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Reason: None provided.

When I graduated electronic communications and instrumentation engineering, I had spare time on my hands after work so I taught myself to read and write and speak basic Russian,

figured out the general rudiments in Italian, French, German,

taught myself Spanish living with South Americans,

taught myself to have partial discussions about technical and common subjects with the Navajos I worked with and for, and several times lived with,

learned ''Hi, Bye, Thank you'' in Hopi when I worked for them managing their electronic communications networks so they could contact the world.

Wherever I go I tend to learn the language and language tree I can sort out.

Electronic Engineering has several sub languages embedded in it, part of my degree was formally working in 4 to 6 math systems additional to base10 mathematics:

the arithmetic, algebra, trigonometry, pre-calc for base10 mathematics, then binary, base 4, 8, hexadecimal, out through base 32/64, general programming mathematics and various machine and programming languages.

So learning additional languages is something I just did because I had spare time when not working with communications networks and telemetry.

You?

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

When I graduated electronic communications and instrumentation engineering, I had spare time on my hands after work so I taught myself to read and write and speak basic Russian,

figured out the general rudiments in Italian, French, German,

taught myself Spanish living with South Americans,

taught myself to have partial discussions about technical and common subjects with the Navajos I worked with and for, and several times lived with,

learned ''Hi, Bye, Thank you'' in Hopi when I worked for them managing their electronic communications networks so they could contact the world.

Wherever I go I tend to learn the language and language tree I can sort out.

Electronic Engineering has several sub languages embedded in it, part of my degree was formally working in 4 math systems additional to base10 mathematics: arithmetic, algebra, trigonometry, pre-calc for base10 mathematics, then binary, base 4, 8, hexadecimal, programming mathematics and some computer programming.

So learning additional languages is something I just did because I had spare time when not working with communications networks and telemetry.

You?

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

When I graduated electronic communications engineering and instrumentation, I had spare time on my hands after work so I taught myself to read and write and speak basic Russian,

figured out the general rudiments in Italian, French, German,

taught myself Spanish living with South Americans,

taught myself to have partial discussions about technical and common subjects with the Navajos I worked with and for, and several times lived with,

learned ''Hi, Bye, Thank you'' in Hopi when I worked for them managing their electronic communications networks so they could contact the world.

Wherever I go I tend to learn the language and language tree I can sort out.

You?

3 years ago
1 score