All times are UTC [ DST ]





Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 93 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 6, 7, 8, 9, 10  Next
  Print view

Re: The Life of Esperanto
Author Message
PostPosted: Wed 03 Feb 2010 10:20 pm 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:31 am
Posts:404
Location: Angola
I never studied Bulgarian, but my friend who's a photojournalist lived in Bulgaria for 1 year, and said Bulgarian was a breeze compared to his 2 years of university Russian.

_________________
ᏙᏒᏓᎵ ᏗᏑᎶ ᎭᏫ


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Thu 04 Feb 2010 1:52 am 
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:22 am
Posts:768
Location: Canada
Yeah, but that was after two years of Russian, wasn't it. I definitely find Portuguese straightforward after a few months of Spanish.

_________________
العربية * 中文 * English * Français * Русский * Português * Español * हिन्दी/اردو * Deutsch * 日本語


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Thu 04 Feb 2010 7:51 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:31 am
Posts:404
Location: Angola
Talib wrote:
Yeah, but that was after two years of Russian, wasn't it. I definitely find Portuguese straightforward after a few months of Spanish.


He FAILED Russian :)

_________________
ᏙᏒᏓᎵ ᏗᏑᎶ ᎭᏫ


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Thu 04 Feb 2010 8:01 pm 
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:22 am
Posts:768
Location: Canada
Be that as it may, studying a closely related language first, even if his knowledge was limited, helps a lot. It means all the fundamentals are in place and from there on in it's mainly a task of acquiring new vocabulary and grammar. This is why some schools have experimented with teaching Esperanto before introducing "harder" European languages like German and French.

_________________
العربية * 中文 * English * Français * Русский * Português * Español * हिन्दी/اردو * Deutsch * 日本語


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Fri 05 Feb 2010 3:16 am 
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 5:25 am
Posts:199
Talib wrote:
linguoboy wrote:
Talib wrote:
To Russian? Bulgarian and Macedonian are supposed to be considerably more analytic than other Slavic languages, or so I've heard.

Analytic isn't always easier. Russian has two simple tenses (non-past and past) and two compound ones (future and subjunctive), plus one aspectual distinction. Bulgarian has the same aspectual distinction carried out through nine tenses (simple and compound), two voices, and four moods. The fact that many of these are expressed analytically hardly makes them a breeze to master. Just ask any Russian learner of English!
Of course not (I mean, I'm learning Chinese, ffs) but generally, all things equal a more analytic grammar comes easier to English speakers.

Ps. I don't know how much you know about Russian but aren't the past and non-past the same thing as saying perfect vs. imperfect? Or is that my Arabic interfering?


My experience with Mandarin was that its isolating SVO structure was helpful when compared with English, but that there are a few syntactic differences that need to be kept in mind. The resultative construction, for example, can be tricky.


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Fri 05 Feb 2010 4:50 am 
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:22 am
Posts:768
Location: Canada
The problem is there's a lot more to learning a language than word order, however important that may be; and easy conjugation (or in Mandarin, none at all) doesn't mean much when you've got thousands of more or less arbitrary characters and just as many unfamiliar vocabulary items to memorize.

_________________
العربية * 中文 * English * Français * Русский * Português * Español * हिन्दी/اردو * Deutsch * 日本語


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Sat 06 Feb 2010 2:51 am 
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 5:25 am
Posts:199
Talib wrote:
The problem is there's a lot more to learning a language than word order, however important that may be; and easy conjugation (or in Mandarin, none at all) doesn't mean much when you've got thousands of more or less arbitrary characters and just as many unfamiliar vocabulary items to memorize.


Oh, I agree. Shifting from tense-orientation to aspect-orientation also took a little getting used to.


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Sat 06 Feb 2010 10:42 am 
User avatar
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:31 am
Posts:404
Location: Angola
Dan_ad_nauseam wrote:
Oh, I agree. Shifting from tense-orientation to aspect-orientation also took a little getting used to.

It's MUCH easier to learn Chinese without the characters first. That's the way they teach Chinese in schools in the US now.

_________________
ᏙᏒᏓᎵ ᏗᏑᎶ ᎭᏫ


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Sat 06 Feb 2010 6:47 pm 
Offline

Joined:Sun 19 Apr 2009 8:22 am
Posts:768
Location: Canada
I prefer to learn the characters first, then get down to speaking. That way you'll be able to read and write spoken dialogue. But I suppose the other way around works for 900 million native speakers.

_________________
العربية * 中文 * English * Français * Русский * Português * Español * हिन्दी/اردو * Deutsch * 日本語


Top
 Profile  
 

Re: The Life of Esperanto
PostPosted: Sat 06 Feb 2010 8:23 pm 
Offline

Joined:Sat 18 Apr 2009 5:25 am
Posts:199
formiko wrote:
Dan_ad_nauseam wrote:
Oh, I agree. Shifting from tense-orientation to aspect-orientation also took a little getting used to.

It's MUCH easier to learn Chinese without the characters first. That's the way they teach Chinese in schools in the US now.


In the late 80s, we started with transliterations (although the book used Yale, so we ended up learning Yale and pinyin, and as an East Asian Studies major, I also had to learn Wade-Giles), and moved into learning characters at about a month in.


Top
 Profile  
 

Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 93 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 6, 7, 8, 9, 10  Next

All times are UTC [ DST ]


  Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron
 
5 Kollam hotels from DirectRooms


Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group