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Aug 2018

They are teaching it in schools again. I could ask my grandpa but I don't have his number (lives in England. Grandpa was born in Wales)

I can translate English-Swedish and Swedish-English:smile:
Don't have much experience writing dialects tho^^;

7 months later

I'm native in Dutch (Flemish to be precise, but there's barely any difference in writing) and always happy to help :^)

Fluent in Russian and English here, so- expert? I will happily translate Russian phrases. Yes, you there, English speaker with Russian mafia characters speaking peculiar, broken Russian in your stories- I see you! x')

Also only confident with basic French, since I am not a native speaker, and don't get to use French as often as I'd like, outside of reading/watching movies. Since my comic contains French phrases/interjections, I may actually be looking for a French-speaking beta-reader down the line.

Good luck with your Spanish translation! (I agree with @joannekwan -this is an awesome idea for a thread)

I'm from Spain so if you ever need help with spanish or anything related don't be afraid to ask :slight_smile:

5 months later

Will help with Russian and Ukrainian.
But I also need a help. How do you call that wooden construction on a brink of a lake that goes into the boby of the water and you can walk on it, and tie your boats to it. In English. Also how the phrase goes for "parking" your boat at it?

Even if it;s like a small like handmade thing somewhere at the village?

Hello again. A question: What is the difference between "toward" and "towards"?

There's no difference, both are correct. Just some english-speaking countries prefer one over the other.
I find myself using both sometimes. But best to pick one and stick with it for consistency's sake.

Oh... And I was breaking my head trying to analyse every instance of me encoutering these words and figure out possible subtle hues of meanings...

I need help on how to use WANT and WANTS correctly. I can't really seems to understand what I read on some answer google gave me.

Maybe my comprehension level is kinda low because I don't particularly know basic English. :confused:

"Want" can be used as a noun, like need (to need) or needs (from "a need"). You can say: "I have a want" or "I have some wants" , etc...