![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/wink.gif)
I'd also like to learn Yiddish, and I'm currently studying french.
Others on my list are Austrian, Irish, and Socttish.
Share up!
Excellent, Flyah.Flyah wrote:Pig Latin
ode ouye etge hatwe I'me ayingse?
Gotta be real careful how you go about speaking . . . I guess it's no less different than if I were to say "what a wonderful day" with a cheerful or sarcastic attitidue. But when learning Chinese or Japense, one needs to be concerned with the stresses on every word.Elf wrote:Yeah, the same goes with Japanese. It's just one word, but depending on what "syllable" you stress, you could either be joking, being friendly, sound surprised, or completely offend someone.
Trent DeWhite wrote:What makes Chinese so difficult to learn is that they don't have an alphabet. Thus, its writing is not related to phonetics. Then you have the different tones. I could be saying something with the inproper tone . . . and people will completely misinterpret what I'm trying to say.
Right.AndreaMeltsner wrote:Trent DeWhite wrote:What makes Chinese so difficult to learn is that they don't have an alphabet. Thus, its writing is not related to phonetics. Then you have the different tones. I could be saying something with the inproper tone . . . and people will completely misinterpret what I'm trying to say.
I think this is right....anyway they speak on main language everyone can understand ( Manderanin) and eveyone has their own little dielect. like People in Hong Kong do not talk like people in Shanghi and so on...kinda like people saying howdy as aposed to hello or how do you do...
lol. fangirlian.Sonuna Hydris wrote:I can speak reasonably fluent Chinese (Mandarin, w/Beijing accent... and a small southerner accent too... o_o), English, HTML and Inform (...Text adventure programming language.)
I can speak small bits of Java, CSS, Javascript, and Japanese... though it's probably classified as fangirlian.
And I wish to learn Java, Japanese, Quenya and Sindarin.