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Linguaholic

宇崎ちゃん

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Everything posted by 宇崎ちゃん

  1. I've never heard of this concept before, but it sounds like a very interesting and effective concept. However, when I take a look at that website, I only see a web blog.
  2. It all depends on your own pace. It can go as quickly as 2 months, it can take as long as 3 years, without knowing your learning techniques and how well you can understand your target languages' rules, alphabets, vocabs, etc., there is no way in telling a proper estimate. Now Japanese doesn't have levels like A1/A2/B1/B2/C1/C2 (I guess my level of Japanese is somewhere close to N2), and it was too long ago for me to tell how long it took me to get on an A2 level in English. In German it took me a month to get from 0 to C1, but when learning Spanish I've never reached A1 even, after 2 months of learning.
  3. There's nothing wrong with this word as far as Polish, Dutch, English and Japanese are concerned. The word does sound a bit French, Italian or Spanish, so perhaps you'll have better luck asking speakers of Romance languages.
  4. I have just launched a freshly new JLPT forum, for those of you who will participate in the JLPT test (either now or later), or for those who want to help others out. If you want to simply kick back and enjoy, neither that is a problem. http://www.jlptforum.com/ I hope we'll meet there in some way, I guess.
  5. Did you create this app, or are you just recommending something?
  6. Moved it to a more appropriate section. And welcome.
  7. As far as I'm able to rate your speaking capabilities: Polish: accented, grammatically off a bit, but understandable. Japanese: good enough. Dutch: very accented, grammatically very off. Being able to speak this many languages is great, but I do recommend you practise them more often.
  8. Moved it to a more appropriate section. As for the title: A combination of spaced repetition and mnemonics is the ultimate way to learn any kind of vocabulary. However, this method is more for self-learners. Seeing you're specifically talking about teaching vocabs, things might be different.
  9. I was raised by Polish parents in the Netherlands. I'm therefore a native speaker of 2 languages. I have learnt fundamentals of English at school when I was 10, fundamentals of German at school when I was 13 and I have further extended my knowledge to English thanks to the internet. Then I have started to learn Japanese on my own when I was 15.
  10. Heh no. Your other 4 topics are the very reason why you're banned right now.
  11. Do you think so? Because I thought Russian was much closer to any Slavic languages than to Germanic or Romance languages. Well, maybe a Romance language like Romanian would a closer one, because that one got a lot of Slavic influence.
  12. The left side seems a bit vague to me, but the right side says 有力, meaning "prominent".
  13. Only 1 question: Reading this, I get an assumption that basically nobody can do the survey. Because every new language learner either didn't learn, is learning, or tried to learn. And those who already learnt aren't what I consider "new". So could you explain your target audience more clearly?
  14. Since this is a Chinese-specific question and grammar related, I've moved it to a more appropriate section.
  15. Wouldn't "limber" be the word you're looking for?
  16. I've let a native speaker check my translation just in case, they said it's perfect.
  17. Note: anything written vertically reads from right to left. Horizontally written stuff reads from left to right. I did not verify it with a native speaker, so there may be some parts that don't make sense.
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