I live in the UK, am male, and am 16 years old. However, for political correctness sake, and due to my personal views on language, i will personally replace the terms "he" and "she" with "they", and do not mind if the same is done for me. We do not distinguish between masculine and feminine "I", "you", "we", and "they", so why should we do it for singular third person? It is not only irregular in that respect, but sexist at the same time. Think about what it would be like if we had separate words for singular third person pronouns for people of different races! It is the same principle for gender.
Translations
Français :J'habite en Grande Bretagne, je suis un garçon, et j'ai seize ans.
Español :Vivo en Inglaterra, soy un chico, y tengo diez y seis años.
Italiano :Vivo nel Regno Unito, sono ragazzo, e ho sedici anni.
Esperanto :Mi loĝas en Britio, estas knabo, kaj estas 16 jara.
I can read most of the important parts of the IPA, but I'm not fluent with all of it.
Translations
Français: Je parle Français aussi, et un peu d'Espagnol et d'Italienne. Je peux comprendre aussi un petit petit peu de Esperanto, mais malhereusement, c'est sans l'aide d'un proffesseur. :(
J'ai l'intention d'apprendre le Japonais, le Chinois, et l'Allemagne dans l'avenir, mais je n'ai pas assez de temps en realité. Ce ne fait rien pourtant... je dois dédier plus de temps pour les langue qui j'ai déja apprenu.
Je peut comprendre la plupart de l'IPA, mais il y a des occassions quand je dois vérifier de temps en temps.
I believe in English spelling reform. English has the most illogical spelling system of any language known to man.
Children in Anglophone countries have one of the highest percentages of recorded dyslexia in the world, brought on by our unneccessarily complicated spelling sytem.
We waste so much time and ink with unneccesary letters - "britic" would cut that down by an eighth.
We waste so much time looking up spellings - britic would eliminate that entirely.
It's time to stop this. Support the reform. Support the Simple Spelling Society, and britic.