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  3. People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language.

People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language.

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  • crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.hostC crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.host

    @Fragglemuppet Well, not really what you asked, but I am Dutch from the Netherlands, and Dutch is my native language, I did English, German and French as foreign languages. English turned out ok, German I can understand fine, speak somewhat... Write not much. And French, 3 weeks after I had given it up, it seemed I had forgotten everything... Almost anything..

    fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF This user is from outside of this forum
    fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF This user is from outside of this forum
    fragglemuppet@fandom.ink
    wrote last edited by
    #24

    @crazydutchy I did think of people in other countries, and that is also interesting, but I thought they probably have different methods of learning than most of us here are probably familiar with, most likely better ones.

    crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.hostC 1 Reply Last reply
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    • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

      People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

      danbjoseph@floss.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
      danbjoseph@floss.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
      danbjoseph@floss.social
      wrote last edited by
      #25

      @Fragglemuppet I have trouble embracing being inexact in my meaning and incorrect in my grammar, but afaik learning a language requires embracing that and trying your best even when your best isn't very good

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

        @crazydutchy I did think of people in other countries, and that is also interesting, but I thought they probably have different methods of learning than most of us here are probably familiar with, most likely better ones.

        crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.hostC This user is from outside of this forum
        crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.hostC This user is from outside of this forum
        crazydutchy@tulipgardenshow.masto.host
        wrote last edited by
        #26

        @Fragglemuppet Hmm, I have no idea how you learn things, of course, when I went to school, we didn't have internet yet, so I had braille books for the longest time, and only later a laptop with books on floppy discs.

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        • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

          People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

          nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
          nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
          nazokiyoubinbou@urusai.social
          wrote last edited by
          #27

          @Fragglemuppet This might depend on the language in question. I find Latin-based languages to be super easy to read and even can figure out the meanings of many words when reading them. But then when you get to something like Chinese or Japanese, it gets trickier because the characters are many and varied... There's a whole system of rules to how they work, but it's still complex enough that it would be incredibly difficult to just pick up...

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          • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

            People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

            tonyamarie@chaosfem.twT This user is from outside of this forum
            tonyamarie@chaosfem.twT This user is from outside of this forum
            tonyamarie@chaosfem.tw
            wrote last edited by
            #28

            @Fragglemuppet Actually the hardest part for me was listening comprehension, because that happens at a specific speed. I can speak and write at the speed of my brain producing the right words, but I have to listen at the speed of the speaker.

            (Of course, I now know that I have Auditory Processing Disorder thanks to autism, and that makes much of my life make more sense, including this issue. 😁 )

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            • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

              People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

              geofftc@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
              geofftc@mas.toG This user is from outside of this forum
              geofftc@mas.to
              wrote last edited by
              #29

              @Fragglemuppet

              Listening. Especially to French, where they abhor consonants.

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              • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                @bryanredeagle Ah, I loved vocab, but my hangup was grammar beyond basic verb conjugation.

                bryanredeagle@beige.partyB This user is from outside of this forum
                bryanredeagle@beige.partyB This user is from outside of this forum
                bryanredeagle@beige.party
                wrote last edited by
                #30

                @Fragglemuppet I'm usually pretty good at grammar. So we just smack our heads together, and we got a fully communicating person.

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                • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                  People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

                  ymasumac@mstdn.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                  ymasumac@mstdn.socialY This user is from outside of this forum
                  ymasumac@mstdn.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #31

                  @Fragglemuppet Listening/comprehension should be an option.

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                  • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                    People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

                    alkaid@social.lolA This user is from outside of this forum
                    alkaid@social.lolA This user is from outside of this forum
                    alkaid@social.lol
                    wrote last edited by
                    #32

                    @Fragglemuppet In middle school, we had one semester of Spanish class (my local university had the same requirement; taking more was optional), and in both cases...writing was the hardest for me. Though that was mostly an issue of "How do I form a coherent sentence?"

                    We never got that far with speaking, beyond some stock phrases.

                    I'm pretty sure my high school had Spanish and French as options, but those were courses for the college prep kids. Us tech prep kids could've benefitted from learning a second language, but alas.

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                    • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                      People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

                      trainguyrom@techhub.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                      trainguyrom@techhub.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                      trainguyrom@techhub.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #33

                      @Fragglemuppet I very much struggled with learning another language as a teenager in school, but I was also struggling with a lot of things right then.

                      As an adult however I've been learning Italian ahead of a trip with family to Florence, and I've picked up about a hundred words just since the beginning of the year!

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                      • colo_lee@mstdn.socialC colo_lee@mstdn.social

                        @cwicseolfor @Fragglemuppet
                        I can read a little Chinese (and keep working on it).
                        Listening and understanding or speaking are beyond me.
                        And writing Chinese seems close to impossible!

                        cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                        cwicseolfor@zeroes.ca
                        wrote last edited by
                        #34

                        @colo_lee @Fragglemuppet It’s manageable but the necessary information to me was having dictionaries that bothered explaining what the radicals (root images) were which make up the characters, because then things start to take on phonetic and semantic valence (even though the meanings or sounds are often fuzzy and always unreliable) - just memorizing them all with absolutely no clues is masochistic. Wenlin is the best paid software I ever used, Pleco is the best free.

                        cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC colo_lee@mstdn.socialC 2 Replies Last reply
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                        • cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC cwicseolfor@zeroes.ca

                          @colo_lee @Fragglemuppet It’s manageable but the necessary information to me was having dictionaries that bothered explaining what the radicals (root images) were which make up the characters, because then things start to take on phonetic and semantic valence (even though the meanings or sounds are often fuzzy and always unreliable) - just memorizing them all with absolutely no clues is masochistic. Wenlin is the best paid software I ever used, Pleco is the best free.

                          cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                          cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                          cwicseolfor@zeroes.ca
                          wrote last edited by
                          #35

                          @colo_lee @Fragglemuppet Also, I got very very lucky I was learning it not even five years earlier than I did. Doing so without software, trying to use the four corners method to look characters up in a dictionary, would have been awful. Having smartphones now with OCR is even better.

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                          • cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC cwicseolfor@zeroes.ca

                            @colo_lee @Fragglemuppet It’s manageable but the necessary information to me was having dictionaries that bothered explaining what the radicals (root images) were which make up the characters, because then things start to take on phonetic and semantic valence (even though the meanings or sounds are often fuzzy and always unreliable) - just memorizing them all with absolutely no clues is masochistic. Wenlin is the best paid software I ever used, Pleco is the best free.

                            colo_lee@mstdn.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                            colo_lee@mstdn.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                            colo_lee@mstdn.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #36

                            @cwicseolfor @Fragglemuppet Pleco is what I've been using. And I did try a little back in the day of paper dictionaries -- that was hopeless.
                            So I can't actually "read" but can decode some texts ...

                            cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • colo_lee@mstdn.socialC colo_lee@mstdn.social

                              @cwicseolfor @Fragglemuppet Pleco is what I've been using. And I did try a little back in the day of paper dictionaries -- that was hopeless.
                              So I can't actually "read" but can decode some texts ...

                              cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cwicseolfor@zeroes.caC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cwicseolfor@zeroes.ca
                              wrote last edited by
                              #37

                              @colo_lee @Fragglemuppet Enough fluency with just picking up characters as you go and you’re reading, you’re just not able to transfer that reading to one of the dialects yet. I think that’s probably easier if you don’t think in spoken words anyway. My fluency is crap now but I was pretty good twenty years ago.

                              Also, especially nowadays that you can get anything online, almost all Chinese TV comes with subtitles burned in, because it’s being shown across a country bigger than some continents and needs to be intelligible across languages because a lot of people just don’t use mandarin much. So if you can already read for meaning you will have a MUCH easier time picking up the spoken language than vice versa, imo!

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                              • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                                People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

                                S This user is from outside of this forum
                                S This user is from outside of this forum
                                stormdancer@mstdn.social
                                wrote last edited by
                                #38

                                @Fragglemuppet None of those things were the hard part. The hard part was wrapping my head around the idea of gendered language.

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                                • fragglemuppet@fandom.inkF fragglemuppet@fandom.ink

                                  People who went to an American public school and speak English as their first language. If you took a foreign language, what was the hardest part for you? I want to know if others had similar experiences to me. #Language #Poll #Polls

                                  lexyeen@plush.cityL This user is from outside of this forum
                                  lexyeen@plush.cityL This user is from outside of this forum
                                  lexyeen@plush.city
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #39

                                  @Fragglemuppet the curriculum and teachers at the time I was in school were both awful, so, it was all too hard.

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