What is your favorite part of language learning?
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- Orange Belt
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
Reading French books, watching French shows, and doing my daily Anki reps. I love doing Anki cards, I must be nuts.
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
rlnv wrote:Reading French books, watching French shows, and doing my daily Anki reps. I love doing Anki cards, I must be nuts.
No French music??
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- Orange Belt
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
moo wrote:rlnv wrote:Reading French books, watching French shows, and doing my daily Anki reps. I love doing Anki cards, I must be nuts.
No French music??
You are absolutely correct. I don't know how I forgot it. I have a bunch of French vinyl records that I've been collecting, I love listening them almost daily.
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
rlnv wrote:moo wrote:rlnv wrote:Reading French books, watching French shows, and doing my daily Anki reps. I love doing Anki cards, I must be nuts.
No French music??
You are absolutely correct. I don't know how I forgot it. I have a bunch of French vinyl records that I've been collecting, I love listening them almost daily.
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- tomgosse
- Brown Belt
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
moo wrote:No French music??
You are absolutely correct. I don't know how I forgot it. I have a bunch of French vinyl records that I've been collecting, I love listening them almost daily.
Here is a playlist of French music from the 1930's. Chansons françaises des années 30. I like them because the lyrics are easy to understand.
Here are more links to French music:
- Music
- Paris Chanson - streaming music
- http://www.radioyeye.com/ - streaming music
- Chansons françaises des années 30 - Youtube
- Chansons françaises des années 40 - Youtube
- French retro 1920s - 1960s - Youtube
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- x 7660
Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
tomgosse wrote:moo wrote:No French music??
You are absolutely correct. I don't know how I forgot it. I have a bunch of French vinyl records that I've been collecting, I love listening them almost daily.
Here is a playlist of French music from the 1930's. Chansons françaises des années 30. I like them because the lyrics are easy to understand.
Here are more links to French music:
- Music
- Paris Chanson - streaming music
- http://www.radioyeye.com/ - streaming music
- Chansons françaises des années 30 - Youtube
- Chansons françaises des années 40 - Youtube
- French retro 1920s - 1960s - Youtube
Cool !! I'll have a look soon
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- Zegpoddle
- Yellow Belt
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
There are three favorite parts for me:
(1) Discovering that I have a different personality in other languages. A little freaky and unsettling at first, but so liberating and mind-expanding. We all contain multitudes, but while we speak our mother tongue, those alter-egos are hidden from us. Learning additional languages is a key that unlocks the door to let some of our parallel selves emerge. (I guess illegal drugs can do that, too, but less safely and without any feeling of accomplishment.)
(2) Reaching the point where you can read a book in a second language you've learned and the pure beauty of the language sends shivers of pleasure through you. "This would lose everything in translation," you realize, and it's true. I can't bear to read anything by Jean Cocteau or Joseph Roth in English because I know what I am missing: 90% of what makes their prose so magical.
(3) Fetishistically caressing the latest language textbooks and CDs I've spent too much money on, but haven't yet started using, and fantasizing about all the time I'm going to have in the future to use them. If half the fun of a trip is in the planning, at least seven-eighths of the fun of buying language study materials is dreaming about the distant day I'll actually open them and learn something.
(1) Discovering that I have a different personality in other languages. A little freaky and unsettling at first, but so liberating and mind-expanding. We all contain multitudes, but while we speak our mother tongue, those alter-egos are hidden from us. Learning additional languages is a key that unlocks the door to let some of our parallel selves emerge. (I guess illegal drugs can do that, too, but less safely and without any feeling of accomplishment.)
(2) Reaching the point where you can read a book in a second language you've learned and the pure beauty of the language sends shivers of pleasure through you. "This would lose everything in translation," you realize, and it's true. I can't bear to read anything by Jean Cocteau or Joseph Roth in English because I know what I am missing: 90% of what makes their prose so magical.
(3) Fetishistically caressing the latest language textbooks and CDs I've spent too much money on, but haven't yet started using, and fantasizing about all the time I'm going to have in the future to use them. If half the fun of a trip is in the planning, at least seven-eighths of the fun of buying language study materials is dreaming about the distant day I'll actually open them and learn something.
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Graciously begging our alien overlords to remember to refresh the batteries regularly in their toddler’s cosmic Game Boy on which the simulation that is my life is running
- arthaey
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
Zegpoddle wrote:(3) Fetishistically caressing the latest language textbooks and CDs I've spent too much money on, but haven't yet started using, and fantasizing about all the time I'm going to have in the future to use them. If half the fun of a trip is in the planning, at least seven-eighths of the fun of buying language study materials is dreaming about the distant day I'll actually open them and learn something.
I agree with all your points, but this one really speaks to me.
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Posts in: French • German • Hungarian • Spanish
NaNoWriMo: 10,000 words
Corrections welcome in any language; I prefer an informal register.
NaNoWriMo: 10,000 words
Corrections welcome in any language; I prefer an informal register.
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- Blue Belt
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
I like the beginning, when I discover the grammar and the inner logic of the language, and when I try to imitate the audio tracks of my courses. Imitate is the most funny part for me. I'm rather good at that game (well, that's what I think, because when I listen to my voice-recorder I've sometimes bad surprises, but it's the same pleasure as singing).
Also I like the high level, when I can read or watch anything without problems.
What I don't like is acquiring vocabulary. Boring, repetitive and frustrating especially because I don't have a good memory.
Also I like the high level, when I can read or watch anything without problems.
What I don't like is acquiring vocabulary. Boring, repetitive and frustrating especially because I don't have a good memory.
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- Black Belt - 1st Dan
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Re: What is your favorite part of language learning?
Going to the country and using it (especially speaking, but also just understanding what I'm hearing and seeing around me), as it makes me feel like all my effort has been worthwhile. Using it in my own country doesn't quite have the same satisfaction as it can feel a bit contrived knowing they we could just use English like they do with the other locals, although it's still fun and it's a means to an end.
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