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ProfArguelles Moderator United States foreignlanguageexper Joined 7254 days ago 609 posts - 2102 votes
| Message 65 of 71 23 September 2007 at 8:56am | IP Logged |
I have returned to the forum at this specific time because on the 31st of August I received a private e-mail from the site individually inviting me to do so. I imagine that this can only have come from the Administrator, who then kindly offered to establish a venue for me to teach here. As he has not set it up yet, however, this week I will simply update some linguistic information about myself.
I know that I have mentioned in past posts that I have assembled a personal language laboratory containing materials for the study of about 140 different languages. Needless to say, I had to leave this behind when I fled the war in Lebanon. While I knew that my books and tapes had not been destroyed by Israeli bombs, I did fear that they would all be lost in the chaotic aftermath of the invasion. Miraculously and at long last, however, I have succeeded in retrieving almost everything. Months after I myself left, university maintenance men threw all the materials from my office into boxes, which then sat around in my abandoned apartment from more months before being repacked by a shipping company together with the rest of my family’s personal possessions, then sent to a warehouse and eventually put into a shipping container, which finally made it across the oceans and past US customs agents, who opened and went through every box with Arabic writing on it. There were 90 boxes of books and tapes, all packed in the most random and haphazard way. It took me many more weeks to organize it all, but when I did, I found to my amazement that I had only lost a single book. Perhaps another item or two has escaped my notice, but until now I have only missed the main volume of Assimil’s Le Perse, which is actually rather strange because it was in its box together with its companion volume and four tapes, all of which made it through. I was happy about the rescue of my library, but my wife, who lost far more of her “normal” possessions, points out that this is probably only because no “normal” person would care to steal foreign language learning materials even given ample opportunity. She is probably all too right. Still, I am happy to be able to make this report, for when and if I ever realize my dream of establishing some sort of polyglot academy, this material can form the core of a language resource center.
As I happily went about organizing materials I had rather assumed were lost for ever, I played almost all my tapes in the background. I have no plans to ever learn Thai or Cambodian or Laotian or Burmese or … but I can listen to them as a “normal” person would listen to music, and I would at least like to be able to distinguish them and identify them when I overhear them. My interest was particularly piqued by those languages that I thought I had consciously aborted seven years ago—Chinese, Japanese, Turkish, Swahili, Breton, and Welsh. Indeed, I recalled so much that I later went back and did some review of the accompanying textual material. I was happily astounded to find that I had forgotten remarkably little. It seems that once you study something consciously and conscientiously in a comparative context, you retain it forever. Despite the long gap of time, I believe I could probably pick any of these up just about where I left them after only a short review.
I would like to express my thanks once again to all those who have expressed interest in my book on polyglottery, both openly and in private messages, and particularly to all those who have made suggestions as to ways of making drafts of chapters available for critique and review. Alas, most of these involve computer skills that are utterly beyond me, for however many human languages I may have studied, when it comes to computer languages, I fear that I am a hopeless functional illiterate. I honestly cannot even manage to successfully modify my personal profile on this site. At any rate, I hope all forum members, and particularly the Administrator who brought me back to you, will understand my underlying copyright concerns about posting extensive professional writings here.
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| jimbo Tetraglot Senior Member Canada Joined 6292 days ago 469 posts - 642 votes Speaks: English*, Mandarin, Korean, French Studies: Japanese, Latin
| Message 66 of 71 23 September 2007 at 11:12am | IP Logged |
You comments on having to make tough decisions on which languages to keep and which languages to drop struck
a chord. As you said, amputation...
I hate to ask but tough love is in order.... what are some of the pros and cons of Turkish vs. Arabic vs. Persian?
Turkish seems it would be a bit easier but Arabic script is pretty, etc.
Also, how similar is Turkish grammar to Korean?
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| Nephilim Diglot Senior Member Poland Joined 7143 days ago 363 posts - 368 votes Speaks: English*, Polish
| Message 67 of 71 23 September 2007 at 2:40pm | IP Logged |
Hello 'the polyglot formerly known as Ardaschir" :-)
I was wondering if you could write a post on time management - in particluar the way you divide up the time available to make sure all your languages get reviewed regularly. You mentioned in an earlier post some of the charts you make to keep track of your languages - would it be possible for you to scan one in and make it available for us to see. I take your point about intellectual copyright but I don't think this affects that. Just a thought anyway. I think most people on this forum would benfit from your input on time management for maintaining languages.
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| Walshy Triglot Senior Member Australia Joined 6940 days ago 335 posts - 365 votes Speaks: English*, Spanish, German
| Message 68 of 71 24 September 2007 at 12:29am | IP Logged |
Ardaschir wrote:
Alas, most of these involve computer skills that are utterly beyond me, for however many human languages I may have studied, when it comes to computer languages, I fear that I am a hopeless functional illiterate. I honestly cannot even manage to successfully modify my personal profile on this site. |
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It's good to know that you are indeed human ;).
I thought you would never visit this site again, so you could imagine my excitement when the Jimi Hendrix of the language learning world resumed posting here.
Welcome back.
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| ProfArguelles Moderator United States foreignlanguageexper Joined 7254 days ago 609 posts - 2102 votes
| Message 69 of 71 08 October 2007 at 8:15am | IP Logged |
In response to the request for a post on time management: I think this topic deserves a thread of its own. If you are truly interested, please open one with more contextualization of what it is you would like to know. In brief, I would be happy to share one of my charts, which are on excel files and which are rather detailed, but I would not know how to scan such a thing.
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| Nephilim Diglot Senior Member Poland Joined 7143 days ago 363 posts - 368 votes Speaks: English*, Polish
| Message 70 of 71 08 October 2007 at 2:32pm | IP Logged |
ProfArguelles,
Thanks for your response. I will get back to you on this in a day or to with more context. I'm just writing this quick post to acknowledge your reply.Regarding charts, I assumed (though I don't know why) they would be handwritten. If they are on excel files there is no need to scan them in as they can be sent as e-mail attachments.
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| sensejoe Bilingual Triglot Newbie China Joined 5847 days ago 4 posts - 3 votes Speaks: Mandarin*, Cantonese*, EnglishB2 Studies: Spanish, Japanese
| Message 71 of 71 19 September 2010 at 5:44am | IP Logged |
Really inspiring!! It helps me see clearly how to arrange my lifelong plan, as it confused me such a long time. Thanks for sharing and offering the clear path.
Edited by sensejoe on 19 September 2010 at 5:45am
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