No, it is possible for a veterinarian to speak only one language and be successful throughout his career. However, a veterinarian who is fluent in two languages or more could have a broader client base.
A second language (L2) is any language learned after the first language or mother tongue. A native language is the language a human being learns from birth.
Additive bilinguals is when the home language is being used and learned while the second language is being learned. Thus, you do not lose the ability to speak home language while learning the foreign language.
If you mean an Alternate Language, it would be a language that is not the one being spoken of.
The second most spoken language on the island after French is typically English, due to the island's history of being colonized by both France and Britain.
I am a veterinarian and I work 9-12 hours a day, five days a week. I'm planning on being in the profession for 30 years or more.
To be a volunteer veterinarian you don't necessarily need to high of skills, after all, you aren't being paid. If you would like to be a veterinarian as a job, it would take about 7 years of college, and a highschool diploma.
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Yes there is...French is the second language which is being spoken in the world and English is the first.
the profession of being a veterinarian is that there is always good opportunities for them to be offered and to given to them as a promtion at work in the profession department.
Considering how Alaska is part of the United States of America, I would say that the primary language would be English, with the secondary language being Inuit.
Spanish would be a second language if it was learnt outside of your main language (1st language) Say if you spoke english, you would take spanish as a second language for another purpose, maybe schooling, moving there, family members speak it. But it would not be in your native tongue and would be a second language hope that answered your question.
Learning another language almost inevitably improves our use of our own language, largely because it makes us more aware of its correct forms and constructions. English speakers who have studied foreign language rarely commit such common howlers as saying "Between you and I," or the extra-complicated grammar bashing of "If I would have known the way I would have arrived on time."