As many as he/she could try. This would take a great amount of practice and learning form a very young age.
Fluency in any language is going to have to happen among native speakers. That is where you will get the current colloquialisms, idiomatic expressions, cultural references and day to day vernacular. English might be one of the hardest languages to master in that way. It is spoken in so many places and the dialects, accents and local slant on it are so numerous as to render fluency in one English speaking country unhelpful in another. If you want, "the King's English," go where they speak it and immerse yourself. Depending upon your innate facility at absorbing a new language, you will achieve fluency in whatever time it takes. Then let's define fluency. Is fluency to be able to communicate adequately in non scripted interchanges with native speakers of the language? Is it mastery of the language such that you could express whatever you want whenever you want to whomever you want, be understood and respected? Is fluency, to you, being able to survive in an English speaking environment and come home alive? English might be one of the hardest languages to master for non native speakers because it's such a polyglot of other languages. Irregularity is regular, if you know what I mean. However: in the age of the internet, you probably can find others to speak with in real time who will be happy to correct you and keep saying, "What?" when need be. If you can, gather a crew of English speakers on a visual communication platform and work at it. Still, that doesn't provide the pressure of absolute necessity that total immersion does. Six months? Define your terms and go forth.
It could be a polyglot, someone who speaks several languages.Such a person could also be described as polylingual.
Interpreters must know at least two languages. A deaf person who knows two different sign languages could be an interpreter for those languages.
yes because fluency is a word that you could use for every thing even a picture in examples and also in a sentence specially
25 languages ambassitor heinreich bremmen of germanyEmil Krebs could speak and wrote in 120+ languages.
The opposite gender of "master" (Mr.) would be mistress(Miss).The opposite status of master could be servant, or slave.The opposite of master meaning an expert or skilled person could be novice, amateur, beginner, or trainee.
Of course. This could be true of a person reading at her/his level, while at the same time increasing fluency over time. I think fluency is a moving target. If one can get along perfectly well given all the needs one faces, then that person is fluent. Such a person might not do well matching wits with someone like William F. Buckley, but so what? I consider myself fluent in English, but I would never have made it in a sparring match with Buckley.
They would be the master of death.
It could be multi lingual. It means a person who can use different or a lot of languages
After being an apprentice, a person became a journeyman, who could earn money in a trade, but was not a master and could not join a guild. The journeyman created what was called a masterpiece, and submitted it to a guild for consideration. If it was accepted, then he was a master and could join the guild.
Could you mean Metallica's Master of Puppets "master, master"? Could you mean Metallica's Master of Puppets "master, master"?
After being an apprentice, a person became a journeyman, who could earn money in a trade, but was not a master and could not join a guild. The journeyman created what was called a masterpiece, and submitted it to a guild for consideration. If it was accepted, then he was a master and could join the guild.