A Quote by Jean-Luc Bilodeau

My father's really fluent in French, but I can't speak at all. I actually took it twice in school already and failed both times! — © Jean-Luc Bilodeau
My father's really fluent in French, but I can't speak at all. I actually took it twice in school already and failed both times!
I actually speak fluent English and Spanish and... I dabble in a couple of languages, but I'm not fluent in German, Russian and Arabic.
I took about four or five years of French in high school, but I definitely don't speak French as well as I thought I did then.
I unfortunately don't speak French, but my wife is now fluent in English, which really reflects rather badly on me.
I learned my French through school. I was lucky in that the tutor on 'The Wonder Years' set spoke fluent French.
I took an estimated two thousand years of high school French, and when I finally got to France, I discovered that I didn't know one single phrase that was actually useful in a real-life French situation.
When I got to college I simply decided that I could speak French, because I just could not spend any more time in French classes. I went ahead and took courses on French literature, some of them even taught in French.
I don't speak fluent Spanish. I took it in college.
I really wished I'd learned Spanish. I took it all in high school and was planning on trying to be fluent in it. I would get Selena tracks and sing with them and stuff like that.
When you move around a lot, there are little bits of you from everywhere. I mean, my father's French, and I speak French, and there's a kind of struggle in me that says, 'I'd like to be French.' But I've never been fully part of that culture, that role.
I speak fluent Hebrew and even dream in Hebrew when we visit there, once or twice a year.
I actually speak fluent German. And I live in Vienna, and I'm married to a Viennese woman.
I wish I could fly. Or speak fluent Chinese. Both I think are equally impossible.
She thinks, I failed twice. If I failed twice I'm going to fail forever. No! That is not the law of life. If you failed twice that means you can learn. It's just a learning experience. It's an obstacle. An imaginary obstacle. She made it real. She made failing a journey of life... Instead do again and make a journey of your life.
I don't want to mess with my face. So I'm becoming fluent in French so I can go to France and make French films when I'm 60.
I met my wife through playing golf. She is French and couldn't speak English and I couldn't speak French, so there was little chance of us getting involved in any boring conversations - that's why we got married really quickly.
We spoke French at home and I didn't know any English until I went to school. My mother was French and met my father when he visited France as a student on a teaching placement.
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