |
|
| Matarchi | Feb 14 2012, 10:34:20 PM Post #4 |
|
The group therefore inherited Spanish, increasing the likeliness of "transmission" to future members. That kind of thing didn't affect the group around the North or South so it got integrated into the Federal group, but the higher you go, the less the chance of "transmission" is. |
![]() |
|
| pajaritos | Feb 14 2012, 11:12:39 PM Post #5 |
|
Actually its not true just because you hear it everyday doesnt mean you are more likely to learn it you are going off stats but those are not always something good to go bye when you live in this country |
![]() |
|
| Matarchi | Feb 15 2012, 07:41:40 AM Post #6 |
|
I never said you will, I said you are more likely to learn it easier. If you are part of a group that contains Spanish, then you are more likely to learn Spanish than a non inclusive group. I say likely because he is less likely to understand spanish easier because of his group, while the is still a possibility that he will. Its rarely 50% - 50% of skill transmission. Otherwise, Why don't the majority of British speak Turkish? Or Spain speak Cantonese? Or why Canada's official language dosen't include Arabic? You may argue History!, but that is about what I was saying how individuals affect a group, increasing percentage of a certain thing "transmitting" to an individual personality. There is always a chance a person will learn something independent of the group, but it is slim compared to the chances of an independent member of a group transmitting his traits. |
![]() |
|
| Alsatia | Mar 2 2012, 10:44:44 PM Post #7 |
|
I find more spanish speakers in New York than I have in TExas so.... |
![]() |
|
| pajaritos | Mar 2 2012, 11:22:34 PM Post #8 |
|
yeah there are tons more in new york mostly from the carribean I hear |
![]() |
|
| 1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous) | |
| « Previous Topic · Out of Character · Next Topic » |






10:14 AM Jul 11