Page Summary
Active Entries
- 1: English needs a preposition “atto”
- 2: Random memory: memorising powers of two
- 3: Random memory: Self-guided tour
- 4: Is 17 the most random number between 1 and 20?
- 5: The things you learn: inhaled objects are more likely to land in your right lung
- 6: I can speak Esperanto; the test says so!
- 7: The things you learn: Canaanite shift
- 8: You know you’re getting better at a language when…
- 9: 3/14 1:59
Style Credit
- Style: Cinnamon Cream pne for Crossroads by
- Resources: Vintage Christmas 6
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 16:47 (UTC)no subject
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 17:44 (UTC)bIyajmeH http://pne.livejournal.com/636289.html?thread=2330753#t2330753 yIlaD.
no subject
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 17:55 (UTC)Ydy, mae Cymraeg ydy e.
But since I'm not sure if my question was grammatical...
no subject
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 18:02 (UTC)I just went by http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_morphology#Bod_and_compounds and hoped for the best.
no subject
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 18:08 (UTC)languages I've tried to learn
Date: Thursday, 12 July 2007 18:35 (UTC)I'm not even sure I could count the languages I know at least some words in (or some tidbit of grammar -- sometimes I know a bit of that without knowing specific words), except that I'm sure the number has at least two digits.
As for the languages I've ever actively tried to learn (as opposed to merely being interested in it in general or picking up bits and pieces by exposure to it/"osmosis"), I suppose it depends on how serious I was about it -- but the list would probably include French, Japanese, Greek, Verdurian, Esperanto, Klingon, Maltese, and possibly Spanish. I'm not sure whether there are that many more candidates for the list, to be honest. Oh wait, Lojban qualifies, too. Maybe Chinese, for which I had checked out a coursebook from the public library a couple of times and browsed through it (though not actively in the sense of trying to remember what was there). Oh, and I completely forgot Russian -- I actually had a couple of semesters of that at Volkshochschule.
Though depending on how you count, another couple of Mark Rosenfelder languages, especially Cadhinor and to a lesser extent Cuêzi, might make the cut: I didn't specifically set out to learn them, much less commit many words to memory, but I had read over their grammar descriptions often enough and even, on occasion, composed short texts (with frequent references to grammar and wordlists) that I did have a small measure of competence in them back then.
So, still a goodly number compared to what many people know, I suppose, but rather less than the number of languages I know at least some words in, I think.
Then there's a third list: languages I never formally learned but have tried to fake speaking nevertheless :) (Given the rudiments of grammar and vocabulary I had "absorbed" plus heavy use of cognates when my vocabulary runs out.) That would be Dutch, Swedish, and Spanish, I think.