JonathanValjean
Porschephile
7+
English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Romansh, Galician, French, and Latin. Of course, these are in the same linguistic grouping(except for my native language, English), so it isn't all that impressive. What impresses me more is when someone masters languages from several different language families, such as: German, Spanish, Finnish, Russian, Chinese, Swahili, and Japanese, for example.
English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Romansh, Galician, French, and Latin. Of course, these are in the same linguistic grouping(except for my native language, English), so it isn't all that impressive. What impresses me more is when someone masters languages from several different language families, such as: German, Spanish, Finnish, Russian, Chinese, Swahili, and Japanese, for example.
Do you mean 'easy hebrew'? If I recall it correctly (help G-man!) in hebrew you don't write down the vowels, so you must know the word in order to read it (because you must know where are the vowels and what are they). Of course, if "easy hebrew" or "hebrew for begginers" the vowels are written down, if I recall it correctly 



Well...I don't think that counts, but if someone knows sign-language I think that would count.