Being fluent in an additional language is always a great skill to have and opens up a number of possibilities for careers. The most obvious choice for someone fluent in German is to look for a job as a translator. Many companies have an international presence and have an in-house translator who can handle any correspondence and paperwork. The travel industry is also a great place for someone with multilingual skills, both in hospitality, to deal with German speaking tourists and management, to plan trips to German speaking regions.
Well if you were fluent in french, you would know
A person fluent in Spanish would say that "Alemania", means Germany in English. This is the original name of the country when it was founded in 500 BC.
They would be considered as being computer literate.
Taking care of customer complaints in Germany would require a person to be knowledgeable about the department where the complaint is being lodged. You would also need to be fluent in the German language.
The great artist Paul Klee was fluent in German (the language in which he wrote many of his essays), and seems to have known French and Italian as well. An educated person of his time would undoubtedly have studied English, but there is little evidence that he ever became fluent in it. All of the writings we have from him are translations.
The standard inseam length for a bike suitable for someone who is 5'8" tall is typically around 30-32 inches.
I dont know if its exactly how someone fluent in spanish would say it, but "Jadyn es el mejor" should get the point across.
Moosha does not exist in German, but a Samurai would yell out "moosha" just before killing someone.
dicker Kuss = big kiss would be the most suitable translation. There is no translation in German for "big hug" that isn't clumsy, hug = Umarmung, Liebkosung
One would say in Deutsch (German) ''Willkommen''.
politician
Any but use a dongle