Thursday, February 2, 2012

Are english-russian speaking diplomatic translators wanted in the United states?

I'm completely fluent in both english and russian and russian is my first language. Many people dont even know im russian because my english is perfect. If i speak english i sound american, if i speak russian i sound like an actual russian person. So my skill set is very unique being fluent in both languages. School is comming around the corner and im thinking about becomming a diplomatic translator for the government. My uncle said, " take a russian course out of college

move to D.C and they will find you." I'm sure they will.

I heard diplomats get paid good bank and was wondering about the pay and really the amount of fluent english/russian speakers needed to work for the government. As im aware that america still has spy's in russia and russia has spy's in the united states. Tension is still there long after the cold war. I would never betray the motherland or the united states of america, as i am a resident of both countries and understand two sides of a story. I plan to be a loyal american and the other way around if you know what i mean. I want to make a diffrence and work for both sides in finding a good compromise. So please, if you know anything about diplomatic translator jobs, please reply.



thank you.Are english-russian speaking diplomatic translators wanted in the United states?
well you have some flaws in English, first of all, all adjectives formed from countries are capitalized, as in in English, French, Russian, etc. and the correct plural for "a spy" is "spies" not "spy's" - there's no need for the apostrophe anyways.

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