Message from @TheBritishGamer β€π (Meh)
Discord ID: 680199330472263730
"Sign languages:
A wide variety of sign languages are used in the EU, with around 500,000 people using a sign language as their first language.[57] None of these languages are recognised as an official language of an EU member state, with the exception of Ireland passing the Irish Sign Language Act 2017 that granted it official status alongside Irish and English, and only two states (Finland and Portugal) refer to sign languages in their constitution."
looool
That's the only thing from Wikipedia that comes close to what you're claiming. Provide proof.
i've provided proof
blocked
No you haven't, provide a source.
Whenever you loose an argument hit that block <:peepodumb:538083903835996176> .
ngl psycho you actually are psycho
hahaha
> I've provided proof
> blocked
LOL
I wouldn't be surprised, most of the EU members sound drunk
All those bureaucratic perks.
Fuck the EU lol
If anything
German would be the official language of the EU
Greman sounds like someone choking on a fork whilst being a military tyrant
Also I don't think anyone would want to be in a Union where everyone speaks German
I don't think i've ever heard a positive comment about the German language
*channel melts*
@AlphaUK I mean it's a passionate language
In your opinion* yea
Well as Germany being the major economical power of the EU and having Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Germany, and Austria being Mostly German speaking
It would make sense for it to be German
except that Switzerland isn't in the EU
It is In europe though
Which the EU has to consider every country that has influence
and Liechtenstein is a joke
it's like saying we should make Europe speak Dutch because we have Netherlands, Belgium and Luxemburg speaking Dutch lmfao
it started with the BeNeLux to begin with
and headquarters are in Brussels for that reason
None of those places matter
Only AMERICA matters
πΊπΈ π¦
German is the most common first language in Europe
nordic languages are similar to german
same with dutch
english to an extent