NadyaEsme Diglot Newbie United States Joined 4894 days ago 5 posts - 5 votes Speaks: English*, Spanish Studies: Portuguese, Persian, Tamil, Russian
| Message 1 of 2 24 June 2011 at 6:04pm | IP Logged |
Welcome to my 2011 learning log! So, this will be my log for
English, Russian, Dari (I'm starting to think that I'll need to
change that to Persian), and Tamil. I'll give updates on
Spanish and Portuguese, but they aren't my main foci.
Russian
Comments: Russian is, without a doubt, the superstar in
this log, so the majority of my entries may be about
Russian (and hopefully in it soon).
Current Level: A1
Goal: A2 by the end of next summer
Resources
Russian for Beginners
Princeton Russian Course
A plethora of Russian podcasts
BBC
Persian
Comments: I began using a free college course to learn the
Perso-Arabic script, but what I did not know was that there
were three main "dialects" of Persian- Farsi, Dari, and Tajik.
I had already bought Living Language: Farsi, so I suppose I'm
learning Farsi with that program and Dari using the other
resources I have stumbled upon. I suppose the difference
between them are comparative to American English and
British English? Please correct me if I'm wrong, though.
Current Level: A1
Goal: A2 by Christmas
Resources:
Living Language Farsi
Websites for Dari
BBC
easypersian
English
Comments: I would like to work on my writing style, which I
feel is a little too informal and convulated.
Current Level: First degree murder of the English language
Goal: Eloquence and brevity
Resources
This handy-dandy reference book
intellectually stimulating literature
*Tamil
Current Level: A1
Goal: A2
Study time: Thirty minutes a day copying the alphabet- heh,
I haven't really gotten to remembering it yet, just
acclimating myself with each letter.
Resources:
A website on the Tamil alphabet (w/ audio)
* I'm currently debating whether I will be able to get far in
my Tamil study because the script is easy to recognize in
certain media, but in others, it's quite hard to decipher and
that really messes with my eyes. Does anyone else seem to
have this problem?
Observations:
-> My learning method focuses on wordlists, Anki, and
listening to and repeating what I hear in audio (is there a
name for that method?). I also have something called the
Sticky Method, which isn't really a method, but...whatever.
So, with the sticky method (which probably already has a
name and is used by people that are more creative and
ambitious than myself), I use this program called Notas
Adhesivas ( I think it's Stickie on the default Apple setting)
to write down words that I'm not familiar with. Then, I
minimize the sticky window until there's about three or four
words with the definition of that word next to it (always in
the same language as the word). I make it a point to put
them all over my screen (the transparent ones) so I'll have
to move them around and hopefully pay attention to what's
actually on them. Obviously this is not a very ergonomic
method (I pick up on 4 words a day with it), but I suppose
that's better than nothing. I'm not too methodical, so I use
whatever I come up with at the time.
My Current Study Plan:
Russian (5 hours), Persian (3 hours), Tamil (30 minutes),
Spanish and Portuguese reading (1 hour)
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NadyaEsme Diglot Newbie United States Joined 4894 days ago 5 posts - 5 votes Speaks: English*, Spanish Studies: Portuguese, Persian, Tamil, Russian
| Message 2 of 2 25 June 2011 at 9:36pm | IP Logged |
My original plan didn't go exactly how I wanted it, so I'll
have to make some much needed adjustments.
SPANISH
I said that I wouldn't study Spanish as much, but I somehow
managed to watch a documentary on gypsies ("gitanos"). It
was really interesting and I learned how to say quite a few
nationalities. I think I should practice a little more though,
since I'll be going to Florida next friday, and that'll be a good
opportunity to practice speaking. The only problem I have is
accents. I'm learning Castilian Spanish and I neglected to
listen to other accents, so I have to get used to not hearing
the " th" sound in certain words.
Soló, tengo una pregunta:
¿Cual es la diferencia entre "qué" y "cuál"? Creo que "cuál"
signifiqué "which" y "qué" signifiqué "what".
RUSSIAN
I finally finished lesson two of chapter one in the Princeton
course, but I'm still stuck on cursive in RFB. I saw that later
on you have to choose a Russian name, so I skipped over
and picked one: Светлана.
I printed out all of chapter one and wow, my parents are
going to be shocked when they see those pages.
TAMIL
Alphabet...still...
PERSIAN
I'm using my pop up dictionary to learn words. At least I
already know the alphabet for when I start the lessons.
ENGLISH
I watched a documentary on i-banking, which is what I want
to do when I graduate college. That counts, right?
THE WONDERS OF WANDERLUST
Portuguese is in my imaginary basurero at the moment. I
also recently found a ton of french podcasts, bookmarks,
books, and exercises. This is bad for my current schedule,
especially since I really don't want to learn a Romance
language right now. My recent love of medieval-type music
is getting me interested in Old English or Old French.
Perhaps that'll help my English? My last obstacle is
resisting the power of Arabic dance music.
Maybe I can keep a consistent schedule when the TAC 2012
action begins.
Edited by NadyaEsme on 25 June 2011 at 9:39pm
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