When in Zurich, is it necessary to ask if someone speaks French, or can I automatically start speaking French? - zurich
Zurich is part of the German language.
When in Zurich, is it necessary to ask if someone speaks French, or can I automatically start speaking French? - zurich
Zurich is part of the German language.
3 comments:
I think it would be more correct to speak German and the Germans would say, would rather speak French, because you're better take in French than in Germany (I).
Maybe you can comminicate also in English.
It's like I'm going to Holland. I do not speak very good Dutch or German (including Dutch), so that we can communicate in English, because everyone is talking (I'm speaking French, French, a).
Now I have cousins in Alsace and speak French, if I so much because they know they do not speak German well.
Hmm. I demand the right to in the introduction, if you can speak French (with that person, perhaps, "Hello / Good day, I speak French?) You can say," I'm not so good English "(where c 'is true).
I have not spent much time in Switzerland (only road stop), but I visited the Alsace region in France several times, where the official language is French, but the German is very popular because the area on the part of Germany. The German family that was greeted with traders typically French, but soon discovered they could use instead of German. I think many times that question in German (the opposite, as I have on French).
Spoken French, Italian and Romansch, but the official language is German in Zurich and "Zürideutsch" (more commonly spoken in the dialect of Zurich).
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