i do! You cant! And there is no chance to learn it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_German
The Swiss speak Swiss German.
Est-ce que tu parles suisse ? Note that there is no language called Swiss. The Swiss speak French, Swiss German, Italian and Romansh.
His parents were German speaking Swiss immigrants.
Switzerland does not have a Swiss language. German, French and Italian are spoken there. The Amish speak a dialect of German.
According to the last census in 2000, 63.6% of Swiss speak German.
Schweizerdeutsch is Swiss:) It's the Swiss version of German. Everyone learns high German (formal German) in school but generally, the Swiss speak their own version of Swiss German. Ich hoffe dass diese Antwort dir helft:)
No. All 3 of these counties do not speak German.For the languages of Austria, click here.For the languages of Switzerland, click here.For the languages of Denmark, click here.
Yes. If you have a grass pollen allergy, you could be affected by Swiss chard and a few other vegetables. Speak to your doctor.
The Swiss people are only known as the Swiss. They do not go by another name, not even one that a person can ake fun of. The swiss people are very smart and most citizens who live there can speak 4 different languages.
the Swiss also speak german, Italian and French, depending on the region, also a dialect called Swiss-Deutsch.
In Switzerland they speak four official languages, in order of popularity: High German (although most German-speaking Swiss speak Swiss German dialects), French, Italian, and Romansch. It is worth noting that most Swiss only speak one of these languages, whichever is used in the local canton (e.g. people in Zurich, Bern, or Basel will speak Swiss German, people in Geneva, Neuchatel, or Jura will speak French, and people in Lugano will speak Italian). Most Swiss also speak English, so communication is not impossible if you do not speak any of the Swiss languages.German:to live = leben (means either to be alive or to live somewhere - "He lives in Switzerland"/"Er lebt in der Schweiz") or wohnen (means only to live somewhere - "She lives in Switzerland"/"Sie wohnt in der Schweiz")Swiss-German*:The common Swiss dialect of the German 'leben' is 'lebe'.To describe that something is live, like in "live concert", you just use the English word = live.*Swiss-German is not an official language, but a dialect of German. This dialect varys from region to region, and so is not universally used across Switzerland.French:to live = vivre (meaning to be alive) or habiter à (meaning to have residence in a location).Italian:to live = vivere (meaning to be alive) or abitare (meaning to have residence in a location).While Romansch is an official language, almost nobody speaks Romansch and those that do, usually speak German, Italian, or English as well.
The official language of liechtenstein is Standard German, but most people speak Swiss German or Walser German.There are also a large number of foreign-born people living in liechtenstein, so there are many foreign languages spoken there.They speak German in Liechtenstein.T.hey speak GermanThe official language is German but most speak Alemannic, a dialect of German.GermanGerman is the official languageGermanIn Liechtenstein they speak German.SwissThey speak a dialect of German.