Hey,
You can definitely do it, considering you having the interest and motivation. Let me know if yuou have any questions about anything.
Hey,
You can definitely do it, considering you having the interest and motivation. Let me know if yuou have any questions about anything.
Amazing! How do you remember it all? I am learning Japanese; I haven’t been learning for too long but I have about 4 months of free time now, of which I’m probably going to dedicate a large portion to learning the language. I figure If I learn about 5 Kanji a day, and practice, I can get it up to about 600-700 by the end of the 4 months (on top of the 100 or so I already know).
Chinese and Japanese is a must in the gaming community.
Justin Wong and Daigo.
It’s hard once you get past 10 languages because you have to find ways to keep up on them, especially if you don’t live in the country. I try and make videos and find people online to practice, plus help others who are wanting to learn a particular language.
Yes sir. This should get more people motivated to learn! LES GO~
What? Is that some kind of typo?
I guess I need to know what your definition oi “know” is.
No jokes. You should check this page out for more information about my language learning:
I’d love to learn Chinese. Which is tougher: Mandarin or Cantonese? To watch all my martial arts films without subtitles would be a real blessing!
I would recommend to learn both, but since Mandarin is most wide spoken, I would go with that one first then Cantonese.
I’m part Chinese, this could be useful.
I love languages, I’ve dabbled in quite a few but haven’t put much serious study in yet.
Laoshu: Have you ever tried learning any Welsh?
I’ll have to try to make myself more disciplined this summer.
Hey there,
No, I haven’t tried to learn that, but I’m very open to learning it. Which languages have you tried?
I was revising my Japanese today (with My Japanese Coach on NDS :P), and it brought to mind a couple of questions:
When I was learning about verb conjugations in school, my teacher taught us a “-te form song”, to help remember how to conjugate different verbs into their -te/-ta forms. I remember the song being really helpful, but of course, I can’t remember it. Does anyone here know any? (I believe there are a few variations with different, familiar tunes.)
Another question that’s risen from me “practicing” Japanese by posting Facebook updates in the language, its not massively important, but I’m curious:
How would you talk about a plane ticket (as opposed to just a ticket)? “Hikouki no kippu” (ticket for a plane), “Koukuubin no kippu” (ticket for a flight), or could you simply use “koukuubin” on its own, the way we use “flight” in English: “Koukuubin wo katta” (I bought a flight).
I would say Hikouki no kippu is fine. ‘‘Sora no tobi’’ means flight. Hikouki no kippu wo katta (I bought a ticket) Hikouki no kippu wo youyaku shita (I reserved a ticket)
kippu= train ticket AFAIK
so hikoki no kippu would mean plain train ticket.
Edit=sorry, I asked. Kippu apparently can be any transport ticked.
Thanks for your contribution.
i dont think people use kippu for flight ticket that much(not that its wrong, i dont know about that), if it was me id use “ken”, “koukuuken”/“hikouki no ken”… i think “chiketto” is also used more than “kippu” when it comes to airplanes.
Thanks for the input, guys. A bit of a google hunt suggest to me that “koukuuken” is the best word for the situation.
What I’m finding now is that I mostly remember the grammar from high school, my vocab is just really lacking. And I get particles confused often.
With a bit more practice, you’ll get used to it.
I just wish kanji didn’t exist