Words matter. These are the best Fluent Quotes from famous people such as Puneet Issar, Craig Bellamy, Dani Shapiro, Luis Fortuno, Naveen Patnaik, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

Given a chance, I would love to host a television show as I have good communication skills and am fluent in Hindi, English and Urdu.
John Hartson, he speaks fluent Welsh and has the tattoos all over him to prove his Welshness. But in my own world, no one is more Welsh than myself.
One of the stranger things about me is that I was raised as an Orthodox Jew. I went to a yeshiva until I was thirteen years old and spoke fluent Hebrew.
Over 90 percent of parents in Puerto Rico want their children to be totally fluent in English.
I am quite fluent in Odiya. I understand the people of Odisha, and they understand me.
I have every reason to believe that an individual man or woman fluent in several tongues seduces, possesses, remembers differently according to his or her use of the relevant language.
I hope for quick, fluent copy and memorable pictures. The words would not ‘describe’ the pictures; the pictures would not ‘illustrate’ the words. Together, they would carry a stamp and tell a story.
When I was 14, I came to school in London. I remember it was very cold, but also having to adjust and become fluent in English.
I’m used to shifting languages because my father used to speak to us, to my brother and I, he used to speak in English. He wanted us to be quite fluent in English, especially when he was trying to correct our behavior; he would do that in English.
When you become fluent with language, it means you can write an entry in your journal or tell a joke to someone or write a letter to a friend. And it’s similar with new technologies.
The mare set off for home with the speed of a swallow, and going as smoothly and silently. I never had dreamed of such a motion, fluent and graceful, and ambient, soft as the breeze flitting over the flowers, but swift as the summer lightening.
We’ve now got a whole generation of jazz musicians who have been brought up with hip-hop. We’ve grown up alongside rappers and DJs; we’ve heard this music all our life. We are as fluent in J Dilla and Dr Dre as we are in Mingus and Coltrane.
I still catch myself trying to become the object someone imagines me to be, but then there are other times, when I am free, when I am fluent, when I am unimaginable, that I start to feel like somewhere out there is the decolonized love for me, somewhere out there, there is a love that doesn’t let any of us be so lonely.
I might be more fluent in Swedish than I am in Spanish. My wife speaks it to our kids, and they’re fluent so I hear it all the time, so I’ve got that under my belt.
My grandfather spoke fluent Spanish and I have family members who speak fluent Spanish.
I am not in the least eloquent or fluent with languages. My writing on social media is quite pedestrian. But even if it was near any acceptability, I would not be in a position to pen a script or a book.
I grew up, as many Indians do, in an archipelago of tongues. My maternal grandfather, who was a surgeon in the city of Madras, was fluent in at least four languages and used each of them daily.
I wanted to show the world, and myself too, what I can do. I came up in the world of Philadelphia soul, but I’m fluent in a lot of languages musically and I like working with different people from different generations.
When I decided to start a career in the Hindi entertainment industry, I knew I had to put in efforts as I’m not very fluent with the language of Hindi, as I pronounce certain words differently.
To the Tamil media, I have mostly interacted in English since I am not fluent in Tamil.
The more fluent the experience of reading a quote – or the easier it is to grasp, the smoother it sounds, the more readily it comes to mind–the less likely we are to question the actual quotation.
We need a president who’s fluent in at least one language.
I wish I could fly. Or speak fluent Chinese. Both I think are equally impossible.
I speak fluent Spanish. I also speak Italian and I was once pretty decent at German.
I don’t really own anything. It makes me more fluent, er, fluid. More fluent, too, because I’ve learned a lot of languages by traveling around.
To be functionally fluent in a language, for instance, in most cases you need about 1,200 words. To acquire a total of vocabulary words, if you really train someone well they can acquire 200 to 300 words a day, which means that in a week they can acquire the vocabulary necessary to speak a language.
I speak fluent Kosovan.
I like to travel, and I would love to be fluent in at least four languages.
After sessions, I keep working and practising with the left foot. Hopefully one day, it’ll just be fluent.
Most of my family speaks fluent Malayalam.
Although I’m not fluent in sign language by a long way, I could have a fairly decent conversation.

My father’s really fluent in French, but I can’t speak at all. I actually took it twice in school already and failed both times!
I was born in Eastern Europe, in Latvia, and I’m fluent in Russian.
I am Chinese. I speak fluent Mandarin. And I go, ‘Man, it’s about time a Chinese person could step up to a Hollywood screen, and international screen, and help save the world.’
You can research until you’re falling asleep, but that still doesn’t mean you’re really fluent in the material.
I don’t think anything I’ve written has been done in under six or eight drafts. Usually it takes me a few years to write a book. ‘World’s Fair’ was an exception. It seemed to be a particularly fluent book as it came. I did it in seven months. I think what happened in that case is that God gave me a bonus book.
I actually speak fluent German. And I live in Vienna, and I’m married to a Viennese woman.
I’m so Filipino. I’m fluent in Filipino.
Visual art is a foreign language I’m fluent at, but my native language is language.
Somehow you get past languages. I don’t speak Mandarin. I don’t speak fluent Italian. I don’t speak German. But it’s amazing how when you need to get something done, it finds a way.
I have grown up in Chennai, so I speak Tamil fluent.
I’d love to go to art school. I’d love to learn how to draw. I’d love to be fluent in Spanish. I’d like to be a brain surgeon.
Learning how to have ‘healthy’ attachments sounds easy, but in fact, for someone like me who had damaged early relationships, it’s like learning to be fluent in Chinese.
I speak pretty fluent American, though I do so with a strong British accent, and I love America: The scale and the variety of it are astonishing to someone not born there, and I’m convinced that its energy and generosity have somehow rubbed off on me and affected my writing. For the better.
I speak fluent Hebrew and even dream in Hebrew when we visit there, once or twice a year.
By creating an urgent crisis that can only be solved by those fluent in a language too complex for ordinary people to understand, the Wall Street crowd has turned the vast majority of Americans into non-participants in their own political future.
I don’t know what makes a writer’s voice. It’s dozens of things. There are people who write who don’t have it. They’re tone-deaf, even though they’re very fluent. It’s an ability, like anything else, being a doctor or a veterinarian, or a musician.
I unfortunately don’t speak French, but my wife is now fluent in English, which really reflects rather badly on me.
True, I was born and raised in Chennai, fluent in Tamil, but essentially, I am a Telugu guy and a Telugu actor.
While I am fluent in Hindi, I was a little worried about my accent. So when I was approached for ‘Karwaan,’ I told them they need to first listen to me speak in Hindi, in case it sounds off.