There are many Universitys that will accept ASL as a foreign language. For example, Yale and Stanford will accept ASL as a foreign language but many state schools do not have a policy in place. Often, if you speak with the dean of English and request to be tested out of the foreign language requirement in place of ASL, they will work with you. Contact the National Association of the Deaf, (NAD) www.nad.org and they can give you a list of each school that will accept ASL as foreign language credit.
that depends on wether you are a foreigner
no because Puerto Rico is "part" of the US... which means that English is your secondary language.
The short answer is no. When you take a foreign language in high school, colleges are able to rely on the fact that you learned the language well enough pass the classes. If you are studying a language on your own, they have no way to verify what you have learned. It's possible that some colleges may have an exam that you can take to prove your foreign language skills; however, I don't know of any colleges that do that.
If wanting to get into UCLA you will have to have at least to years of foreign language. You can take any two foreign language classes you like.
Nope! Dying does not count as a life goal.A life goal should be something you want to do BEFORE you die, since we all do. Life goals could include learning a foreign language, seeing the Grand Canyon, getting promoted at work, or getting a college degree.
One way to know how large your vocabulary is in a foreign language is to count how many words you are confident of. Paying close attention to lessons is a good way to learn and frequent practice is needed to maintain or even add to a good vocabulary.
There are a few countries like this:North KoreaSouth Korea (if you don't count Korean Sign Language)Iceland (if you don't count the fact that almost everyone can speak English as a foreign language)Kuwait
count is a function that counts the variable name.
There are many countries where the majority of the population speaks primarily one language, such as Japan (Japanese), South Korea (Korean), and Sweden (Swedish). However, it is rare for a country to speak only one language exclusively, as there are usually minority or indigenous languages spoken within the country as well.
English, (American)
No, they do not meet the requirements for college credit.
No, never
The Count of Vergennes -Apex ;)