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Thread: advanced or fluent

  1. #1
    LwyrFirat is offline Member
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    Default advanced or fluent

    The other day I stubmled upon a job advertisment which confuses me , it says;

    Candidates should possess excellent academic qualifications and no less than 3 years relevant experience in a major and highly-regarded law firm. They should be advanced or fluent speakers of English......


    Which of those levels are higher than the other?

    Thank you.

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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    I am not a teacher of English and not a native speaker.

    Advanced means highly developed, complex; also, being of a higher level than others.
    Fluent means that you are able to express yourself effortlessly and readily in all language situations; your English is always smooth and flowing.

    While being advanced in reading, translating, hearing comprehention, you may not be fluent -- in some situations you may be at loss of words. It requires practice.
    Yet I wouldn't say that being fluent is on a higher level than being advanced. Say, I am fluent in the daily small conversations, and yet, should I try to read serious books on politics, arts, psychology, etc, I become aware of my limited vocabulary and grammar skills.
    I think those two levels go together.
    Last edited by NanetteDee; 24-Sep-2008 at 05:16. Reason: typo
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    Smile Re: advanced or fluent

    Quote Originally Posted by NanetteDee View Post
    I am not a teacher of English and not a native speaker.

    Advanced means highly developed, complex; also, being of a higher level than others.
    Fluent means that you are able to express yourself effortlessly and readily in all language situations; your English is always smooth and flowing.

    While being advanced in reading, translating, hearing comprehention, you may not be fluent -- in some situations you may be at loss of words. It requires practice.
    Yet I wouldn't say that being fluent is on a higher level than being advanced. Say, I am fluent in the daily small conversations, and yet, should I try to read serious books on politics, arts, psychology, etc, I become aware of my limited vocabulary and grammar skills.
    I think those two levels go together.
    You're right, however, I have to disagree with you about the "highness" of both levels, advanced and fluent.
    Well, students say being fluent means you can talk to people effortlessly, they understand you and you understand them, however, for many companies that send recruiters to select students to apply for a job, an advanced student can do a lot of things with English, however those ones who are fluent can do anything!
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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    Quote Originally Posted by marciobarbalho View Post
    You're right, however, I have to disagree with you about the "highness" of both levels, advanced and fluent.
    Well, students say being fluent means you can talk to people effortlessly, they understand you and you understand them, however, for many companies that send recruiters to select students to apply for a job, an advanced student can do a lot of things with English, however those ones who are fluent can do anything!
    I think I agree with you, yes. One can be fluent but not advanced... It makes sense!
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    LwyrFirat is offline Member
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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    So can we say that the highest level of English is "advanced" for non-native speakers?

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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    I believe, yes, we can. But I wouldn't disregard being fluent: It takes a lot of daily practice to reach the fluency.
    Last edited by NanetteDee; 25-Sep-2008 at 05:47. Reason: mis-wording
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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    Hello,
    Note am not a teacher

    General English exams (University of Cambridge)

    KET (Key English Test)
    PET (Preliminary English Test)
    FCE (First Certificate in English)
    CAE (Certificate in Advanced English)
    CPE (Certificate of Proficiency in English)

    The last exam is at proficiency level; so I'd say that the proficiency level is the highest one.

    Cheers

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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    Quote Originally Posted by LwyrFirat View Post
    They should be advanced or fluent speakers of English......


    Which of those levels are higher than the other?

    Thank you.
    Fluent is higher.

    Advanced: non-native speaker of English with advanced English language skills.

    Fluent: native English speaker (doesn't mean that English was your first language)

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    LwyrFirat is offline Member
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    Default Re: advanced or fluent

    Quote Originally Posted by Soup View Post
    Fluent is higher.

    Advanced: non-native speaker of English with advanced English language skills.

    Fluent: native English speaker (doesn't mean that English was your first language)

    So if I understand you correctly you mean being fluent is "using English as good as native English speakers", don't you?

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    Smile Re: advanced or fluent

    Well, I personally think a native speak is that one whose first language is, in this case, English. Whether someone is fluent it means she or he can do anything a native speaker does.

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