@@truebro77 in most Oxford/Cambridge course books it's the 1st/2 nd unit on Beginner, rarely Elementary, level..and usually it doesn't even take 5 classes im the curriculum, 1 or 2 maximum...
@@truebro77 thank you) I was born in USSR , it collapsed when I was a child, but I remember stories how people weren't allowed to leave the country.. the fear to lose freedom was my worst nightmare ever and guess what? It came true this year.
Interesting....we say "bella-rush-ans" in the States! :-) Belgium is mostly Dutch or French, and a small percentage speaks German as their first language :-)
Yeah definitely some big differences between us and our neighbours. Even in Scots English, it can sometimes be totally different to our neighbours down south!
Thanks for this video. I find it very useful and educational. I was surprised with San Marino, I would get it wrong and said a person from San Marino is Sanmarinian lol, so thanks for that. But, you got the Belgium wrong. Yes, official languages are French, Dutch and German but spoken are Flemish (60% of the population) and Wallon (about 33% of the population). My grandma lived there. And what about VaticanCity? Anyway, great video :)
@@truebro77 oh, in Russian Lithuania and Latvia sound so similar (Latvia and Litva= Lithuania) and most students are confused and frequently cannot tell them apart even in their language))