/LANG/ now actually visible

>What language are you learning?
>Share language learning experiences!
>Ask questions about your target language!
>Help people who want to learn a new language!
>Participate in translation challenges or make your own!
>Make frens!

Read this sometime and feel free to improve:
4chanint.fandom.com/wiki/The_Official_Jow Forums_How_to_Learn_A_Foreign_Language_Guide_Wiki

Totally not a virus, but rather, lots of free books on languages!:
mega.nz/#F!x4VG3DRL!lqecF4q2ywojGLE0O8cu4A

FAQ U:
>How do I learn a language? What is the best way to learn one? How should I improve on certain aspects?
Read the wiki before asking in the thread
>Should I learn lang Y so I can learn lang X?
No
>What is the most useful language?
Slovene
>What language should I learn?
Macedonian

If someone could be bothered to share the pastebin, I'd appreciate it

Attached: 1515566894558.jpg (1280x720, 423K)

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=4-eDoThe6qo&feature=youtu.be
youtube.com/watch?v=Qwdyx9kAPlU
alexstrick.com/blog/everything-you-need-to-study-jordanian-arabic
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/no#Polish
youtube.com/watch?v=YUEa9UsDMTA
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

okay

We should not have this thread on weekends. Weekends are for fun and rest and socializing, not being on electronic devices at home

I learn languages because I have an inferiority complex about being monolingual.

get out, normalfag

Gé sind ealle míne frýnd :3

Attached: (You) and I.png (1000x564, 510K)

>έβδομη σελίδα

Attached: 1512686132929.jpg (354x423, 24K)

time to go to library and check out some sign language books

>Sign language books
I might be stupid, but how do those work?

why

what ever gets you going, I still have an inferiority complex being trilingual , german, and spanish, currently learning French. hopefully I will feel better after I learn it


Alright /lang/ question of the day, why are you learning your target /lang/ how did you choose it?

Attached: argie chad 2.jpg (473x548, 71K)

>why are you learning your target /lang/ how did you choose it?
because of songs by helena paparizou

French, because it was a mandatory subject at my secondary school for the first 3 years so I just continued with it. I'm glad I did, frogs have lots of top kino and good songs.

Mein Fühl wenn Arabisch lernend

Attached: tfwtakbir.png (690x539, 36K)

Serbo-Croatian - because my family decided to not teach me any

Polish - terminal polabooism

How do you say "Uncle Adolf is a historic leader" in German

>terminal polabooism
based

No YOU are based

dzięki user

Attached: 1512311617515.jpg (432x444, 196K)

I jesteś user który ucze się greckiego?

>because my family decided to not teach me any
I know the language is ugly but it'd still have been useful to teach you... what were they thinking

no to ja
siema

Everyone speaks English here. It's hard to retain ancestry languages

Attached: Sav2T9p.png (1676x2208, 249K)

Parents only teached my older sister S-C, she then got teased in school for her poor Dutch. My parents then presumably went "No way we're gonna teach him both so Dutch it is"
Zastanawiam, czemu uczysz się greckiego? żeby możesz czytać starogreckie teksty?
Btw, uczę się polskiego od 2 lat ale już nie jestem pewny co dokładnie znaczy "no"

>Zastanawiam, czemu uczysz się greckiego? żeby możesz czytać starogreckie teksty?
>Btw, uczę się polskiego od 2 lat ale już nie jestem pewny co dokładnie znaczy "no"

>tfw I understood literally all of this

>Moje lice kad nemam više tajnim jezika

tajnih* :^)

Chinese(simplified), because I'm planning a trip after I graduate from uni (in roughly 1 year), so I'll see how far I can get in that time. If I get far enough I might also get the confidence to tackle japanese next, which I don't want to start unless I'm confident I can get good enough to understand games/manga/VNs comfortably, in a reasonable time.

youtube.com/watch?v=4-eDoThe6qo&feature=youtu.be

holy fuck lads im 8 minutes in and so inlove with lisa. i could stare at her all day long. i need more of her

Onkel Adolf ist ein historischer Führer.

It is beacuse you are only learning languages related to your mother tongue.
You need to learn non indoeuropean languages.

95% of langs that are aesthetic/worth learning are Indo European
You literally can't argue with this

>aesthetic

Then learn Arabic, persian, chinese or japanese.

Latin alphabet is the blandest, most boring least aesthetically pleasing writting system ever.

>Worth learning

Anything other than English is garbage not worth learning and even then Chinese is more relevant than any other European language besie English, the same could be said about Arabic if the language was not split into many different dialects but still MSA is more worth it than sissy French.

>You literally can't argue with this
Sure you can. "aesthetic/worth learning" are subjective qualities.

how long u learning chinese, before swtiching to jap? how many hours u study a day?

believe me , i want to learn chinese and arabic next, my actual problem is that seeing videos of hyperpolyglots in the 20s makes me feel like a fraud

Wrong!

looks boring as fuck, i reccomend tuerkisch fuer anfanger to see real cuties, however they speak fucking fast and probably need to have a good grasp of german to see it

JAG MÅSTE LÄRA MIG SVENSK FÖR ATT VI HAR SATAN'S PAKKORUOTSI, I UNIVERSITET. FÖR HELVETE!
DÄRFÖR LURKAR JAG SVERGIETRÅDEN.

Attached: fickle.jpg (399x399, 21K)

>DÄRFÖR LURKAR JAG SVERGIETRÅDEN.
Bokstavligen varför? Ett av de värsta ställena på hela Jow Forums...

German because I got a job with Viessmann and told them I already had A2 level german.

They are not as good as you think
They are always people whose parents traveled around and they picked up languages as they grew with the advantage of a young brain.

By the time they are 15 they can speak like 5 or 7 languages to different degrees of fluency then they get to intermediate level in different languages in a year each. By the time they are in their 20's they speak 2 languages and a lot of '' in reality I speak some of x language but instead I said I speak them''. I've watched many videos of hyperpoliglots and they always speak 2 languages fluently and the rest they seem fluent to someone who is not familiar with the language but in fact are not.
An example is the guy Moses a black dude on youtube he studies many languages to a basic level. Whenever he speaks in Arabic he uses super simple expressions and vocabulary that are beginner tier and never actually says anything intermediate or above, the same can be said about his Japanese (I've been studying those languages for some time) and according to comments on his videos it is the same with most of his languages except his English and Chinese.

2/2

Also by learning a bit of those two languages I've realized how easy it is to learn similar languages since by the time you start you already know over half the language (massive amount of similar words) This cuts down the amount of time required for learning a language in over half and it also allows you to start reading a lot sooner which is the biggest teaching and language improving tool you could do when learning any language.
Learning words in Arabic is a lot harde not only do you have to remember weird sound combinations and long vowels which is something that doesn't exist in Spanish but you also have to learn Irregular plural form of the words (meaning you have to learn 2 words for the same word in most cases unless the plurar is regular btw plural in arabic is 3+ while 2 is called dual and gets formed by addin ''ani'' or 'ayni''at the end of the word) + the fact that there are a lot of synonyms so by the time you learned a word in arabic you could have learned like 10 in a language related to yours.
In japanese all words sound the same and you have to remember not only how to write the kanji but also how they are placed inside the word.
In reality speaking 10+ non related languages at a proficient c1+ level will take you at least 20+ years unless you are a genius. Whenever you learn a language it is like being accepted into a family so if you learn MSA (arabic) and then you go learn Persian you will find a lot of shared words.

>In reality speaking 10+ non related languages at a proficient c1+ level will take you at least 20+ years unless you are a genius. Whenever you learn a language it is like being accepted into a family so if you learn MSA (arabic) and then you go learn Persian you will find a lot of shared words.

Moses is based though, sure he gets a lot of hate on his comments but he gets more support and praise from natives as well.

Also moses has been studying diffferent langs over 10 years he's over 40. what's impressive about him is that he's still fluent in several non indo-european langs , even if you cut out japanese and arabic from his list.

Sure he probably is only C1 in a handful of his langs but im a strong believer that quantity is better than quality ,

I mean what is the actual purpose to be C1 in arabic and japanese as an american living in america?

Id honestly rather be B1 in chinese, arabic , russian, and japanese , than be C1 in just one non-indo european lang.

you can do a lot of shit at B1 level , and it still takes a lot of time and effort to reach this level in a non indoeuropean language


also moses isnt the dude i get jelous of it's that dorner fag, he's some zoomer from new york and luca , italian dude now those guys are gifted

does your job require you to speak german?

Fucking dead thread, someone start vocaroo challenges

Try to say Eichhoernchen for those german learners

Only language learners that make me butthurt are western females learning Japanese, specially when they try to talk and sound all ''cutesy kawaii like'' it makes me want to quit the language.


By the time you are b1 in all of those lang you would probably be c1 or b2 in 2 and trust me b1 is not enough to read a language comfortably while b2 is.

I've read about Chinese grammar and from what I've found out it is literally the most brainlet language ever. Grammar is the easiest thing ever and words never conjugate or change you just slap word next to word and you are done, I can make simple Chinese sentence like 我愛你 just by knowing Japanese kanji. As for Russian I studied it for a bit then dropped it when I realized words are gendered and I had learnt a bunch of words without knowing their gender( I also was starting to learn arabic and didn't wanted to learn two languages at the same time that had gendered nouns sadly I hadn't gotten to the part that says that most feminine words in arabic had t tamarboota and the rest are masculine otherwise I wouldn't have dropped Russian) but from reading around they say the grammar is easier than Arabic.
Arabic grammar is a lot harder than Japanese grammar but it is so logical that I would say it is easier to master than Japanese grammar.

My difficulty ranking would be

Arabic > Japanese > Russian > Chinese

Kanji and Hanzi (the same thing both translate to chinese character) look insanely hard when you don't know anything about them but after learning around 500 you will have learned all the radicals and whenever you find a new character you will give it a single glance and learn it without having to check stroke order. Chinese characters are only hard at the beginning if you do something like ''remembering the hanzi'' while mastering the tones you can learn Chinese to fluency in like less than a year.

Zzzz I'm going to sleep now

>By the time you are b1 in all of those lang you would probably be c1 or b2 in 2, and time you have to spend to reach C1 from B1 , for me getting to german C1 from B1 was well over a year

you underestimate the gap between b1 and b2 but at the same time you acknowledge , that B1 is still a basic level since you said yourself B1 isnt good enough to read.

But again I ask , whats the point of being an excellent reader unless youre really into that langs literature.

For most chads like moses who just uses a lang to communicate about basic every day shit, b1 is more than enough.

and even if the argument was be C1 in 2 langs or b1 in 4 langs ,if the langs were non indo -european. Because basically what I want to do with a language is not necessarily be as prifficient as a native but be able to to travel to the country and simply talk to the people there and read important signs and bilboards in that lang, because after all that shit is kino

Also I disagree with ur decision to stop russian but that's just my opinion , i like when langs have a complicated challenge to them not found in other langs

>and even if the argument was be C1 in 2 langs or b1 in 4 langs ,if the langs were non indo -european.

and even if the argument was be C1 in 2 langs or b1 in 4 langs ,if the langs were non indo -european , I would choose the 4 b1 langs, simply because what i want to do with a language is not necessarily *

Trying to learn japanese, it's hard to find the time to study and it's really fucking hard. If I ever become fluent it will be the biggest accomplishment of my life.

WHY CANT I LEARN ANY LANGUAGES?

I've tried Spanish, but lost interest in HS.
I've tried Japanese and Chinese, but they're fucking hard
I've tried French, but I find it useless and nobody around me speaks it at all.
I don't know what else to do.

can someone write a challenge please?

Attached: african pool.jpg (720x607, 116K)

Should i learn russian or arabic?
Which one would i be able to practice more if i went to, say, Strasbourg, France?
I have the same level of interest for either

Well Russian is indo-european. It's also incredibly soft while Arabic is pretty harsh sounding. Russian sounds like ж and ш are in both langauges often.

Every thread needs a challenge:

Easyish
>I like the green owl.
>My brother is annoying.
>I can't read this.
>The guitar is a popular instrument.
>Where is the train station?

Mediumish (no sharks this time)
>The mouse stole my baby's cheese.
>He will cook dinner tonight.
>We don't know how to play chess.
>What should we call our band?
>I haven't read a single book on my bookshelf.

Hard
>Louis Wain (5 August 1860 – 4 July 1939) was an English artist best known for his drawings, which consistently featured anthropomorphized large-eyed cats and kittens. In his later years he may have suffered from schizophrenia (although this claim is disputed among specialists), which, according to some psychiatrists, can be seen in his works.
>H. G. Wells said of him, "He has made the cat his own. He invented a cat style, a cat society, a whole cat world. English cats that do not look and live like Louis Wain cats are ashamed of themselves."

Attached: Louis_wain_cats.png (500x1011, 1.13M)

Easyish
>I like the green owl.
Jag tycker om den grön ugglan
>My brother is annoying.
Min bror är irriterande
>I can't read this.
Jag läser inte detta
>The guitar is a popular instrument.
Gitarren är en populärt instrument (based)
>Where is the train station?
Var är tågstationen

Mediumish (no sharks this time)
>The mouse stole my baby's cheese.
Musen sola mina bebis ost
>He will cook dinner tonight.
Han kommer att kock middag ikväll
>We don't know how to play chess.
Vi vet inte hur till spela schack
>What should we call our band?
Vad skall vi nåmnge vårt band?
>I haven't read a single book on my bookshelf.
Jag har inte läst en enda bok på mina bokhylla

Attached: army cat.jpg (720x702, 55K)

Lois , war ein Englischer Kunstler bekannt fuer seine Zeichnen, die oftmals "anthropomorphized" grosse augige katzen und kaetzchen vorgestellte . In seinen spaeteren jahren , hatte er warscheinlich von schizophrenia geleidet, Denoch seine behauptung wurde unter fachmaennern gestritten , nach manchen psychologen , kann man es an seinen Werken merken.

>H. G. Wells said of him, "He has made the cat his own. He invented a cat style, a cat society, a whole cat world. English cats that do not look and live like Louis Wain cats are ashamed of themselves."

HG wells von ihm sagte, Er hat die katze geignet , er erfand einen katzestyle, eine katze gesellschaft , eine ganze katzewelt , Englishe Katzen die nicht wie louis wain katzen wohnen und aussehen, schaemen sich.

Arabic (Levantine-ish)

سهل:
انا بحب البومة الخضرا
أخي مزعج
مابقدر اقرى هالشي
الغيتار آلة موسيقية مشهورة
وين محطة القطار

متوسط:
الفارة سرقت الجبنة تبع طفلي
رح يطبخ العشى الليلة
مامنعرف كيف نلعب شطرنج
شو بدنا نسمي الفرقة الموسيقية تبعنا
ماقريت ولا كباب على رف الكتب تبعي

When I started learning Arabic I wanted to pic another language because the Arabic I'm learning is MSA (modern standard Arabic) which is different from what they speak in day to day life and it a a language that no one has as a native language if you want to know Arabic, after learning MSA you have to learn a dialect but it will be a piece of cake since dialects are just dumbed down MSA so Learning Arabic is like learning 1.5 langauges rather than just 1. Since MSA is no ones native tongue I wanted to learn a language that people had as their native one so when I was learning about the Arabic writing system I also started learning the Cyrillic alphabet and a bunch of words and I thought that I would have to remember the gender of all words in both languages but I was barely starting and didn't know that in both languages you can easily see the gender of a word so I dropped it for Japanese. I will learn Russian in some years after I'm done with 1 of those.

When I was a b1 English learner I couldn't pick up any videogame and play it trough without missing big portions of the plot and the same can be said about my Japanese and Arabic (Both high a2 or just starting b1) meaning I know the basic grammar and can mantain basic conversation but still a lot of unknown vocab and grammar.

I'd say solid A2 and 3k words is enough for travelling the country, I can understand a lot of signs from seeing places in the middle east using google maps but a b1 would be a lot more solid.

السلام عليكم كيف حالك يا أخي الأبيض

*الأسود جدا

>Jag tycker om den grön ugglan
gröna*

>Jag läser inte detta
Jag kan inte läsa det här.

>Gitarren är en populärt instrument (based)
ett*

(baserat*) (^:

>Musen sola mina bebis ost
top kek at that sentence
A mouse sunbathing your baby cheese
Oh right, let's get serious.
Depending on what 'baby' means here, we have several options.
If it means infant:
>Musen stal min bebis ost.
If it's an endearing term for your partner (romantic love) or platonic but intense love like what one might have for their children:
>Musen stal min älsklings ost.
Or just the romantic love bit:
>Musen stal min älskades ost.
and then there's a myriad of terms for platonic endearment like between girlfriends, but it's too much to go over and I'm sure it's not what the challenge writer thought of anyway.

>Han kommer att kock middag ikväll
Han ska laga middag ikväll.
Cook accurately means kock, but also laga. The English word encompasses both the profession and the verb.

>Vi vet inte hur till spela schack
Vi kan inte spela schack.
It's common to just say that you are unable to play a game if you don't know how to do it.
Same with operating vehicles, playing instruments, knowing jokes, etc.
>I don't know how to drive a car = Jag kan inte köra bil
>I don't know how to play the guitar = Jag kan inte spela gitarr
>I didn't know that one [joke] = Den [vitsen] kunde jag inte
etc
A bit much to go over now.
Or we can just settle for
>Vi vet inte hur man spelar shack.
:^)

>Vad skall vi nåmnge vårt band?
Vad ska vi döpa vårt band till?
or
Vad ska vårt band heta?

>Jag har inte läst en enda bok på mina bokhylla
Jag har inte läst en enda bok i min bokhylla.

Attached: apureadingded.png (240x193, 54K)

Easy:
>Ich mag die grüne Eule. (looked up owl)
>Mein Bruder ist nervtötend (looked up "annoying")
>Das kann ich nicht lesen
>Die Gitarre ist ein beliebtes Instrument. (had to look up this whole sentence)
>Wo ist die Bahnhof?

Der Bahnhof
"nervig" is probably the best word in this case.
Use dict.cc for looking up words.

>I'd say solid A2 and 3k words is enough for travelling the country, I can understand a lot of signs from seeing places in the middle east using google maps but a b1 would be a lot more solid.

When I was A2 in german, I suppose it was enough for the bare minumum like surivive, but to converse a little bit and get to know people for sure you need B1, I still remember how long it would take me in my head to form a basic sentence in german when I was A2.

Also how do you even start learning Arabic, Arabic is my next lang after french? did you take any formal classes?

>Also how do you even start learning Arabic
1) Enlist in U.S. military as a language analyst
2) Hope you get assigned an Arabic dialect

I started with those videos

youtube.com/watch?v=Qwdyx9kAPlU

Watched three of his series later just started learning from grammar books, dictionaries for vocab and online websites for grammar and vocab, I never went to any classes, I like studying whenever I want going to classes at a fixed time can be a chore.

my uncle was in desert storm then he worked in the FBI they stationed him in Vienna then Berlin because he knew german from being half german, dude got lucky because he said there was a chance he could have been sent to latin america , but i guess since he didnt know spanish that saved his ass.

liked and subscribed mi negro

So we all know learning German is the best langauge for the intro into other germanic langs, but what is the Slavic langauge that one should learn first to learn other slavic languages?

My guess would be Czech someone told me , it's somewhere in between West slavic and east slavic

Attached: altes-haus.jpg (550x412, 64K)

>Czech

What the fuck? No
Start with Russian

If you're learning all of the rules, you're wasting time.
You only need to be able to understand written MSA, not produce it or read it aloud. A lot of the grammar that you're learning may be absolutely unnecessary. (I'm talking about rules relating to unwritten short vowels.)
Focus on learning Levantine. The best advice I've seen on the internet is this:
alexstrick.com/blog/everything-you-need-to-study-jordanian-arabic
>but muh egypt so high population, most media presence!
Trust me you don't want to talk like an Egyptian.

Czech is kind of boring. You'll have more fun with Russian.

is it good practice to write a journal in your target lang and then use deepl or googe translate to see a better translation of what you wrote?

>Focus on learning Levantine. The best advice I've seen on the internet is this:
>alexstrick.com/blog/everything-you-need-to-study-jordanian-arabic
>>but muh egypt so high population, most media presence!
>Trust me you don't want to talk like an Egyptian.

Im intrigued why focus on levantine?

and why wouldnt i want to speak like an egyptian?

>Czech is kind of boring. You'll have more fun with Russian.

I suppose I should have mentioned hypotheically if i had the desire to learn all the slavic languages, what would be the best "base slavic lang"?

why tho?

Im under he impression learning Czech would help you with both learning polish and russian equally but i could be wrong

High media presence (not as high as Egyptian, but it's enough to work with as a language learner).
Spoken in four countries, you can tailor your accent to be relatively neutral. You can sound metropolitan/international whilst generally adhering to a particular dialect.
Geographically at the center of the Mashriq.
Arguably the best sounding. Most people (arabs and non-arab) have a relatively positive opinion of how Levantine sounds.
And most Arabs outside Egypt think that Egyptian sounds comical.

yeah im not very convinced, if Egyptian arabic is still the most widespread and understood of all the arabics, I mean im sure some arabs find egyptian better sounding than levantine seems like ur arguments are very subjective

>learning Czech would help you with both learning polish and russian
Literally any slavic langauge can do this

>equally
No. That would be Ukrainian. Also Polish is closer to Russian than Czech is, not by much though.

>No. That would be Ukrainian.

Ukranian and Russian are as different as norwegian and swedish , literal dialects of eachother , I doubt it will help you with polish as much as wit russian.

>Also Polish is closer to Russian than Czech is, not by much though.

how does this make sense geographically speaking? sauce?

None of what you're saying is true. Russians cannot understand spoken Ukrainian. Ukrainian shares a lot of vocabulary with Polish that is not in Russian. Grammatically, all three langauges are very similar, it's vocabulary that's the major difference. Seriously, just start with Russian. There's more speakers, more resources, and more people who can help you.

t.native Serbo-croatian speaker who is learning Russian

Egyptian is widespread only in that it has a lot of speakers centered on one very overpopulated city.
If you only want to visit Egypt, fine, learn Egyptian.
But Levantine pronunciation is more neutral. Nowhere else is ج pronounced in such an obnoxious manner, and this negates whatever benefit Egyptian gains from it's reach in the media.

You want an entirely non-subjective reason? Consider the fact that if you learn Egyptian, you will have a hard time understanding anything that ISN'T Egyptian.

Nowhere else but in Egypt*

And actually that's not entirely true. Some bumfuck qat chewers in Yemen also pronounce it like that.

Ich mag die grüne Eule. / Die grüne Eule gefällt mir.
Mein Bruder nervt.
Ich kann dies nicht lesen.
Die Gitarre ist ein beliebtes Instrument.
Wo ist der Bahnhof?

Die Maus klaute den Käse meines Babys.
Er kocht heute abend. / Er wird heute abend kochen.
Wir spielen kein Schach.
Was sollen wir unsere Band nennen?
Ich habe kein einziges Buch in meinem Regal gelesen.

jesus

Attached: sd.png (898x844, 684K)

Start with the Greeks
Learn Greek

Spanishdict is unironically a life saver. I can't think of a better online resource

cute

>page 9

>page sven

>Zastanawiam, czemu uczysz się greckiego? żeby możesz czytać starogreckie teksty?
żeby rozumieć piosenki heleny paparizou
starogrecki jest znacznie inny niż nowogrecki, chociaż może jak nauczę się nowogreckiego na dobrym poziomie to starogrecki też będę umiał zrozumieć
>uczę się polskiego od 2 lat ale już nie jestem pewny co dokładnie znaczy "no"
to jest tak jak po angielsku "yeah" albo "well"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/no#Polish

>Czech is kind of boring. You'll have more fun with Russian
cringe
based

Most people still want to learn an IE language though

Persian is the best on that list and it's Indo European lmao

Japanese and Chinese are in the 5%

what is kino

>I've read about Chinese grammar and from what I've found out it is literally the most brainlet language ever. Grammar is the easiest thing ever and words never conjugate or change you just slap word next to word and you are done, I can make simple Chinese sentence like 我愛你 just by knowing Japanese kanji.

I wish more people would know that. I'm really tired of people who don't know shit about the language and think they re hot shit because they speak chong.

They say Slovak is the most "central" Slavic language

I am learning English.
I'm interested in German and Russian.

Easyish
>I like the green owl.
Η πράσινη kουkουβάγια μου αρέσει.
>My brother is annoying.
Ο αδελφός μου είναι ενοχλητιkός.
>I can't read this.
Δεν μπορώ να το διαβάζω.
>The guitar is a popular instrument.
Η kιθάρα είναι δημοφιλής όργανο.
>Where is the train station?
Που είναι το σιδηροδρομιkό σταθμός;

Mediumish (no sharks this time)
>The mouse stole my baby's cheese.
Το ποντίkι έkλεψε το τυρί του μωρό μου.
>He will cook dinner tonight.
Θα μαγειρέψει το δείπνο απόψε.
>We don't know how to play chess.
Δεν ξέρουμε να παίζουμε σkάkι.
>What should we call our band?
Τι πρέπει να λέμε την ζώνη μας;
>I haven't read a single book on my bookshelf.
Δεν έχω διαβάσει ένα μόνο βιβλίο στο ράφι μου.

>Louis Wain (5 August 1860 – 4 July 1939) was an English artist best known for his drawings, which consistently featured anthropomorphized large-eyed cats and kittens. In his later years he may have suffered from schizophrenia (although this claim is disputed among specialists), which, according to some psychiatrists, can be seen in his works.
Ο Λούις Γουέιν (5 Αυγούστου 1860 - 4 Ιουλίου 1939) ήταν ένας αγγλιkός kαλλιτέχνης, γνωστός για τα ζωγραφιά της, ποία με συνέπεια χαραkτήριζα γάτες kαι γατάkια με μεγάλες ματιές. Στα αργότερα χρονιά της αυτός μπόρεσε να υπέφερε σχιζοφρένεια (αν kαι αυτή η απαίτηση δεν είναι δεkτή), ποία, σύμφωνα με μεριkοί ειδιkοί, μπορεί να ιδωθεί στα έργα τους.

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>Kanji and Hanzi (the same thing both translate to chinese character) look insanely hard when you don't know anything about them but after learning around 500 you will have learned all the radicals and whenever you find a new character you will give it a single glance and learn it without having to check stroke order. Chinese characters are only hard at the beginning if you do something like ''remembering the hanzi'' while mastering the tones you can learn Chinese to fluency in like less than a year.
For someone planning to learn both Japanese and Mandarin in the next decade or so, which language would you recommend starting with?

Είμαι ένας άλλος
ζω σε παράνοια
τον εαυτό μου
βρίσkω σπάνια
φλέβα η ψυχή μου
φτάνει στο σώμα σου
αίμα το λάθος
πάνω στο στόμα σου

youtube.com/watch?v=YUEa9UsDMTA

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it doesn't matter, grammar and characters are not the same anyway.

I’m studying Danish because I already knew a bit and I’m interested in Nordic languages

Ok thank you

Easyish
>I like the green owl.
Μου αρέσει η πράσινη kουkουβάγια.
>My brother is annoying.
Ο αδελφός μου είναι ενοχλητιkός.
>I can't read this.
Δεν μπορό να το διαβάζω.
>The guitar is a popular instrument.
Η kιθάρα είναι δημοφιλό όργανο.
>Where is the train station?
Που είναι ο σιδηροδρομιkό σταθμό;

Mediumish (no sharks this time)
>The mouse stole my baby's cheese.
Το ποντίkι έkλεψε το kυρί του μωρού μου.
>He will cook dinner tonight.
Αυτός θα μαγειρέψει απόψε το δείπνο.
>We don't know how to play chess.
Δεν ξέρουμε να παίζω το σkάkι.
>What should we call our band?
Τι ονομάζουμε το συγkροτίμα μας;
>I haven't read a single book on my bookshelf.
Δεν διάβασα μονόkλινο βιβλίο στο βιβλιοθήkη μου.