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family crest (coat of arms) has its' motto in French: "Sans mal". (without death) Plus, I liked the way the French language sounded when spoken :D |
i failed french 1 cuz i was too embarrassed to speak it in class.
i switched to spanish, and failed that because i like to fuck off. i still learned un pocito espanol, though. pass los cacahuetes. Lo siento, yo stupido |
perl. Definitely perl.
I'd go for Spanish at this point. |
I didn't do well with languages in school. I think they ought to teach it earlier than they do. But I can still count to ten in German, French and Spanish. :)
On a completely unrelated note, my seventh grade English teacher forced us to memorize the prepositions. I was never good at memorizing things, and I nearly failed the seventh grade because of it. I had to go to summer school . just to memorize the prepositions. Unbelievable. But, now I have this: (takes deep breath) aboutaboveacrossagainstalongamidamongaroundatbefore behindbelowbeneathbesidebesidesbetweenbeyondbutby concerningdownduringexceptforfromininsideintolikenearofoffon ontooutsideoverpastsincethroughthroughouttotowardtowards underunderneathuntilupuponwithwithinwithout Now, isn't that worthwhile? (Yeah, I've probably missed a few here and there, but we're going on fifteen years since.) |
I took latin in high school for a year or maybe two.
I wouldn't recommend it for kids. It's not a language that anyone speaks as a native, so the only time you hear it spoken is in class. It's more of a written language. Kids are going to be less excited about a written language. Sure, it will help with learning the other languages, but not as much as studying those other languages would. |
But wouldn't it be cool to be able to understand bits of The Passion without the subtitles? That's useful, isn't it?
I've been wanting to learn Ancient (not New Testament) Greek for a while, but have been thwarted by the lack of colleges offering such a thing. Also, It's something that I want to do, but don't really want to have to make massive adjustments in my schedule to accomplish. I have several "teach yourself ancient greek" books, but I stall somewhere around chapter three or so. I work better when I have a more structured environment and the feedback of a live teacher, particularly for something like language acquisition. And yes, it has occurred to me that I could/should pursue education in some language of practical usefulness, like Spanish. There is a fairly large Spanish-speaking population in the area, and it might come in handy at work, however, doing such an thing violates my belief that "you're in America, speak American dammit!" A refresher in German would probably not hurt me much, though. Reading Stern is a lot more of a struggle than it used to be. |
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Aren't "we" (Americans) expected to do the same when visiting other countries (learn *some* of the native language)? |
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Move there, on the other hand, and it's a different story. |
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I'm the same way with Ancient Egyptian... I always stall out. (The Oriental Insitute at the University of Chicago has a correspondence course, but I already have the textbook they use, and I've never felt like paying the course fee to have somebody take me through it by mail. Tho it's possible that if I did pay I'd be more diligent about it.) Quote:
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Go for a roman language. Maybe spanish. After knowing that it's a piece of cake to learn french, italian or portugese.
It's maybe the easiest to teach and learn. I speak about 5-6 languages but only "european" ones. Would like to try some russian or japanese... But it's difficult cause different letters |
pi, you know 5 or 6 languages? why the uncertainty? i'd think that someone smart enough to learn all of thoses languages would be smart enough to count to 6. which is it 5 or 6? and name them. i'm friggin impressed.
let me ask you this: when you are speaking a different tongue, what language do you "think" in? what is your first language? |
I'm not shure because it depends on how you count all the languages:
1. luxemburgish (is it a real language, I'd say yes...) 2. german (at school when I was 6, but knew already some because of german TV) 3. french ( when I was 7, at school, quite difficult) 4. english (12 years, at school, knew some because of music and so on) 5. spanish (16 years, at school but only for 2 years, would need some exercice to get in again but still understand when watching TV) 6. dutch (20 years, never learned it in school, but over here in Brussels, I have lots of dutch-speaking friends, quite the same as luxemburgish or german) 7. italian/portugese (can read a newspaper and understand the meaning of it, can do some shopping and understand if spoken slowly, never learned it but's easy if you know french and spanish). Still trying to learn more... Don't need to translate when using first 4 languages, sometimes dream in 2-3 different languages in one dream. That's really crazy! |
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yeah, you sound SO much smarter than everyone else if you throw a little latin at them. they don;t know what the hell you just said, but won;t want to admit it because they figure you must have gone to a better college.
meanwhile, i know " carpe diem" and that's about it. I did learn the latin "roots" of words in 7th grade, and it helps my vocabulary immensely. between context and word roots, i can usually figure out what a word i've not heard means without having to look it up. |
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