fireflies Senior Member Joined 5180 days ago 172 posts - 234 votes Speaks: English*
| Message 1121 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 4:13am | IP Logged |
LanguageSponge wrote:
When you come home from three hours of archery practise three times in a week and feel guilty because you've spent nine hours of the week speaking English that you could have spent at home studying languages. |
|
|
I feel that way going to see a generic Hollywood movie. When the credits roll I feel like I have learned nothing.
1 person has voted this message useful
|
seldnar Senior Member United States Joined 7131 days ago 189 posts - 287 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Mandarin, French, Greek
| Message 1122 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 5:55am | IP Logged |
janalisa wrote:
seldnar wrote:
When you overhear people on the bus talking about
language learning and you hand them a
card from the local restuarant that hosts several different language nights.
When you actually stock up on these cards every time you go to a French evening (which
is
also Turkish evening at another table and you long to join the Turkish speakers but
don't
because you feel you'd be "cheating" on French). |
|
|
Where on earth did you find such a wonderful restaurant?! If there was one nearby, I
might go there every day... =O |
|
|
It is the Continental Restaurant in Seattle, Washington. The language groups began
with the German Stammtisch which I believe has been going on for more than 30 years.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday--Dutch
Tuesday--German, Czech
Wednesday--French, Turkish, Greek?
Thursday--Spanish
Friday--Can't remember
Saturday--Can't remember
Sunday--Swedish, Celtic
I'm in China right now and didn't bring any of the cards with me. My experience is
that 5-12 people for the popular languages show up each night. I don't know about the
less popular languages (Gaelic, for example). There used to be a website but its been
down for a while
1 person has voted this message useful
|
Hanekawa Diglot Newbie United StatesRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5171 days ago 30 posts - 36 votes Speaks: English*, French Studies: Japanese, Korean
| Message 1123 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 9:49am | IP Logged |
Also, when you go on historical tangents about Kanji. To people who have no clue what
your talking about.
1 person has voted this message useful
|
janalisa Triglot Senior Member France janafadness.com/blog Joined 6889 days ago 284 posts - 466 votes Speaks: English*, French, Japanese Studies: Russian, Norwegian
| Message 1124 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 12:16pm | IP Logged |
seldnar wrote:
janalisa wrote:
seldnar wrote:
When you overhear people on the bus talking about
language learning and you hand them a
card from the local restuarant that hosts several different language nights.
When you actually stock up on these cards every time you go to a French evening (which
is
also Turkish evening at another table and you long to join the Turkish speakers but
don't
because you feel you'd be "cheating" on French). |
|
|
Where on earth did you find such a wonderful restaurant?! If there was one nearby, I
might go there every day... =O |
|
|
It is the Continental Restaurant in Seattle, Washington. The language groups began
with the German Stammtisch which I believe has been going on for more than 30 years.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday--Dutch
Tuesday--German, Czech
Wednesday--French, Turkish, Greek?
Thursday--Spanish
Friday--Can't remember
Saturday--Can't remember
Sunday--Swedish, Celtic
|
|
|
Anybody want to help me establish something like this in Tokyo? XD (Totally serious!)
1 person has voted this message useful
|
LanguageSponge Triglot Senior Member United Kingdom Joined 5765 days ago 1197 posts - 1487 votes Speaks: English*, German, French Studies: Welsh, Russian, Japanese, Slovenian, Greek, Italian
| Message 1125 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 1:39pm | IP Logged |
You know you're a language nerd when you go into a class at uni thinking it's the Slovene grammar class you're supposed to be attending. But it's not, it's an introductory class for Polish grammar. You think "oh well, I can always go to the next Slovene class" and stay for Polish :]
1 person has voted this message useful
|
Liface Triglot Senior Member United States youtube.com/user/Lif Joined 5857 days ago 150 posts - 237 votes Speaks: English*, German, Spanish Studies: Dutch, French
| Message 1126 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 7:10pm | IP Logged |
seldnar wrote:
janalisa wrote:
seldnar wrote:
When you overhear people on the bus talking about
language learning and you hand them a
card from the local restuarant that hosts several different language nights.
When you actually stock up on these cards every time you go to a French evening (which
is
also Turkish evening at another table and you long to join the Turkish speakers but
don't
because you feel you'd be "cheating" on French). |
|
|
Where on earth did you find such a wonderful restaurant?! If there was one nearby, I
might go there every day... =O |
|
|
It is the Continental Restaurant in Seattle, Washington. The language groups began
with the German Stammtisch which I believe has been going on for more than 30 years.
The schedule is as follows:
Monday--Dutch
Tuesday--German, Czech
Wednesday--French, Turkish, Greek?
Thursday--Spanish
Friday--Can't remember
Saturday--Can't remember
Sunday--Swedish, Celtic
I'm in China right now and didn't bring any of the cards with me. My experience is
that 5-12 people for the popular languages show up each night. I don't know about the
less popular languages (Gaelic, for example). There used to be a website but its been
down for a while |
|
|
Nice. I go to the Continental for the Dutch Stammtisch. It's only once a month though.
1 person has voted this message useful
|
Teango Triglot Winner TAC 2010 & 2012 Senior Member United States teango.wordpress.comRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5555 days ago 2210 posts - 3734 votes Speaks: English*, German, Russian Studies: Hawaiian, French, Toki Pona
| Message 1127 of 3737 29 September 2010 at 8:07pm | IP Logged |
When you wander into websites like this and instantly smile (but for a completely different reason from your friends). :)
1 person has voted this message useful
|
meramarina Diglot Moderator United States Joined 5966 days ago 1341 posts - 2303 votes Speaks: English*, Spanish Studies: German, Italian, French Personal Language Map
| Message 1128 of 3737 30 September 2010 at 5:18am | IP Logged |
ellasevia wrote
Quote:
Inspired by you meramarina, I did just the same thing when I was at the bookstore yesterday! I didn't see any books from the "hide this [...] book" series (maybe someone from this website got there before me), but I did hide a book called "Dirty Japanese." |
|
|
Excellent work for The Cause, ellasevia! Now we just have to figure out how to hide the Rosetta Stone kiosk displays. That will be difficult; maybe the company anticipated this and made the vivid yellow boxes so bright in order to be nerd-resistant.
Another incident. They just keep coming. I had to find a quick lunch for three dollars the other day and so I went to Chik-fil-A, a fine dining establishment with a name every bit as annoying as Weetabix or Big Corny. With so few dollars I could only get a kid's meal. It came in a fun, colorful little bag decorated with puzzles. One of these impressed me a lot at first. I saw a few strange words:
EMRBEREM OT MLSIE !
I couldn't identify the language, but course I highly approved of teaching foreign languages to children. Then I realized that it was not a foreign language, but an "unscramble the letters to find a message" word game:
REMEMBER TO SMILE !
I was not amused.
3 persons have voted this message useful
|