6Likes -
speak a language at an intermediate level
Do you say "speak a language at a beginner/ elementary/ intermediate/ advanced level"?
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level

Originally Posted by
Lily of the valley
Do you say "speak a language at a beginner/ elementary/ intermediate/ advanced level"?
You could say "I am at intermediate level in my English studies".
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level
Not a teacher!
I hope I won't give a wrong information but the preposition you are looking for may be "on".
My speaking skill is on an advanced level.
Please correct me when I am wrong.
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level
bhaisahab knows what he is talking about - 'at' is fine.
Incidentally, you may have meant 'please correct me when I am wrong' [that is whenever I am wrong'], but I think you probably mean 'if I am wrong ' - wenn is a faux ami.
b
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level
Perhaps virus would call it a falsch Freund.
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level

Originally Posted by
Rover_KE
Perhaps virus would call it a falsch Freund.
No way! It would be called a "falscher Freund".
German is a relatively highly inflected language. (At least compared to English...)
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level

Originally Posted by
~Mav~
No way! It would be called a "falsch
er Freund".

German is a relatively highly inflected language. (At least compared to English...)
'falschen Freund'? Accusative here?
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level
You mean ''die falsche freunde''. Like wir sind die falsche freunde. Am I right Mav? My German gets rusty.
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level

Originally Posted by
arzgol
You mean ''die falsche freunde''. Like wir sind die falsche freunde. Am I right Mav? My German gets rusty.
We are getting way off-topic here, but we might as well finish. The expression 'faux ami' or 'false friend' refers to a word in one language that looks like one in another, but means something different, and so misleads us. So, German 'wenn' makes us think of the English 'when', but it it usually means 'if' or 'whenever'.
I don't know whether this expression is used in German, but if it is, as Rover suggested, then, in the sentence ' A false friend can cause problems', it would be 'ein falscher Freund' in German - the words Mav suggested.
However, in the sentence 'Virus would call it a false friend", I believe it should be, "einen falschen Freund" (accusative case). We need to wait for a native speaker of German to confirm whether the expression is used in German at all and, if so, how it would be translated in that sentence.
'die falsche Freunde' (plural) is, think, incorrect; it should be 'falsche Freunde' or 'die falschen Freunde'
Rover's bon mot has got a little out of hand.
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Re: speak a language at an intermediate level

Originally Posted by
bhaisahab
You could say "I am at intermediate level in my English studies".
Do you not need an article before intermediate or was that just a typo? It sounds kind of odd to me without the article but I'm not sure which is correct.
Not at teacher.
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