England is in Europe. If you had included English I would have aced that part. I also got all the Spanish ones. Not so good at counting in French or German... I can do Arabic and Korean, though...
What does it matter that England is in Europe? It's not exhaustive, otherwise Portuguese, Italian, Polish, Russian, Greek, Dutch, Croatian, Romanian, Hungarian, Czech, and many, many other languages are missing too.
Though I do concede that there are a lot of rules to learn, compared to Spanish where you need to learn each letter, ll=y, the different pronunciations of c, the ch sound and I can't think of anything else except accents
Got them all with 3:26 to go. Too bad I don't remember much of the French and German I learned in high school and college (respectively) other than the counting, though...
I could hear all the french numbers, but couldn't spell them! Un, do, twa, cat, sank, sees, set, wheat, nuff, dees, where unfortunately not acceptable!
Un, DER, twa, cat, sank, sees, set, wheat, NERF, dees... reminded me of the joke about the three three kittens (un, deux and trois) who fell in the pond... very sad ending.... un,deux, trois quatre cinq... has to be said aloud, of course, as it does not work when written down
got all of them with 2:34 left. I was struggling on how to spell cuatro and cinco thinking it was quatro and cinquo. I think that cinquo is just me being stupid, but Quizmaster, please allow quatro for cuatro!
29 out of 30 .. ran out of time on neuve, knew it, but my typing skilss always leyt me down, have to back up and correct all the time (see what I mean?? I am a crap typist)
1-10 in Spanish because I had to take it for a year, 1-10 in French because I study French, 1-3 in German because it’s 1-3, 4 in German because Schalke 04 were in the Champions League, 5 because it has an umlaut and 9 because Borussia Dortmund are always in the Champions League.
Eins is the name of the noun and the symbol 1, and is what is used when counting 1,2,3 etc. (but not one banana two bananas etc)
When used to indicate an amount in a sentence like; there was one weird comment in the comment section ;) then it is ein (with the proper declension).
There is nothing to fix here Eins was correct here.
I think the best way to remember might be if you are replacing the article (so a(n) or the) you use a form of ein, so before nouns, otherwise it is Eins.
(The number) 1 was written on the board-> eins
One sentence was written on the board->ein
*not a native speaker so please correct me if I made a mistake
I don't know enough about French to say that ses is incorrect, it might very well be a regional variant, but six definitely is correct, and if you are a native speaker it is weird that you do not know about the standard/correct spelling.
Ses in normal French is (only) used for his/her/their when referring to plural nouns. Like in he lost his books. She didn't pay attention in her French classes.
Edit; I wonder where you got ses from, aparently in ses is used in Sardinian and Piedmontese (both in Italy) and Esperanto. Couldn't find any references to French regions
Quite telling as to the mostly American audience of this website. I wonder if Canadian IPOs were to be ID'd if the french would come out on top ahead of Spanish and certainly German. Having spend a childhood in Europe and learning a bit of German and then Spanish in school in the USA, I certainly fall into this paradigm. Worth investigating @Quizmaster?
Ein (without the s) should be accepted for 'one' in German. It is what I was taught and I've looked it up and grammatically it is correct. I have never seen (or heard it) as 'eins'.
Ein can translate to the numeral "one," but only when it's declensed to modify a male or neutral noun (e.g., Ich habe ein Buch, "I have one book.") When you're talking about the numeral on its own, as when counting, it's always eins.
I knew up to 9 in Spanish, but realized that I've been spelling them wrong in my head... I know French better, so they've been "french-ified"... (cuatro = quatro, cinco = cinqo, seis = seize)...
So I can COUNT to ten in all these languages, but I cannot SPELL to ten in all these languages lol. I was trying to sound out some of them and it was NOT working.
-polish
-dutch
-italian
-swedish
etc.
10/10 German
2/10 French
--I've never studied French xD
german 10/10
french 10/10
spanish 10/10
https://www.jetpunk.com/user-quizzes/98610/counting-to-10-in-10-languages-from-countries-in-the-eu
You know, I think I believe you. ;-)
pwease
Uno, Dos, Tres, Kwatro, Singko, Sais, Syete, Otso, Nwebe, Dyis
Eins is the name of the noun and the symbol 1, and is what is used when counting 1,2,3 etc. (but not one banana two bananas etc)
When used to indicate an amount in a sentence like; there was one weird comment in the comment section ;) then it is ein (with the proper declension).
There is nothing to fix here Eins was correct here.
I think the best way to remember might be if you are replacing the article (so a(n) or the) you use a form of ein, so before nouns, otherwise it is Eins.
(The number) 1 was written on the board-> eins
One sentence was written on the board->ein
*not a native speaker so please correct me if I made a mistake
Ses in normal French is (only) used for his/her/their when referring to plural nouns. Like in he lost his books. She didn't pay attention in her French classes.
Edit; I wonder where you got ses from, aparently in ses is used in Sardinian and Piedmontese (both in Italy) and Esperanto. Couldn't find any references to French regions
Russian, Greek, Italian, and Polish are all good suggestions from above.