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30
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Asked on March 23, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
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We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 23, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-
-
Asked on March 22, 2021 in Other.
I’ve heard the word “Bilingual” several times used to mean “Spanish- and English-speaking,” without regard to how many other languages a person may know. If I understand English and Spanish we would still recognize this as bilingual.
-
We need a bilingual secretary. And we need to find one!
-
Are you bilingual?
In both cases, English-speaking is assumed, Spanish-speaking is implied, the actual number of languages spoken is unimportant. No doubt this is more common in parts of the U.S. where there is a significant Spanish-speaking
population.
- 776770 views
- 640 answers
- 289757 votes
-