Possible. However as a non native English speaker myself, I kind of take pride in making sure I’m understood, and grammatically cromulent.
And i’ve seen multiple people apologizing for their English, then having a better vocabulary and grammar than most native speakers.
Of course some people can barely make a sentence in a second or third language. It’s quite possible. I’m really bad at making coherent sentences in German, even after many years of studying it. But in my experience, non native speakers tend to be careful about this.
Anyone wondering about the writing, that person might notbe a native English speaker
That makes more sense honestly.
People communicating in their non-native tongue tend to be more precise (if clumsy) in order to get their point across more clearly/with a greater success rate.
If I had to guess, native English speaker or not, this person prob speaks English most of the day every day, it’s just what it is.
Pride in not causing mass aneurisms aside, communication for some people is just really hard & takes a lot of energy (and not communicating bcs of that is depressive), so y’all better don’t be shaming that.
Now - wondering how someone can break a car window (that doesn’t have any applicable certificates to that point), that is def weird.
Nah this is how people I went to high school with write. For some people, writing is apparently kept in an entirely different part of their brain from normal speech and they can’t just write the way they talk, it’s just pure stream of consciousness.
Anyone wondering about the writing, that person might not be a native English speaker.
Edit: I’m saying this as a non native speaker btw
Possible. However as a non native English speaker myself, I kind of take pride in making sure I’m understood, and grammatically cromulent.
And i’ve seen multiple people apologizing for their English, then having a better vocabulary and grammar than most native speakers.
Of course some people can barely make a sentence in a second or third language. It’s quite possible. I’m really bad at making coherent sentences in German, even after many years of studying it. But in my experience, non native speakers tend to be careful about this.
That makes more sense honestly.
People communicating in their non-native tongue tend to be more precise (if clumsy) in order to get their point across more clearly/with a greater success rate.
If I had to guess, native English speaker or not, this person prob speaks English most of the day every day, it’s just what it is.
Pride in not causing mass aneurisms aside, communication for some people is just really hard & takes a lot of energy (and not communicating bcs of that is depressive), so y’all better don’t be shaming that.
Now - wondering how someone can break a car window (that doesn’t have any applicable certificates to that point), that is def weird.
Nah this is how people I went to high school with write. For some people, writing is apparently kept in an entirely different part of their brain from normal speech and they can’t just write the way they talk, it’s just pure stream of consciousness.