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Study languages you are bound to fail in

 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
96 messages over 12 pages: 1 24 5 6 7 ... 3 ... 11 12 Next >>
Solfrid Cristin
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Winner TAC 2011 & 2012
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Norway
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4143 posts - 8864 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, Spanish, Swedish, French, English, German, Italian
Studies: Russian

 
 Message 17 of 96
11 March 2014 at 8:23pm | IP Logged 
tea oolong wrote:

Written Chinese and Spoken Chinese would be a snap for the OP. But, despite the language
she's learning, I'd strongly suggest she practice writing and memorize Chinese Characters
while she practices her current language.


I really appreciate the vote of confidence, but I think you overestimate me :-)
1 person has voted this message useful



ScottScheule
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Senior Member
United States
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Speaks: English*, Spanish
Studies: Latin, Hungarian, Biblical Hebrew, Old English, Russian, Swedish, German, Italian, French

 
 Message 18 of 96
11 March 2014 at 8:53pm | IP Logged 
Solfrid Cristin wrote:
Do you ever study a language you know you have no chance whatsoever to become functional in? ... Do you ever do a language just because you think it is fun, without having any ambitions in it whatsoever, or
do you only start languages you intend to "finish".


It seems to me most of the dead languages I study satisfy these conditions. Of course functional is ambiguous, but I take it you mean something like "can have a conversation in, read the news, communicate via writing." With Old English and Sanskrit, I have no intention to get to that level. I'll be happy to simply read the existing corpus.

This applies a fortiori to Quenya.

But with living languages, yes, I do aspire to functionality in all of them.
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Bao
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Germany
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Studies: French, Spanish, Japanese, Mandarin

 
 Message 19 of 96
11 March 2014 at 9:16pm | IP Logged 
Solfrid Cristin wrote:
Bao wrote:
Sorry, Solfrid, when I it looked over I thought: Who am I to tell you these things?


If I ask it is because I am genuinely interested in the answers. If I had all the answers myself, I might as well
just stay put :-)

Yes, but I ... kind of went from the general question to the example of yourself, and tried to disprove your own statement about yourself, and that is impolite. I do believe you could do it, but from all I know, your learning seems to be closely linked to social ties with a language and its cultures.
As for character learning, I don't know if there's a way to tell before trying.

And for the question itself ... I can't motivate myself by thinking "if I keep up the hard work for several years, I will be able to use this!" - I have to be able to gain some intrinsic motivation from the process of learning itself, and the more I concentrate on simply learning what I can learn, the more I indeed learn, and the less I care about possibly failing to meet some goal. (Those two outcomes are probably linked.) So, yes and no.

Edited by Bao on 11 March 2014 at 9:17pm

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Solfrid Cristin
Heptaglot
Winner TAC 2011 & 2012
Senior Member
Norway
Joined 5331 days ago

4143 posts - 8864 votes 
Speaks: Norwegian*, Spanish, Swedish, French, English, German, Italian
Studies: Russian

 
 Message 20 of 96
11 March 2014 at 9:23pm | IP Logged 
Bao wrote:
Solfrid Cristin wrote:
Bao wrote:
Sorry, Solfrid, when I it looked over I thought: Who
am I to tell you these things?


If I ask it is because I am genuinely interested in the answers. If I had all the answers myself, I might as well
just stay put :-)

Yes, but I ... kind of went from the general question to the example of yourself, and tried to disprove your own
statement about yourself, and that is impolite.


I have two teenagers in the house, so impolite to me is a whole different level.

To quote M in James Bond: If I want sarcasms, I'll go to my children :-)
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Volte
Tetraglot
Senior Member
Switzerland
Joined 6436 days ago

4474 posts - 6726 votes 
Speaks: English*, Esperanto, German, Italian
Studies: French, Finnish, Mandarin, Japanese

 
 Message 21 of 96
11 March 2014 at 9:33pm | IP Logged 
You probably would not be dyslexic with the Chinese writing system - obviously, pinyin would be as problematic as your current languages, but dyslexia with characters appears to be a distinct and rarer phenomenon, involving a different part of the brain. So, yes, you probably actually are lucky.

I'm honestly puzzled by why you think spoken Mandarin would be so difficult. True, there aren't many cognates, but the grammar is a lot less painful than Russian's, and you've certainly proven that you can learn quite a lot of words! As for writing, characters take time, but aren't hard, per se.
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Medulin
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Senior Member
Croatia
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Speaks: Croatian*, English, Spanish, Portuguese
Studies: Norwegian, Hindi, Nepali

 
 Message 22 of 96
12 March 2014 at 1:40am | IP Logged 
Solfrid Cristin wrote:
Do you ever study a language you know you have no chance whatsoever to become functional in? I ask
because after a couple of more years focusing on Russian, I assume that I will move on to another language,
and I have an urge to learn Mandarin, but I know that I have no chance to ever speak it. If I have learned one
thing with Russian it is that where I am in life, learning a language takes a loooong time. I might be able to do
Greek or Turkish, and I could most certainly do Dutch or Portuguese, but I could not do Mandarin. To
different, too difficult.

Do you ever do a language just because you think it is fun, without having any ambitions in it whatsoever, or
do you only start languages you intend to "finish".

And for the record, the question is not "Do you ever dabble". Most of us do. The thing is that I always have
the intention of becoming somewhat functional. With Mandarin it would be more of a " Oh, what a nice shiny
language, let's look at some of the letters" sort of thing.
You should definitely learn Mandarin.
But there are more Tamils and Vietnamese in Norway,
if you pick one of these, you could practice more. ;)

1 person has voted this message useful



DaisyMaisy
Senior Member
United States
Joined 5377 days ago

115 posts - 178 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Spanish
Studies: Swedish, Finnish

 
 Message 23 of 96
12 March 2014 at 4:42am | IP Logged 
I would love to learn Welsh to a near native level, but realistically.....I will probably only dabble along, despite my interest.

Much as I love languages and want to study them all :) the practicality issue does have a big impact. I hear Spanish every day, speaking it well would (will!) be a great marketable skill in my field, and there are native speakers all around that I can talk to. So I spend the vast majority of my effort on Spanish.

Not that I won't study other languages, but right now I don't see being fluent in any others (still a goal for later on down the road though).
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Stolan
Senior Member
United States
Joined 4029 days ago

274 posts - 368 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Thai, Lowland Scots
Studies: Arabic (classical), Cantonese

 
 Message 24 of 96
12 March 2014 at 5:21am | IP Logged 
Mandarin is the Spanish/English of Chinese languages or asian tonal languages. It has only 8 or so particles while
some languages such as Thai have up to hundreds for different questions, aspect, politeness, exclamation, and
modality.
It has only 6 pronouns while Thai has as many as 50 based on whether one converses with a child or monk.
4 tones, yes, but only 6 vowels, no clusters in consonants, half the words end in a vowel, and no reduction or pitch
or any of that. Thai is stress timed with 18 vowels and 5 tones and some consonant clusters exist.
Or Hokkien, the Lithuanian of Chinese languages, tons of irregular tone changes in some lexical words and very
complex regular tonal sandhi.

It is not hard outside of foreignness nor is it conservative, rest assured it would be just as hard for them to learn
your languages, would you not be willing to struggle a little if they have in High School?




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