The word used to describe an English speaking person is 'Anglophone.' Similarly, the word used to describe a French speaking person is 'Francophone.'
it is the best you can get, ask any English person
If you are speaking as a person whose first language is English, the answer is communication. If you are another 'normal' person the importance needs discussion.
In order to answer this, you have to specify the native language of the learner. For example:A Spanish-speaking person might find Portuguese easierA Dutch-speaking person might find English easierA Mandarin-speaking person might not find either one more difficult than the other
From the verb "llegar" which means "to arrive". Llegan is the third person plural in the present tense, or "they arrive".
You have asked two questions: Q: You are English speaking? A: Yes or no Q: Does the client not speak English? A: Yes or no In real life, the first question would be asked directly to a person, who may or may not be able to answer the question. The second question would be asked about the person, directly to another person who may or may not be able to answer the question for the person.
anglophone
They have slightly different meanings. If you are speaking of English as a language, you would say "good at." If you are speaking of it as school subject, you would say "good in," just as you would say "good in science" or "good in history."
Of course, it only means french-speaking person, it is as polite as calling someone an english-speaking one
Generally speaking we do not preface people's names with either 'a' or 'the' (in English).
The third person form of arrive is "arrives."
I'm sorry...are you speaking English?