What Languages Do The Royals Speak?


If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
No. He speaks RP (extremely upper-class, old-fashioned) British English. https://youtube.com/?v=KMZGT3BM0TU
Sherlock Holmes might be able to tell that it's not his native language, but I doubt anyone else would.

Actually, according to his bio "Young Prince Philip", either his mother Alice or someone else thought he was developing an American accent from the kindergarten he was going to in Paris! :lol: I wouldn't be surprised. (That does suggest he was speaking English on a regular basis from before he was about 7 or so.)

And further in the book it mentions that when the diarist Chips Channon came across him as a young adult he was impressed and said "he speaks only English", but I take that more as he only used and sounded English despite his background, rather than really being monolingual.

It's not that anyone's seriously putting forth the notion Philip can't speak anything else, and yes, xenophobia probably has something to do with it, but he's been the Queen's consort for a staggeringly long time and there's a strange lack of him actually doing it, in this modern media age.

Edit: And fwiw Philip himself has said he self-identified as Danish growing up (probably for convenience's sake), but I would be incredibly surprised if he could speak more than a smattering of that.

Definitely off topic but GOODNESS what an attractive and charismatic man!:ohmy::whistling:
 
Yes, he certainly rambled off at the last word. Can't make any sense of that bit.
 
I think he said «pour votre accueil chaleureux*» but really failed at pronouncing Accueil correctly.
 
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My father worked as a journalist for Tribune Madagascar in the nineties and was able to ask questions to Prince Philip about WWF when he visited Madagascar. He asked him questions in french and he told me that Prince Philip was able to answer in French without any accent.
 
Diana and language skills

I read a lot of magazines in my youth. And Princess Diana was a common topic. So her life was often mentioned in these types of articles. And I agree that her unhappiness at school was not about language issues if you can believe all that silly stuff written. She almost on purpose flunked all her O levels. Which would actually take effort to achieve. I think she was acting out somehow. And after her divorce I remember someone asking her if she would go to University and do some studies. And Diana said something to the effect that she wasn't interested at all. Not I am too old or some other reasoning. Almost are you crazy I would never do that it means nothing to me. So my impression of Diana she had great ability to feel people and for people to feel her somehow. And I mention the youthful magazine reading as I am no expert and my research sources are terrible. From what I read she had little interest in any studies at all. And never did. Almost totally uncurious. She was a feeling person. So needless to say I think it can be said that Diana did not speak another language. Interesting to me how our lives shape our language abilities one way or another.
 
My father worked as a journalist for Tribune Madagascar in the nineties and was able to ask questions to Prince Philip about WWF when he visited Madagascar. He asked him questions in french and he told me that Prince Philip was able to answer in French without any accent.

That is hardly surprising as he spent a number of years of his childhood living in Paris - from about 1 - 8. He started school in Paris.
 
I read a lot of magazines in my youth. And Princess Diana was a common topic. So her life was often mentioned in these types of articles. And I agree that her unhappiness at school was not about language issues if you can believe all that silly stuff written. She almost on purpose flunked all her O levels. Which would actually take effort to achieve. I think she was acting out somehow. And after her divorce I remember someone asking her if she would go to University and do some studies. And Diana said something to the effect that she wasn't interested at all. Not I am too old or some other reasoning. Almost are you crazy I would never do that it means nothing to me. So my impression of Diana she had great ability to feel people and for people to feel her somehow. And I mention the youthful magazine reading as I am no expert and my research sources are terrible. From what I read she had little interest in any studies at all. And never did. Almost totally uncurious. She was a feeling person. So needless to say I think it can be said that Diana did not speak another language. Interesting to me how our lives shape our language abilities one way or another.

Dont quite see that. How did Diana's language abilities or lack of them shape her life? She didn't have much interest in studying at school but I doubt if she failed exams on purpose.. She wasn't good at languages and that was one reason she was unhappy in Switzerland, She couldn't speak French, she didn't want to be there and she was homesiclk...
 
mother language ability passes to children

Diana lack of an interest in language ability or world travel during language development ages would show that both her children have zero language ability. Excuse me. William and Harry have little language ability. ZERO.
 
According to Sally Bedell-Smith, Diana refused to even try to speak French or Italian with the other students at Institut Videmadette(?) in Switzerland. She limited her interactions to her fellow British aristocrats.

Ironically, what finally persuaded Lord and Lady Spencer to throw in the towel and concede defeat was Diana refusing to attend any classes except cooking...she wrote her parents that she didn't go to class, skied all day and was tasting so many of the rich sauces in cooking class that she was becoming fat.

That did the trick. I guess that's where the Spencers drew the line.:whistling::cool:
 
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Another thought about Philip and languages — the Navy never seems to have asked him to do anything with his French or especially his German, and the WWII British military was pretty desperate to use every multilingual person that they had. Even his girlfriend at the time, Osla, wound up working at Bletchley.

So unless they asked Philip to do something that's still classified? It's, again, a bit weird.
 
Did Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine, Marchioness of Milford-Haven speak Russian when she visited her sisters Empress Alexandra and Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia?
 
Did Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine, Marchioness of Milford-Haven speak Russian when she visited her sisters Empress Alexandra and Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia?

Since they were German princesses and I don't think Victoria spoke Russian (and Alicky was never particularly comfortable in it, considering her children spoke English to her), wouldn't it make sense they spoke German? Or even English.
 
Diana lack of an interest in language ability or world travel during language development ages would show that both her children have zero language ability. Excuse me. William and Harry have little language ability. ZERO.

Why would Diaana's lack of language ability show that her children have poor language ability? She didn't go to college, but her son William did. I dont know of any necessary correlation between the language ability of a parent, and a child....
 
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Another thought about Philip and languages — the Navy never seems to have asked him to do anything with his French or especially his German, and the WWII British military was pretty desperate to use every multilingual person that they had. Even his girlfriend at the time, Osla, wound up working at Bletchley.

So unless they asked Philip to do something that's still classified? It's, again, a bit weird.
Philip was on active service and Im sure he would prefer that to a desk job..
 
I can't see why Diana's lack of language ability would show that William or Harry would have a similar lack, either.


I doubt that Alix's sister Victoria spoke Russian - I'd assume they spoke German or English. Probably English.
 
According to Sally Bedell-Smith, Diana refused to even try to speak French or Italian with the other students at Institut Videmadette(?) in Switzerland. She limited her interactions to her fellow British aristocrats.

Ironically, what finally persuaded Lord and Lady Spencer to throw in the towel and concede defeat was Diana refusing to attend any classes except cooking...she wrote her parents that she didn't go to class, skied all day and was tasting so many of the rich sauces in cooking class that she was becoming fat.

That did the trick. I guess that's where the Spencers drew the line.:whistling::cool:
I'd imagine that it had nothing much to do with the cooking or "Diana becoming fat" as she claimed...and a lot to do with the fact that Diana was clearly unhappy there and didn't want to be at finishing school. if she wasn't learning anything at all and was very unhappy and homesick, there was no point in keeping her there....
 
Mother tongue

I was being very blunt when I was thinking about language skills of Diana who I have compassion for her and her situation before her tragic death. What I meant is that many language skills are taught by our mothers. For me living in France we speak English at home and French everywhere else. And I have my son read out loud since he was a child from very difficult books so he has a normal reading level in English. So a mother's language ability can be a factor in children language skills. At my sons French school he sits in as a sort of student helper to help the other students with their English. My point here is that mothers can pass their mother tongue to their children. In Diana's situation only speaking English that is all she could teach which is fine. Many people only speak one language. I am certain Harry and William have studied languages going to the best schools available. I wouldn't call either of them fluent in another language. Maybe they are better than most traveling so often and meeting so many foreign speakers they likely get more chances to improve than most. I saw here that William gave a speech in French. Is he fluent?
 
Regarding Philip's knowledge of languages I remembered this quote of his:
'If anything, I've thought of myself as Scandinavian. Particularly, Danish. We spoke English at home,' Prince Philip recalls today. 'The others learned Greek. I could understand a certain amount of it. But then the (conversation) would go into French. Then it went into German, on occasion, because we had German cousins. If you couldn't think of a word in one language, you tended to go off in another.'

It's also mentioned in the article how sign language was an integral part of family life.

https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-...ge-life-profile-of-prince-philip-1563268.html
 
Sign language

Until reading the article posted about Prince Philip's interview at 71 I did not know his mother Alice was deaf since 4 years old. So they used sign language. So this might have been Prince Philip's first experience with language. How interesting. And what a tragic childhood. It is a miracle really that he managed to do as well as he has done. Although I often wondered if feelings in his household were not considered important. All his children seem to struggle with personal relationships. Just very interesting that Prince Philip was raised by a deaf mother, absent father and sounds like almost like an only child. I have been to Corfu it is a beautiful place. I can understand why his mother would be traumatized by having her husbands life threatened and the close escape with their lives. Obviously Prince Philip speaks French and German and English and sounds like he can sign and understand some Greek. Living in a bilingual household I understand the funny situations one finds oneself in trying to communicate. Often I will speak in English and my husband and son will speak to me in French. As these are our more comfortable languages. My husband speaks German and I speak some Spanish. My husband grew up in a German speaking part of France. Anyway, from my household experience I can understand Prince Philip description of using different ways to communicate. I find the sign language knowledge very interesting.
 
I was being very blunt when I was thinking about language skills of Diana who I have compassion for her and her situation before her tragic death. What I meant is that many language skills are taught by our mothers. For me living in France we speak English at home and French everywhere else. And I have my son read out loud since he was a child from very difficult books so he has a normal reading level in English. So a mother's language ability can be a factor in children language skills. At my sons French school he sits in as a sort of student helper to help the other students with their English. My point here is that mothers can pass their mother tongue to their children. In Diana's situation only speaking English that is all she could teach which is fine. Many people only speak one language. I am certain Harry and William have studied languages going to the best schools available. I wouldn't call either of them fluent in another language. Maybe they are better than most traveling so often and meeting so many foreign speakers they likely get more chances to improve than most. I saw here that William gave a speech in French. Is he fluent?
I dont think that Wiliam is fluent in French.. but I can't see what it has to do with Diana. Most people I'd say can only speak one language.. so Diana was hardly different to the majority of English people. her kids would have learned languages at school but probably never learned to speak well in French, and once they left school, they lost whatever they had learned as most of us do...
 
William and Harry both grew up in England, with two English-speaking parents. It was different for past royals. Prince Philip was born in Greece with one Danish grandparent, one Russian grandparent, one German grandparent and one half-German, half-British grandparent, spent part of his childhood in France and part in Britain, and had a brief spell at school in Germany. Two very different scenarios!
 
I’d say that Prince Philip kept his German speaking skills up mainly because I remember reading years and years ago that he would pay private visits to his sisters and brothers in law in Germany and sometimes take his elder children Charles and Anne with him. This lasted into the late 1960s at least.

As these sisters remained close to their brother and had children and grandchildren of their own I can’t imagine that family conversations would be conducted entirely in English, though I suppose some would among the younger members who could speak English, for Charles and Anne’s benefit.


I remember reading that in the early years of the marriage Charles really wanted ‘the German cousins’ to stay with him and his family for a while, but Diana wasn’t keen so the idea was dropped. These cousins would have spoken English I guess as I’ve never heard that Charles (or Anne) were/are fluent in German, which is a shame in a way.
 
I dont think that Wiliam is fluent in French.. but I can't see what it has to do with Diana. Most people I'd say can only speak one language.. so Diana was hardly different to the majority of English people. her kids would have learned languages at school but probably never learned to speak well in French, and once they left school, they lost whatever they had learned as most of us do...

Probably most people in the UK speak only one language. But worldwide, the majority speaks multiple languages. In this country, for example, very few people (less than 1%) will only speak one language (typically those who hardly had any schooling); most others will typically speak at least 3 languages.

I found this statistic:
Monolingual: 40%
Bilingual: 43%
Trilingual: 13%
Quadrilingual: 3%
Quintilingual(+): 0.1%

English-speaking countries typically have a higher percentage of monolingual people.

So, while I understand that for a British prince it isn't as important as for other royals, imho, it would still have been beneficial if he had started learning at least a second language from an early age (and maybe that is what he himself thinks as well; as their children might have learned Spanish from their nanny). For example, while Leonor speaks another often spoken language, i.e., Spanish, she not only studied English but also studied Chinese. Amalia also studied many different languages, while speaking 2 languages fluent (Dutch and Spanish) from an early age and probably 2 languages 'somewhat' (English and German) before starting high school, where she would have taken classes in at least English (classes are in English from the start!), German, French, (both obligatory for at least 3 years) Greek, Latin (both obligatory for 3-4 years; at least one until final year/exam) and Chinese (only for 'Gymnasium Plus' - so, for the best students; this included Amalia).
 
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I agree, and believe that while it might not be completely necessary for heirs to the throne of the UK to speak at least one other language it makes for a much more rounded person if they do. IMO an opportunity was missed with William and Harry, (an opportunity that won’t come again as it’s harder to learn another language in adulthood than in childhood) and I hope that George and his siblings keep up with speaking Spanish and expand it later, and that at least they will learn fluent French.
 
Who says teh children are learning Spanish from their nanny? They may pick up a few phrases but I doubt if they speak Spanish...
 
Modern Royals and language

Modern royals often do not marry royals from other countries as in times past to create alliances and political power through marriage. So language ability would be less important in modern times.

It reminds me of a scene in some dumb holly wood movie I think it was Marie Antoinette with Kirsten Dunst being taken as an Austrian Queen to the French Court. And there was some sort of I am sure totally inaccurate trade off on the road from the Austrian to the French court. And Kirsten Dunst is told to strip and they take her Austrian dog away and she is redressed in French clothes and gets into a French carriage.

I think Prince Philips seems to have experienced some of these submerging his self to take on the new self. And a lot of royal ceremonies even marriage is about becoming someone else. With modern royals able to marry commoners from their own cultures it is less likely more than one language will be spoken amongst the families.

I remember reading in a magazine another of my illustrious sources that Prince Albert of Monaco's South African Dutch bride had a terrible time adapting to the French language and culture. And was unhappy. Me being American having married a French man I am very interested in how people adapt and cope with multicultural lifestyles.

I think once as in Prince Phillips life time royals were only allowed to marry other royals with great social problems if the partner was not considered socially right. Leading to lots of languages in royal families. As well as the past times marriages for political alliance.

I agree that studying another language helps make someone a more rounded person but not necessary to be a well rounded person.
 
meghan seemed to speak a good level of french when she visited morocco (she was only heard speaking to a couple of schoolgirls over their plans for life, so admittedly it was an informal conversation so unsure what her real level of french is like). she lived in argentina so assume she speaks a decent spanish.
 
Modern royals often do not marry royals from other countries as in times past to create alliances and political power through marriage. So language ability would be less important in modern times.

It reminds me of a scene in some dumb holly wood movie I think it was Marie Antoinette with Kirsten Dunst being taken as an Austrian Queen to the French Court. And there was some sort of I am sure totally inaccurate trade off on the road from the Austrian to the French court. And Kirsten Dunst is told to strip and they take her Austrian dog away and she is redressed in French clothes and gets into a French carriage.

I think Prince Philips seems to have experienced some of these submerging his self to take on the new self. And a lot of royal ceremonies even marriage is about becoming someone else. With modern royals able to marry commoners from their own cultures it is less likely more than one language will be spoken amongst the families.

I remember reading in a magazine another of my illustrious sources that Prince Albert of Monaco's South African Dutch bride had a terrible time adapting to the French language and culture. And was unhappy. Me being American having married a French man I am very interested in how people adapt and cope with multicultural lifestyles.

I think once as in Prince Phillips life time royals were only allowed to marry other royals with great social problems if the partner was not considered socially right. Leading to lots of languages in royal families. As well as the past times marriages for political alliance.

I agree that studying another language helps make someone a more rounded person but not necessary to be a well rounded person.

Yes I think that Charleen's had difficulties adapting to Monaco, though she lived there with Albert for a time before she was married.. but I think that she doesn't speak very good French and that may be one reason why she's not that happy and is not that involved with charity duties...Besides foreign brides often get criticism for their accents or for not speaking the language of their new country well... like Mary Donaldson in Denmark....
 
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