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Learning a language by watching TV?

 Language Learning Forum : Music, Movies, TV & Radio Post Reply
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frenkeld
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
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Speaks: Russian*, English
Studies: German

 
 Message 57 of 134
13 January 2009 at 10:01am | IP Logged 
Cainntear wrote:
Yet this same literature snobbery exists elsewhere, perhaps worse than here -- many people here are more interested in pop music and cinema than classical literature and opera.


More people in general, for sure, but among the people who would actually go to the trouble of learning a foreign languages to a decent level of proficiency without living in the country where it is spoken, the distribution of interests may be different.

Also, the issue is not just high literature versus pop music and TV, there are other kinds of reading one can do. There is entertainment literature, newspapers, magazines, forums, e-mail, etc.



Edited by frenkeld on 13 January 2009 at 10:03am

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reineke
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United States
https://learnalangua
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 Message 58 of 134
13 January 2009 at 12:58pm | IP Logged 
SlickAs wrote:
A few too many glasses of wine to be posting, but I offer this anyway:

It is reasonably easy to learn a language with the accent that the "language people" decide is the good accent. BBC Southern Standard English in English, Madrid Spanish, Parisian French, Stockholm Swedish. But what if you have good reason to speak another accent? Then you will be relying on media.

For example, my Spanish got to a point where it was so good that I now needed to decide on an accent to take it further. I was in Argentina at the time. I learned Argentinian Spanish. But I have not been to Argentina for over 5 years now. And the Latino's I speak to are from all over. The films I see are mostly from Spain. To continue to speak with an Argentian accent is a pretense? Even though I am not exposed to it? I don't think so, but I need recorded Argentinian Spanish to keep it current. Guess where that comes from ... film, TV, utube.

Same with Quebec French. I listen to French learning materials, and I feel false in immitating that accent. Posh. Toffy. But give me a Quebec film and I feel at home ... the language I speak, the language I want to perfect.

My GF (Francophone) wants to step off the plane when we return to Quebec in May with an Australian accent. She speaks beautifully fluent English, but with an accent. I told her that she needs to be able to pass herself off as an Australian here, and with my reinforcement she will speak with a colloquial Australian accent all her life. I told her of how I learned my Swedish accent: that I walked into the streets of Stockholm, having been misunderstood, and spoke more Swedish than the cliche, more Abba, more sing-song than the chef from the Muppets, more than the Swedes and completely overdo it, and suddenly they understood.

And I started teaching her Australian English "FOrget what your teachers taught you ... speak more Australian than the Australians ... Oi wanda spoik with an o-stoilian occoint" (I want to speak with an Australian accent) more Australian than the Australians. We would never speak like that, but you need to lean on the things she keeps too clean from her language classes. She will feel goofy, but if she does not exaggerate, she will not be getting close, and the Australians will not correct an over prononciation ... go out and try it and see what happens. She did, and her accent is coming. Does not sound foreign anymore, even if it does not sound Australian either.

If you are learning English, where else are you going to learn colloqial English other than the media? It does not matter what breed ... you learn Manchester colloquial English, and your English will be considered fluent across the English speaking world for the rest of your life, you just need one. Let me say that again ... if you speak with one dialect / accent quasi-natively, you will be considered native by all, and not some accented foreigner.

THere are many people here who get all snobby about language learning and get into "I learn this language to read Plato in the orginal" or some such guff. What snobbery to say that learning from "high-literature" is valid, but from "low-culture" (i.e. mass media) is beneath you and inferiour language learning. You are getting your snobbery confused with language proficiency. I will see you "literature" people in the bars, clubs, streets, and we will see who speaks it better. Maybe you will see me on a spelling-bee or literature quiz show, and I still might beat you.

I reckon this prejudice comes from Professor Arguelles who is all into literature. He speaks Persian apparently, but "has never had the pleasure of speaking to a native Persian speaker"! Despite living in California! *I* have Persian friends who live in California, and I have never lived there. There are over 3 million of them there. What, has he never felt tempted to walk into the local Persian carpet / coffee shop and sa "Hi"? How shy do you have to be? It is all cool to read "1001 Nights" in Persian, but with respect for the 20 languages he speaks (and I listened to his Swedish video, his accent is far better than mine), he has a different philosophy to learning languages to me, and I feel his shyness has infected the world-view of this community. We all need not get caught up in this literature craze.

Media has a place in language learning. That is all. Equal to literature. People saying that they learned from media are telling the truth as much as people who say they learned from literature. If you drop your snobbery, you will see it clearly.


I don't believe you need to mention people's names in this manner. You will find plenty of people here who like and dislike the "ProfasAR", lol.

My impression has always been that this forum is full of people who are all into cheap entertainment. I have a very good feeling your girlfriend will leave a pretty bad impression.

Some people don’t run after native speakers of other languages and dislike the empty chit-chat with perfect strangers. They find it silly and awkward when someone approaches them in this manner.

Your talk about “posh French,” “snobbery”, “your snobbery” “you "literature" people” “literature craze” “some accented foreigner” the need to protect “the world-view of this community” etc. is very pretentious, pompous and hostile.

I personally learn languages mostly because of books and movies. A Persian rug salesman or an Italian meat mincer factory rep don’t quite justify the effort. A saleswoman might. “High literature” is worth the effort – for some people. Trash is fun. Trash is called trash for a reason. You are what you eat and otherwise consume. Draw your own conclusion.

In order to learn a language to a very high level one needs a lot of different kinds of input. One also needs to communicate daily about a variety of topics and not simply imitate the Swedish Chef.


Edited by reineke on 13 January 2009 at 1:03pm

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cordelia0507
Senior Member
United Kingdom
Joined 5829 days ago

1473 posts - 2176 votes 
Speaks: Swedish*
Studies: German, Russian

 
 Message 59 of 134
13 January 2009 at 4:05pm | IP Logged 
Huh???
Am I a snob because I want to speak clear well-articulated English with a good vocabulary and correct grammar?

I'd argue no!
Most British people notice after a few minutes at the most that I have a foreign accent. (some Northerners don't notice and most Americans don't notice).

But why on earth would I want to speak UK slang like Cockney or any regional speech? I live in London (not East End, for the record..) and I have no family connection to the UK at all. I learnt standard British English in school, and this is also what I had opportunity to practice.

What English accent other than BBC English would make sense for me to use? Yorkshire? Brummie? Or why not... US Texas!! All make equally little sense. This has nothing to do with snobbery, just common sense!

Lastly, I work in a professional job and live in a nice part of London. Frankly, I speak in a similar way as most of my UK friends and colleagues albeit with a very faint accent which I cannot fully get rid of.

The Radio 4 tip was a suggestion by my (then) fiancee who admittedly was a bit of a snob. But he was only trying to be helpful. The suggestion came after he jokingly complained because I had picked up some American expressions (in Asia) like "elevator", "period!" and a few others I can't remember anymore. I wasn't able to understand some old English sayings, and his view was that Radio 4 was a way to fix this. I quite enjoyed listening to some of the programs but there are only so many 'Gardeners' Question Time" and "The Archers" that a normal person can endure...

Innit mate, laterz ;-)

Edited by cordelia0507 on 13 January 2009 at 5:30pm

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cordelia0507
Senior Member
United Kingdom
Joined 5829 days ago

1473 posts - 2176 votes 
Speaks: Swedish*
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 Message 60 of 134
13 January 2009 at 4:15pm | IP Logged 
Also - I have to disagree with the posters who think it's a good idea to learn colloquial and slang.

Slang and swearing is the LAST thing to introduce as you start practicing a ne language! Get the basics right first. Of course it's convenient to understand commonly used slang. But new learners should stay well clear! It is very easy to use an extremely rude expression without realising the full content of how rude and stupid you sounded.

What would you think if school kids learning English started using American slang, swear words and colloquial expressions before they can construct and pronounce a correct sentence in English? Quite sad, I imagine! The idea of doing this when learning any European language is equally inapproproiate...

Personally I think it sounds really silly when people who use slang in a language that they don't really master.

The point of slang is that you are very familiar with the language and ways of speaking. Sort of an 'insider' thing.
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frenkeld
Diglot
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United States
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Speaks: Russian*, English
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 Message 61 of 134
13 January 2009 at 4:43pm | IP Logged 
cordelia0507 wrote:
Am I a snob because I want to speak clear well-articulated English with a good vocabulary and correct grammar?


Uh, yes, you are, but then, why should you or anyone else be any less of a snob in a foreign language than in your own, even when you are advanced in it.

One can, however, find an educated variety of the language in appropriately selected movies and TV shows.


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Volte
Tetraglot
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Switzerland
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 Message 62 of 134
13 January 2009 at 5:08pm | IP Logged 
frenkeld wrote:
cordelia0507 wrote:
Am I a snob because I want to speak clear well-articulated English with a good vocabulary and correct grammar?


Uh, yes, you are, but then, why should you or anyone else be any less of a snob in a foreign language than in your own, even when you are advanced in it.

One can, however, find an educated variety of the language in appropriately selected movies and TV shows.



You and I have different definitions of snob, Frenkeld; I wouldn't call that snobbishness. Looking down on others for not choosing to do the same might be, but having it as a personal aim doesn't strike me as being a snob: high standards are not the same as snobbery; condescension is much closer to snobbery, in my opinion.

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frenkeld
Diglot
Senior Member
United States
Joined 6934 days ago

2042 posts - 2719 votes 
Speaks: Russian*, English
Studies: German

 
 Message 63 of 134
13 January 2009 at 5:17pm | IP Logged 
Volte wrote:
... having it as a personal aim doesn't strike me as being a snob


That would depend on _why_ it is one's personal aim. In any case, the post was meant to have a smiley, except I purposely left it out to see what happens. It happened. :)


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Volte
Tetraglot
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Switzerland
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 Message 64 of 134
13 January 2009 at 5:30pm | IP Logged 
frenkeld wrote:
Volte wrote:
... having it as a personal aim doesn't strike me as being a snob


That would depend on _why_ it is one's personal aim.


Granted.

frenkeld wrote:

In any case, the post was meant to have a smiley, except I purposely left it out to see what happens. It happened. :)


What happened: we disagreed. ;-)



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