Rob Tickner Senior Member New Zealand Joined 4491 days ago 126 posts - 158 votes Speaks: English* Studies: GermanB1, French, Swedish
| Message 25 of 158 09 September 2012 at 2:05am | IP Logged |
Thanks, it's certainly nothing remarkably difficult or requiring
a great stretch of intelligence to accomplish, simply a
concrete goal and persistence.
To clarify, 2000 new words learnt, the deck size is 3000. 200
new words a day plus reviews.
Once all the new cards are done, I'll keep doing the reviews
as they come up to maintain it all.
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ZombieKing Bilingual Diglot Senior Member Canada Joined 4530 days ago 247 posts - 324 votes Speaks: English*, Mandarin*
| Message 26 of 158 09 September 2012 at 10:32am | IP Logged |
Rob Tickner wrote:
Thanks, it's certainly nothing remarkably difficult or requiring
a great stretch of intelligence to accomplish, simply a
concrete goal and persistence.
To clarify, 2000 new words learnt, the deck size is 3000. 200
new words a day plus reviews.
Once all the new cards are done, I'll keep doing the reviews
as they come up to maintain it all. |
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I believe that your hard work will definitely pay off. There's no reason why a person isn't physically capable of learning 200+ words a day, it's just the discipline it requires to do so is hard to come by. With your determination, I think Swedish will be a breeze for you!
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prz_ Tetraglot Senior Member Poland last.fm/user/prz_rul Joined 4862 days ago 890 posts - 1190 votes Speaks: Polish*, English, Bulgarian, Croatian Studies: Slovenian, Macedonian, Persian, Russian, Turkish, Ukrainian, Dutch, Swedish, German, Italian, Armenian, Kurdish
| Message 27 of 158 09 September 2012 at 12:55pm | IP Logged |
For me the problem is not determination, the problem is that (in my case) while having the last several dozen or even several words they simply can't stick to my mind. And when I finally guess them, because there are so little of them that I can remember it for 10-15 seconds, I forget it after another 10-15 seconds ;)
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Rob Tickner Senior Member New Zealand Joined 4491 days ago 126 posts - 158 votes Speaks: English* Studies: GermanB1, French, Swedish
| Message 28 of 158 09 September 2012 at 3:29pm | IP Logged |
Day 11
Total: 2200
New: 200
Reviews: 461
Time: 131 mins
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stifa Triglot Senior Member Norway lang-8.com/448715 Joined 4876 days ago 629 posts - 813 votes Speaks: Norwegian*, EnglishC2, German Studies: Japanese, Spanish
| Message 29 of 158 09 September 2012 at 3:41pm | IP Logged |
Your determination is admirable. I am "mining" my own Japanese deck, and it has only
~1200 items; I only add 10-30 new cards a day.
When you're done with those reviews, you could just add new cards based on words you
encounter in native material. Perhaps even with Swedish definitions considering the
fact that you have 3000 words under your belt...
Good luck with the last 800.
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Rob Tickner Senior Member New Zealand Joined 4491 days ago 126 posts - 158 votes Speaks: English* Studies: GermanB1, French, Swedish
| Message 30 of 158 09 September 2012 at 3:50pm | IP Logged |
The "stickiness" of each new Swedish word seems to directly
correlate to the level of similarity with the same word in
English or German, and/or the ability to conjure up some
memorable image that I can recall later. I imagine one's
creativity would get a greater workout as the languages
diverged, however.
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Rob Tickner Senior Member New Zealand Joined 4491 days ago 126 posts - 158 votes Speaks: English* Studies: GermanB1, French, Swedish
| Message 31 of 158 09 September 2012 at 3:57pm | IP Logged |
Thanks for your suggestion, I hadn't considered entries
using Swedish alone.
Best of luck with your Japanese studies.
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stifa Triglot Senior Member Norway lang-8.com/448715 Joined 4876 days ago 629 posts - 813 votes Speaks: Norwegian*, EnglishC2, German Studies: Japanese, Spanish
| Message 32 of 158 09 September 2012 at 7:13pm | IP Logged |
Thanks.
You might end up finding unknown words in the definitions but those words are usually
related to the original word, or they might be "dictionary words".
I've been doing this with Japanese, and I'm very lucky if I don't have to learn 10-15
more words to actually understand the definitions.
The reason for doing that is the fact that some words can't really be translated
properly into English. I noticed this when I looked at Lang-8 entries in my own
language. An example would be the word "to add" which could be translated to several
words in Norwegian. The one most similar to the English word, "å addere" is, as far as
I know, only used in mathematics.
(Please forgive my English language mistakes.)
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