Everyone starts from zero, so you don't have to worry or apologize. You seem to be doing well already (especially if you've been a longtime fan of the comic)! If you want, I can give you help or tips to use. I don't know much french myself, but I'll offer what I can.
Welcome to the forums!
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Welcome .. Bonjour (that is about as far as my french goes well i can also say that i dont speak french... but somehow people dont believe you if you say you dont speak their language in their language =/ ) but if u speak dutch or german i can help ^^
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"A wizard is never late, nor is he early, he arrives precisely when he means to"
I understand what you mean. I don't really have problems to understand or to read but when I am speaking or writing I always afraid to use a wrong word or to say something clumsy. ^^'
Definitely agreed, speaking and writing is a lot harder than hearing/reading, at least in my experience.
Quick notes, pals: pityful: When adding -ful or -ed to words that end in -y, the y is replaced with an i (pitiful, pitied). Though, if you're adding -ing, the y stays a y (pitying - this one confused me for a while).
foreighn->foreign
(I fail at formatting.)
-- Edited by LadyTwilight at 02:24, 2009-02-10
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I'm sweet like lead poisoning. I haz a profile biography now! The curious-nosed might peer into it, and the dramatically-disinclined can withold themselves.
NEW! I also have a blog, you're invited to check it out, or request a topic you'd like me to cover.
I took french in HS remembering what I learned might be a problem...( tries remembering what I learned 2 years ago) nope nothing at all.
Ohyeah? Well, I took french in HS, and couldn't remember what I learned by the second year of it!
gappiee wrote:
I thought it looked weird I just didnt know how to get it right ^^ ... but wheres the rest of my last post =/
Did you try to use a less-than sign (the flip of > )? That's snagged me a bunch of times on these very forums... if you try to use one without closing it with a >, the rest of your post will simply vanish.
You're quite welcome!
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I'm sweet like lead poisoning. I haz a profile biography now! The curious-nosed might peer into it, and the dramatically-disinclined can withold themselves.
NEW! I also have a blog, you're invited to check it out, or request a topic you'd like me to cover.
hehe no i had a whole story about how extremely good my french is ^^ well it came down to that i speak french better than spanish which i dont speak at all .... well i can say good day but thats it. and i sort of understand french =D
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"A wizard is never late, nor is he early, he arrives precisely when he means to"
French is a difficult langage for other people, I think. Mostly the tenses !! If I say "indicatif", "subjonctif", impératif", "conditionnel", "présent", "imparfait", "plus-que-parfait", "passé simple", does it mean anything for you ? Even french people make mistakes with it.
Personnally I speak russian.
You are saying that you took french in HS. Soory, but what does "HS" mean ?
In french, HS means "hors-sujet" which we can translate by "out of the subject" but I am not sure. French teachers use it on the essays when you have writen about something that yoou should not have because it is not the subject.
Ah, my bad. I use HS as an abbreviation for 'high school'. Sorry for the confusion ^ ^;;
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I'm sweet like lead poisoning. I haz a profile biography now! The curious-nosed might peer into it, and the dramatically-disinclined can withold themselves.
NEW! I also have a blog, you're invited to check it out, or request a topic you'd like me to cover.
I lstarted earning russian 5 years ago so now I do not have many problems to use this langage. (But I do not speak russian perfectly neither ^^;). But the first lessons are the worst ones. You have the learn the Cyrillic alphabet (more than 30 letters). And you learn the most basic word which is, unfortunately, one of the most difficult. It is simply the translation of "hello" which is "zgpabmbyucme" (many Cyrillic letters and Latin letters looks alike but we do not pronunce them in the same way). I can not show you how to pronunce it ^^ but it is not easy at all.
Then you have to learn grammar, declension, conjugation and vocabulary....a lot of vocabulary... T_T
I took Latin for two years. 24 letter alphabet, generally romanic pronunciation...and 5 cases, almost as many exceptions as words, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc. of m and f and n declensions and aaaahhh!
Then I took French, which wasn't as mind-boggling.
Russian sounds absolutely terrifying.
Right now I'm learning Japanese--mostly by osmosis through music over years--which doesn't seem to be too hard to grasp. At least, the language seems pretty straightforward; levels of formality, though... I just wish I had a fluent speaker to talk to to correct me, though; that's probably one of the best resources to learn a language.
-- Edited by LadyTwilight at 12:51, 2009-02-18
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I'm sweet like lead poisoning. I haz a profile biography now! The curious-nosed might peer into it, and the dramatically-disinclined can withold themselves.
NEW! I also have a blog, you're invited to check it out, or request a topic you'd like me to cover.
hmmm isnt that chinese? hmmm i hvent learnt any languages just dutch, german and english (my father is dutch and my mother is german and the tv and most computer games are english) ^^
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"A wizard is never late, nor is he early, he arrives precisely when he means to"
(moving above babble) How fluent are you two in your languages?
Chinese has at least one variant (Mandarin) of the spoken language to my common knowledge; beyond that, wikipedia is your friend! I know Japanese has a couple regional dialects (is 'regional dialects' redundant?), but don't know much about them, other than a couple substitutions one uses.
Hah... The 'straightforward' I mentioned didn't extend to the written form, which is way beyond my current level (though it seems easier than Latin! ...maybe). There's symbols for a...lot of things. Most words are made up of more than one, too (1~4 I think I've seen so far?)
A lot of words share symbols, and a lot of symbols share sounds. So you end up with teacher/doctor, upperclassman, foresight, and last week (sensei, senpai, senken, senshuu) starting with the same symbol, and then you have train track, election, affidavit, and melody (senro, senkyo, senseisho, senritsu), which all have different symbols for their 'sen'.
Sometimes if you look hard enough, you can find connections, though. That first set above, along with a couple other that use that symbol, generally refer to a person, time, or thought related to the past. But then, 'athelete' has the same 'sen' as 'election', so...*shrug*
...
I'd still take it over Latin.
-- Edited by LadyTwilight at 18:14, 2009-02-19
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I'm sweet like lead poisoning. I haz a profile biography now! The curious-nosed might peer into it, and the dramatically-disinclined can withold themselves.
NEW! I also have a blog, you're invited to check it out, or request a topic you'd like me to cover.
I always wanted to learn latin. I'm not sure why. I think it might have somthing to do with my love for greek and roman mythology and the fact latin is the root of most languages.
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Religion is spread by the brainwashing of our children by their parents.
(moving above babble) How fluent are you two in your languages?
Chinese has at least one variant (Mandarin) of the spoken language to my common knowledge; beyond that, wikipedia is your friend! I know Japanese has a couple regional dialects (is 'regional dialects' redundant?), but don't know much about them, other than a couple substitutions one uses.
Hah... The 'straightforward' I mentioned didn't extend to the written form, which is way beyond my current level (though it seems easier than Latin! ...maybe). There's symbols for a...lot of things. Most words are made up of more than one, too (1~4 I think I've seen so far?)
A lot of words share symbols, and a lot of symbols share sounds. So you end up with teacher/doctor, upperclassman, foresight, and last week (sensei, senpai, senken, senshuu) starting with the same symbol, and then you have train track, election, affidavit, and melody (senro, senkyo, senseisho, senritsu), which all have different symbols for their 'sen'.
Sometimes if you look hard enough, you can find connections, though. That first set above, along with a couple other that use that symbol, generally refer to a person, time, or thought related to the past. But then, 'athelete' has the same 'sen' as 'election', so...*shrug*
...
I'd still take it over Latin.
-- Edited by LadyTwilight at 18:14, 2009-02-19
hmmm im fluent in both dutch and german (dutch is the language spoken over here so it would be pretty bad if i couldnt speak it) and i dont speak any other languages i do understand a little french. i know some words from other languages but not enough to understand or speak them.
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"A wizard is never late, nor is he early, he arrives precisely when he means to"
I am not really fluent in English or russian but as I travel a lot in Europe I can speak it with some people. I often go in Finland where many people speak russian and thank to the Channel Tunnel I can be in London in 4 hours
To LadyTwilight : Thank you for the explanations about Japanese langage =)
To Elpis : Latin and ancient Greek are very interresting but I think that the hardest is to start. I remember that I did not understand a thing to the first lessons but after a year it is much easier. At school we study the Odyssey and Illyade in Greek. It is not easy at all but interresting. =)
To Grappie : My family is of German origin but I do not speak a word of German langage ^^; I think I will learn it later ... Maybe... All I know is Danke !! ^^
I've got two years of mediocre French and two years of fun-but-not-very-good Latin under my belt. I think it would be fun to learn Gaelic or something like that, but it would be pretty tough to find a teacher.
BTW: welcome to the forums (even though you've been here longer than me ^^' )
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