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Learning/Speaking Languages


chrismada9
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I'll give this a bump. I speak English as my first language, Tamil (a Southern Indian language) and German with reasonable fluency, and I can just about garble out a few words of Sinhalese (a Sri Lankan language). Also I'm thinking about taking Italian next semester at uni, for no other reason than to be able to post better on the Napoli forum :D

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At school here we learn Maori. Probably the most worthless language that only about 4% of New Zealanders speak.

I can say a few words in that and count to 10 :D

Really want to learn Cantonese or Mandarin.

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At school here we learn Maori. Probably the most worthless language that only about 4% of New Zealanders speak.

I can say a few words in that and count to 10 :D

Really want to learn Cantonese or Mandarin.

It is great that they are keeping the language alive. Mandarin is hard but worth it!! But I need it daily so I may be biased.

Which Island do you hail from?

I really need to learn Korean since I have a class where 9 of the 13 students are Korean.

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It is great that they are keeping the language alive. Mandarin is hard but worth it!! But I need it daily so I may be biased.

Which Island do you hail from?

I really need to learn Korean since I have a class where 9 of the 13 students are Korean.

It is good, considering its pretty much the only thing that separates us and Australians.

Mandarin would be an excellent asset! Im from, Christchurch in the south island.

Thats a big %. What/Where do you teach?

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I teach year 10 and year 9 science at theBritish International School Shanghai (www.bisspuxi.com)

We went to NZ for Christmas but only the North Island. We only had 15 days and decided it was too short to do both islands justice. we plan to go back and do the South Island.

It is good, considering its pretty much the only thing that separates us and Australians.

Mandarin would be an excellent asset! Im from, Christchurch in the south island.

Thats a big %. What/Where do you teach?

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I teach year 10 and year 9 science at theBritish International School Shanghai (www.bisspuxi.com)

We went to NZ for Christmas but only the North Island. We only had 15 days and decided it was too short to do both islands justice. we plan to go back and do the South Island.

Oh that would be interesting. Im going to HK at the end of the year after going to London to watch the Blues play. Hoping to get to the Harbin Ice City in China before I leave.

Do the South Island! I love it! You won't be let down! I highly recommend Central Otago (Wanaka, Queenstown, Cromwell) Milford Sound..Heaps to do =]

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Oh that would be interesting. Im going to HK at the end of the year after going to London to watch the Blues play. Hoping to get to the Harbin Ice City in China before I leave.

Do the South Island! I love it! You won't be let down! I highly recommend Central Otago (Wanaka, Queenstown, Cromwell) Milford Sound..Heaps to do =]

If you make it North stop in Shanghai to say hi

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Bump.

I just completed my internship and I have a few months on hand till my exams in November so I really want to get round to learning a new language. I'm interested in German and Spanish. Which one is easier? I'm only really looking to become fluent in the conversational aspect, mind.

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Dutch, French, English and a bit of German (highschool Latin not counting)

@madmax : I found German difficult to master with all the cases (Nominativ, Akkusativ, Dativ, ...). I hated that in Latin and it screwed up my German as well.

I'd go for Spanish - a lot more people speak it and it sounds quite a bit sexier :-)

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Bump.

I just completed my internship and I have a few months on hand till my exams in November so I really want to get round to learning a new language. I'm interested in German and Spanish. Which one is easier? I'm only really looking to become fluent in the conversational aspect, mind.

Spanish is easy to learn and speak. German has very specific grammar which can be hard.

I still remember my high school Spanish! My husband is semi fluent. My mandarin is still painful!

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD

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Spanish is easy to learn and speak. German has very specific grammar which can be hard.

I still remember my high school Spanish! My husband is semi fluent. My mandarin is still painful!

Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD

I can speak English, Korean, Indonesian, and decent chinese in a few dialects(mandarin, cantonese, hakka)

Japanese wouldnt be hard to learn for me, but ive never thought about it. French sounds interesting to me, i like the way it is spoken. Might learn that after i get my chinese fluent, those intonations are probably the hardest part about it.

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