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Linguaholic

linguaholic

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Everything posted by linguaholic

  1. Hey there I think you are doing pretty well. Unfortunately, the audio quality is not that good. But I think you have a great voice. Keep on going! Best, L
  2. Welcome, Joey! Glad to have you onboard here at linguaholic.com! Hope you can find a Mandarin learner in Sidney. I am currently studying Mandarin, however, I am based in Beijing. Best, Lingua
  3. the problem is just that some languages don't even have an alphabet: =)
  4. Salut Frunobulax Je trouve que tu écris déjà très bien! Pourquoi tu veux étudier le français? Et puis j'ai encore une question: Frunobulax, ça signifie quoi? Merci bien pour joindre linguaholic.com L
  5. Oh ok. I see. I will give you an example. Recently, I met some guys from Serbia and two of them are working here as Basketball Coaches. In fact, in China, there are lots of opportunities these days. A very common job here in China is being an English Teacher. And you can earn some good money with that. So if you have a very good command of English, that is also something you could do here....even if your mother tongue is not English.
  6. I am working as a Journalist here. Where are you from, if I may ask? What is your mother tongue?
  7. Welcome to Linguaholic.com! I can only speak for Chinese, as I do not have any experience in Japanese, Arabian and Scandinavian languages. If you are fluent in Chinese, this will definitely be a plus when looking for a job (in Asia). However, I think your decision should be more based on how much motivation you actually have to learn one of those languages. Because if you are not passionate about studying any of those languages, you might have an incredibly hard time to go on and really get proficient in any of those. This especially holds true for a language like Chinese, which is, after all, really not easy to learn. In my case, I studied Chinese for about 5 years and now I am working in Beijing, China. Without having studied Chinese, I could definitely not have done that. So in my case, studying Chinese helped me to get a job in China. If you are interested in China and studying/working here, I will be glad to provide more information. In 2010, I studied a year at Nanjing University in Nanjing, China.
  8. Dear Solvinden Thanks for joining Linguaholic.com I must say that your English is already excellent! Have you ever tried Grammarly? I recently started using it and it helps me a lot with silly grammar mistakes. As far as pronunciation goes, hiring a language coach might indeed be a good idea. So in fact, are you planning to get online lessons, then? Best, L
  9. 1) it means that "there is nothing you can do anymore" (in some situation for instance) 2) it means: "he’s not that great/special, he’s nothing to write home about" Hope that helps.
  10. Hi Melloch You can use Google Translate wfor that. You can either use this on your desktop or download the app. If you are downloading the app, you will also be able to make a picture of the diploma and the app will instantly try to translate it to English through OCR (Optical Character Recognition). Another method would be to post those documents here. And then hopefully someone here from the Community who does indeed speak Japanese will help you to translate it to English. Best, Lingua
  11. After talking to several people, it seems like "Faut la maille" here simply means "Il faut (avoir)de l'argent" = you need to have money hope that makes sense :=)
  12. it means: "In any case dope (song) Damso, amazing sound, we feel it. Big up"
  13. agree with almost everything you said...I would also say that Japanese and Russian are overall a little bit harder to learn than German. But yea, it always depends on what languages you are already speaking and which mother tongue you have, etc. By the way, welcome to Linguaholic!
  14. Thanks a lot for contributing this answer and therefore contributing to the community here at Linguaholic.com! Have a great day, L
  15. oh I see. I completely missed that one. Thank you. I will try that.
  16. Hi there I checked this out and it was easy enough to store my own words. How can I use the test function, though? Will I need to register in order to use it? I couldnt find such a function. What do you mean exactly by "written test"? Thanks for giving some extra information on this.
  17. Welome to Linguaholic.com Kullboys Where are you from and which languages are you studying, if any? Best, L
  18. you are right, there are some umlauts. But I guess it has something to do that in 1927 there was a different grammatical rule for Umlauts. I will do some research on this and will let you know when I find out something. Thanks so much for that interesting thread. I love threads like this one! So interesting.
  19. welcome to Linguaholic, m1shootr. Thanks for your interesting introduction. So if I understand right you prefer Fluencia over Rosetta Stone? Are there other advantages apart from the fact that Fluencia gives more grammar background?
  20. I have now attached the file and I hope somebody actually knows what language that is. I actually don't :=) Sounds very interesting though
  21. oh and do you have any idea when this letter has been written?
  22. Hey there This is what the letter says as far as I see it: Des Himmels Segen begleite dich mein Sohn Tag und Nacht. Und mögest du sein der Segen der der Menschheit. Dein Name bleibe unsterblich. der Mutterswunsch
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