/lang/ - Language Learning General

>What language(s) 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 shit some damn time:
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

Check this pastebin for plenty of language resources as well as some nice image guides:
pastebin.com/ACEmVqua

Torrents with more resources than you'll ever need for 30 plus languages:
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 damn wiki
>Should I learn lang Y so I can learn lang X?
No
>What is the most useful language?
Cunnan vs witan
>What language should I learn?
Wesan vs beon

Old thread Old challenge >this is unironically how Anglos teach Latin

Attached: omfg Anglo Latin teaching methods.jpg (355x474, 17K)

Other urls found in this thread:

content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2091477,00.html
twitter.com/AnonBabble

anyone use hellotalk?

I'm not premium but I want to try other languages and need to know if it will save my posts and chats on the first language.

...

You should really be using the AJATT and MIA methods if you want to learn a language.

Also does anyone have a lesson on adjectives and grammar for Icelandic? I mean a written one not audio.

Amongst the romance languages:
Italian is the most pleasant to listen to, easily.
Portuguese sounds like drunk Russian.
French is pants on head retarded, and sounds like someone forgot a bunch of marbles in their mouth.

However,
Spanish is the worst.
Wildly inefficient and therefore in order to compensate is spoken very quickly to condense more words into what you could say in half the time in most other languages, thus making it a high pitched and very feminine sounding language.

Of course it is easy to learn, since it's the dirtiest, most vulgar form of Latin.
And naturally the language perfectly mirrors its people - those half human orc brutes in Southern America.

Not to mention the sonically repulsive ' th sound that repeats everywhere.
Yuck.

What a tragedy that the Spaniards conquered South America instead of the Germanic people with their Masculine, robust, vocally superior languages.

Attached: main-qimg-af2a12d352a127488299ce997d8ab342.jpg (5497x992, 2.2M)

content.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2091477,00.html

Summary: the "density" of information of most languages is very similar. Some languages need more syllabes to express the same piece of information, but this is compensated by going faster. Spanish and Japanese are the fastest. but at least Japanese sounds good.

>Once again, what is french?
A terrible abomination, as I have written in my OG post. Too bad your ancestors killed the Gauls - Gaulish was a beautiful Celtic language.

>Which exist in many more languages, including English
Yes, but most of the time only in the beginning of words. not randomly in the middle of a word, retardedly and needlessly changing it's pronunciation for no good reason.
E.G.
Opción
Realización
Producción
Animación
Concepción

As if they have to lift their tongue to say a hard C.
Incredibly annoying to hear and to speak.

The only time Spanish sounds bearable is when it spoken slowly *on purpose* and only when someone with a deep voice speaks it.

Attached: 2019-08-07_19-34-22.png (630x345, 35K)

"The Actes and Deidis of the Illustre and Vallyeant Campioun Schir William Wallace (English: Acts and Deeds of the Illustrious and Valiant Champion Sir William Wallace), also known as The Wallace, is a long "romantic biographical" poem by the fifteenth-century Scottish makar of the name Blind Harry probably at some time in the decade before 1488.[1][2] As the title suggests, it commemorates and eulogises the life and actions of the Scottish freedom fighter William Wallace who lived a century and a half earlier. The poem is historically inaccurate, and mentions several events that never happened.[3] For several hundred years following its publication, The Wallace was the second most popular book in Scotland after the Bible.[4]"

Fuck my indecisiveness, I won't ever settle on a language at this rate.

How does /lang/ feel about writing in a mirrored, inverted Semitic Alphabet? that is identical to Hebrew?
Must be awkward for Indo-Europoors that they can only write thanks to us Levantines.

Attached: phoenician.gif (584x597, 16K)