Brazil, 18 | English, Italian, French, German and Spanish
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tho fr learning languages is such a great source of reinforcement, you can do the bare minimum & still feel like you’re progressing in a meaningful way. came across a new word you haven’t previously heard of? learned an irregularity in conjugating a particular verb? figured out how spell something you’ve heard but never read? bam! you’ve increased how much you know by just that little bit & it’s so. intrinsically. rewarding!!!
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my skills include reading an entire page of an academic text without absorbing a single word
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in Italy when we want to describe a caring, loving boy with a very good heart we use to say “è buono come il pane” which literally means “he’s as good as bread” and I think it’s beautiful.
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German Vocab: Encouraging Phrases
Du schaffst das! ~ You can do it!
Ich bin stolz auf dich. ~ I’m proud of you.
Mach weiter so. ~ Keep up the good work.
Gib nicht auf! ~ Don’t give up!
Glaube an dich selbst. ~ Belive in yourself.
Ich glaube an dich. ~ I believe in you.
Es ist nie zu spät. ~ It’s never too late.
Gut gemacht! ~ Well done!
Es wird alles gut werden. ~ Everything is going to be alright.
Niederlagen machen dich stärker. ~ Defeats make you stronger.
Aus Fehlern lernt man. ~ You learn from mistakes.
Lass dich nicht entmutigen. ~ Don’t get discouraged.
Jeder Tag ist eine zweite Chance. ~ Everyday is a second chance.
Du kannst nicht negativ denken und Positives erwarten. ~ You can’t think negatively and expect positives.
Nur weil es nicht jetzt passiert, heißt es nicht, dass es nie passieren wird. ~ Just because it does not happen now does not mean it will never happen.
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the concept of seeing bad movies/tv shows just to practice your target language
#this is dedicated to how to sell drugs online#i mean dude got dumped and now wants to become a fucking drug dealer like what the fuck#just let the girl live she doesn't want you anymore
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This is your friendly reminder to not to give up on your target language
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Me: *studies the same words over and over again.*
Me: Yes, I am learning a language! I am unstoppable! This is a walk in the park!
Me: *looks at new words and grammar rules*
Me: I am a fool and a sham. I’ve been lying to myself this whole time. I know nothing.
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I'm going to try this with german!!
From Beginner to Intermediate: an intense plan for advancing in language
Introduction
I've studied Spanish at school for 3 years and now I'm at a low B1 level. I can actually understand pretty well while listening or reading but I can't communicate fluently.
This plan will include vocabulary build up, some grammar revision, a lot of listening, reading and writing. And could be used for the most languages, not only Spanish.
Plan
Every day:
Conjugate one verb in present, past and future tenses
Make a list about 10 - 30 words long
Create flashcards with them and start learning them (I use Quizlet for flashcards)
Revise yesterday's set of flashcards
2-3 times a week:
Read an article or a few pages from a book
Write a few sentences about anything in your target language
Listen to one episode of podcast (at least one)
Once a week or every two weeks:
Watch a movie in your target language, preferably animated movie as the language used there is easier. You can watch with subtitles
Grammar exercises
Translate some short text
Once a month:
Write something longer, like an essay or report, on chosen topic
Additionally:
Talk to yourself, to your friends, to your pets
Text with someone
Look at the transcription while listening to the podcast for second time
Repeat what you hear (in podcast or movie)
Check words you don't know from the listening and reading
Read out loud
Listen to music in your target language - you can even learn the text and sing along
Watch YouTube in your target language
Change your phone language to the one you're learning
Think in you target language!!!
***This is very intense plan for self-learners, you don't have to do all of these things in the given time. Adjust it to your own pace. I'll try to stick to this, if I have enough time.***
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good morning notes app poets, lesbian intellectuals, self-loathing americans, art school dropouts, brown eye supremacists, robert pattinson stans, hunter-gatherers, spiritual neophytes, sourdough addicts, false prophets, and bisexuals with a preference for men
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“wissen” vs. “kennen” - What’s the difference?
Both “wissen” and “kennen” mean “to know”, so what is the different usage of these two words?
“wissen” is used when you are talking about some kind of information, for example:
“Ich weiß, dass Berlin die Hauptstadt von Deutschland ist” - I know that Berlin is the capital of Germany
“Ich weiß, dass er angerufen hat” - I know that he called
“Ich weiß nicht, wo mein Hund ist” - I don’t know where my dog is
“Weißt du was sie gesagt hat?” - Do you know what she said?
“kennen” is used when you are talking about nouns (unfamiliar/familiar people or objects),for example:
“Ich kenne diese Frau” - I know this woman
“Ich kenne dieses Lied nicht” - I don’t know this song
“Kennst du diese App?” - Do you know this app?
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German vocabulary list: moods & feelings
aggressiv: aggressive
ängstlich: afraid
beleidigt: offended
besorgt: worried
beschämt: ashamed
böse: evil
dankbar: grateful
deprimiert: depressed
eifersüchtig: jealous
enttäuscht: disappointed
erschöpft: exhausted
freundlich: friendly
friedlich: peaceful
froh: glad
frustriert: frustrated
gedemütigt: humiliated
gelangweilt: bored
gelassen: calm
gleichgültig: indifferent
gierig: greedy
glücklich: happy
gütig: kind
heiter: cheerful
hilflos: helpless
klug: clever
nervös: nervous
melancholisch: melancholic
neugierig: curious
offen: open
optimistisch: optimistic
pessimistisch: pessimistic
schockiert: shocked
schuldig: guilty
schüchtern: shy
traurig: sad
trübsinnig: blue
unsicher: insecure
verängstigt: anxious
verärgert: annoyed
verlegen: embarrassed
verrückt: crazy
verwirrt: confused
wütend: angry
zickig: bitchy
zögerlich: hesitant
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* Weak masculine nouns decline -[e]n in every case except the nominative; only a few decline -[e]ns differently in the genitive. der Junge, den Jungen, dem Jungen, des Jungen der Friede, den Frieden, dem Frieden, des Friedens
^ Masculine and neuter nouns decline -[e]s in the genitive, with the exception of some weak masculine nouns (see above). der Hund, des Hundes der Vater, des Vaters das Haus, des Hauses das Auto, des Autos
̃ Dative plurals decline -[e]n unless the plural already ends with -n or -s. die Äpfel, den Äpfeln die Bücher, den Büchern die Bananen, den Bananen die Fotos, den Fotos
̄ There is no plural form of the indefinite article. The negative plural form is shown for explanatory purposes. † Possessive pronouns decline in the same pattern as the indefinite article.
German case declensions - download as PDF
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anyway linguistics is not and never will be apolitical because it studies languages that are 1) governed by politics and 2) spoken by political beings (humans)
politics and humans are married. therefore, politics and language are married. therefore politics and linguistics are married.
to make linguistics ‘apolitical’, you’re going to have to get rid of politics, which is not going to happen on this earth because it’s a component of the human psyche at this point and there’s no identity or way of life that can avoid it.
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might fuck around and learn chinese 😅🤪🤪 why am i like this
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i know this isn’t really original but im obsessed with how english words that refer to the bodily, the tangible, the elemental etc are so often of anglo-saxon/germanic origin e.g. (heart, blood, jaw, flesh) or observable phenomena, like adjectives describing light (glisten, gloaming, glitter, gleam, gloom, glow, dark, fire) or places (hearth, hall, hill), and the most stark, primal emotions or states (hate, love, life, lust, death) and of course fuck, shit, bitch, cunt etc– these often monosyllabic, consonant heavy words…and then you have the lilting, limpid romance/latinate, words like acquiesce and exacerbate and agrarian and pellucid and clemency and lucidity…and how maybe the secret of all great english language poetry is a textural balancing of the push-pull of the germanic and the romantic/latinate, a balancing of these two energies. like some of the most powerful moments in shakespeare are where the verbosity falls away and you have these plain utterances (“to be or not to be” or lear’s dying “look there look there”– all anglo saxon words) that are so powerful precisely because the language is so ornate elsewhere. i once came up with an elaborate wildly incoherent theory about this in the pub with some drunk american masters student who was dressed like harry styles
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