1. Do you and your SO speak the same native language? If so, what language?
No.
2. If not, what are your respective native languages, and which language(s) do you use to communicate?
His is English, mine Spanish. We use English to communicate since he barely knows anything of Spanish.
3. For whoever isn't communicating in their native language, how did you/they learn the SO's language, and what is their level of proficiency like?
--Did you/your SO learn a lot of the language while in the relationship, or did you/they start out the relationsihp with already strong knowledge of it?
I'm the one not speaking in my native language and I learned it as I grew up watching movies in English, playing games and school helped a bit but the rest was on my own. Whenever I don't understand a word, I google it or ask my SO (mostly google) and I keep broadening my vocabulary. He has asked me what some words mean in Spanish and I elaborate but we haven't gone in depth about it yet.
4. What challenges has communicating in a non-native language (for at least one of you) created in your relationship? How do you try to overcome those challenges?
It's not really a challenge, just the fact that sometimes I don't understand what he says cause he talks so fast and vice-versa cause of my accent. But normally we just change that by asking eachother to repeat what it's said slowly.
5. Does it ever feel like one person has more power, because they're able to communicate easily and freely while the other person struggles? Or is there support to try to communicate as best as possible?
Not really. Of course, he's going to have the 'upper hand' on his language 'cause it is his native language just as I will with mine but it doesn't make either of us feel any powerless compared to the other.
6. Since I assume that for most (although certainly not all) couples in this situation, you're living in different countries, what countries do you live in?
He currently lives in Utah (he moves around quite a bit but he's from Texas) and I live in Puerto Rico.
7. If you could change it so that you could both have had the same native language, and communicate with no trouble understanding each other (at least literally...as we know you can still have trouble communicating with someone in your native language too!), would you change it? Or do you like it?
Not at all, my english is quite vast and we understand eachother very well. It's fun knowing more than one language, speaking from my point of view.
No.
2. If not, what are your respective native languages, and which language(s) do you use to communicate?
His is English, mine Spanish. We use English to communicate since he barely knows anything of Spanish.
3. For whoever isn't communicating in their native language, how did you/they learn the SO's language, and what is their level of proficiency like?
--Did you/your SO learn a lot of the language while in the relationship, or did you/they start out the relationsihp with already strong knowledge of it?
I'm the one not speaking in my native language and I learned it as I grew up watching movies in English, playing games and school helped a bit but the rest was on my own. Whenever I don't understand a word, I google it or ask my SO (mostly google) and I keep broadening my vocabulary. He has asked me what some words mean in Spanish and I elaborate but we haven't gone in depth about it yet.
4. What challenges has communicating in a non-native language (for at least one of you) created in your relationship? How do you try to overcome those challenges?
It's not really a challenge, just the fact that sometimes I don't understand what he says cause he talks so fast and vice-versa cause of my accent. But normally we just change that by asking eachother to repeat what it's said slowly.
5. Does it ever feel like one person has more power, because they're able to communicate easily and freely while the other person struggles? Or is there support to try to communicate as best as possible?
Not really. Of course, he's going to have the 'upper hand' on his language 'cause it is his native language just as I will with mine but it doesn't make either of us feel any powerless compared to the other.
6. Since I assume that for most (although certainly not all) couples in this situation, you're living in different countries, what countries do you live in?
He currently lives in Utah (he moves around quite a bit but he's from Texas) and I live in Puerto Rico.
7. If you could change it so that you could both have had the same native language, and communicate with no trouble understanding each other (at least literally...as we know you can still have trouble communicating with someone in your native language too!), would you change it? Or do you like it?
Not at all, my english is quite vast and we understand eachother very well. It's fun knowing more than one language, speaking from my point of view.
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