ChristopherB Triglot Senior Member New Zealand Joined 6313 days ago 851 posts - 1074 votes 2 sounds Speaks: English*, German, French
| Message 17 of 19 26 January 2009 at 7:29pm | IP Logged |
The approach I've finally decided to take is to mix in both words and sentences, and only use the latter when I feel a particular word needs context to properly understand. Makes a lot more sense to me than to spend hours writing out sentences from books just to test basic nouns or whatever. For a language like Chinese, however, such an approach might actually be preferable insofar as fluditity in reading sentences is concerned, no matter how basic the words might be. I also find that the more advanced I get, the less need I have for sentences and I can switch largely to words. Even basic sentences are good to test in the beginning, as they get you used to the structure of the language.
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SiibillamLaw Bilingual Diglot Newbie United Kingdom storywrite.com/siibiRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5784 days ago 25 posts - 26 votes Speaks: French*, English* Studies: Japanese
| Message 18 of 19 04 February 2009 at 7:27pm | IP Logged |
Sounds interesting, mate. I still favour the "sentences" only method, and use words only for place names 箱崎 for example or words which still allude me
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Monox D. I-Fly Senior Member Indonesia monoxdifly.iopc.us Joined 5132 days ago 762 posts - 664 votes Speaks: Indonesian*
| Message 19 of 19 21 September 2017 at 3:58pm | IP Logged |
SiibillamLaw wrote:
Sounds interesting, mate. I still favour the "sentences" only method, and use words only for place names 箱崎 for example or words which still allude me |
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What does that Kanji read? I know that the first Kanji is "bako", but what is the second one?
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