--- In [email protected], "Nelson" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > Based on my experience, Russian is probably a far
> > easier language to learn than English. Talk about
> > consistent...once you've learned the alphabet 
> > (which is just Greek with a few extra letters)
> > and the basic verb endings and inflected noun
> > endings, it's pretty much a snap.  Or was. It
> > was a long time ago that I studied Russian.
> >
> +++ Would you think that  one learning Russian could eventually
> pronounce it well enough to pass as a native?

I think it would be very, very difficult indeed
for a non-native speaker to speak Russian so well
as to be mistaken for a native speaker. 

>     One person that I met (Polish native) said there were 
> some words in their language that would seperate non natives 
> from natives.  N.

There are some words in Russian that, when spoken
*by* natives, would bag people as being from a 
certain province, and having grown up there in 
a certain era. Same in French. I assume that the
same was true about American English at one point.
but much of that has been worn away by how much
Americans move around from state to state.









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