Conversation

If the phones don't have a Canadian SIM, they see it as the real category (Presidential alert) instead of it using the generic "EMERGENCY ALERT / ALERTE D'URGENCE". By the way, French isn't even a top 10 first language in Toronto and look how much space they're wasting on that.
Amber alert sent as Presidential alert.
2
5
Replying to
I'm no expert in Canadian french, but it seems to be changing the meaning? (Also not even top 10 ? Wow didn't expect this).
3
Replying to and
Answering for myself: it would be fair to say that among people not speaking English, french is not in the top 10. Or that among native tongs, french is not in the top 10. But yet, french seems to be the #2 language people in Toronto understand.
1
Replying to
The number of people truly fluent in French is greatly overstated. Most people take French as a minor subject starting at some point in elementary school. Few people take it for 10th grade and beyond once it's no longer mandatory. It's semi-mandatory in 9th grade (high school).
1
1
Replying to and
I spent 10 years of school taking most subjects in French and was fluent in it but I cannot speak French at this point and mostly can't understand people speaking it. I can sort of read French and could almost write it. I could pick it up again in a few weeks if I had any reason.
1
Replying to and
I don't consider myself as really knowing French at this point even though I used to and I would say that nearly everyone who says they know it are greatly overstating it. They would need weeks or months of relearning it to actually be able to use it as a language regularly.
1
Show replies