Hello,
I was told that every "good" Finn speaks "good" English.
I hope you don't mind, my Finnish is not so good...
I'm a French Linguist and I have been invited to talk about Quenya (and Finnish) during the SILF( http://www.helsinki.fi/romaanisetkielet/congres/index_eng.htm ).
I will be in Helsinki for a week. It is my first stay in Finland.
I have been teaching Quenya since the 90's in France, but also in Belgium,
Switzerland and Italy. And why not one day in Finland... :wink:
So I was wondering if in here some "Tolkiendili" who like, or even love Quenya would like to have a talk with me during my stay.
It looks like Finland in into Quenya "hard".
I'm trying to get the name of the guy who put the word VORE on Nelonen TV this summer... anyone knows who that might be ? But even on Nelonen they are still looking.
cheers,
Edouard Kloczko
PS You can write to me at ejk@free.fr
- Merri made the link clickable
I was told that every "good" Finn speaks "good" English.
I hope you don't mind, my Finnish is not so good...
I'm a French Linguist and I have been invited to talk about Quenya (and Finnish) during the SILF( http://www.helsinki.fi/romaanisetkielet/congres/index_eng.htm ).
I will be in Helsinki for a week. It is my first stay in Finland.
I have been teaching Quenya since the 90's in France, but also in Belgium,
Switzerland and Italy. And why not one day in Finland... :wink:
So I was wondering if in here some "Tolkiendili" who like, or even love Quenya would like to have a talk with me during my stay.
It looks like Finland in into Quenya "hard".
I'm trying to get the name of the guy who put the word VORE on Nelonen TV this summer... anyone knows who that might be ? But even on Nelonen they are still looking.
cheers,
Edouard Kloczko
PS You can write to me at ejk@free.fr
- Merri made the link clickable