Saturday, April 23, 2016

Free Resources To Get You Learning, Reading, Writing and Speaking French

Frenchpod101
Learn French by Podcast
Learn French with Alexa
Rocket French
Français Authentique
DailyFrenchPod
Easy French Poetry
One Thing in a French Day
Cultivate Your French  
Learn French with Daily Lessons
News in Slow French
Le journal en français facile
Daily French Pod (website)
French Podcasts.com (website)
Learn French by Podcast (iwebsite)
Je French.com (website)
One Minute French ( website)
Learn Out Loud: Survival Phrases (website)
French Pod 101 ( website)

the catalogs of the “Language learning” section within the Podcast section of the iTunes store

2.) Radiolingua Network — Coffee Break French

3.) FrenchPod101.com 4.)   Livres Audio Gratuit http://www.litteratureaudio.com/

AudiOCite Bibliboom.com

5.) News in Slow French

6.)   iTtunes Bonus Tip:

enter the itunes store, and scroll down, all the way until you see 4 categories titled “explore,” “features,” “Help,” and “manage.”
Below the category that says “manage,” click on the link “change country.”
we want to find more French podcasts, so try changing your country to France or some other country with French as official language.

7.)  Wordreference.com and the wordreference.com forums;

8.)  Google Translator
9.) Lingro.com —  “the coolest dictionary known to Hombre”

10.)  Anki SRS Virtual Flashcards

11.) Facebook Language options – Change your facebook to French
12.)  Wikipedia en francaise

Also, it’s very good for subject specific vocabulary.  Just check out the wiktionnaire

Bonus:

Wikipedia entry on French Grammar

12.) The Wikibooks and Wikiversity French Courses.

13.) Foreign Service Institute Free Language Courses

14.) The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center

15.) BBC Languages guide to French

16.) Six newspapers in French

17.) TV5 Monde

18.) National Geographic en francaise
 

19.) Lyrics Training

20) xkcd  webcomics

21) 14 French Worksheets Websites Worth Getting Worked Up Over

22.) Forvo.com – “All the words in the world. Pronounced”

23.) The Open University – french Podcasts and Free language course

24.) Enhancing French Skills



25.) Francais interactif
26.) The Internet Polyglot: french Lesson Catalog
27.) The Omniglot Forum
28.)Couchsurfing.org
29.) iTalki.com
30.) Livemocha.com
31.)  Busuu.com

32.) Themixxer.com – A free educational website for language exchanges via Skype



33.) Verbling Global Language Exchange Communities

34.) Memrise – Online Community Language Learning

35.) The Genius App — Spaced Repetition Memorization by Soundforge.net

36.) Duolingo — “Free Language Education for the World”

37.) Quizlet Online Language Learning and Virtual Flashcards



38.) FreeLanguage.org’s French Language Learning Resources

39.) Conjuguemos


40.)  Pictolang


37.) Lifehacker.com – I Learned to Speak Four Languages in a Few Years Article.


38.) French proverbs

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Finding the time

"There are good and bad times to study, and people often fail to take advantage of the good ones.
Early in the morning: by rising 15 minutes earlier, you can read a page of Russian a day.
At lunchtime: you could practice Italian for 15 minutes rather than chatting with office-mates.
Before dinner: a session with your vocabulary cards may help pass the time, and no rule forbids learning a language with a martini in your hand; in fact, it may lower your inhibitions.
I knew a man who used his shaving time to learn Chinese. He posted a few Chinese characters on his mirror every morning and looked at them while shaving. It cost him a nick or two, but within a few months he had learned 500 Chinese characters solely while shaving."

Paul Pimsleur; Learn Languages

"Learn how to keep your flash cards handy. Whip them out and flash test yourself the instant you find yourself with the time. (The person you’re walking with stops to look at a shop window. You’ve read the menu, finished the newspaper, and the waiter hasn’t come yet. The clerk has to validate your credit card. There’s a line at the bank or at the ticket counter. The elevator seems to be stopping at all floors.) Learn how to draw those cards out and start flashing even if all you’ll have is five seconds. If the person you’re telephoning doesn’t answer until the fifth ring, he’s given you time to go through two or three entries. Learn to be quick. I’ve learned how to master a whole new Chinese character between the time I dial the last digit and the time my party says hello."

"You can learn a language in twelve months using only those moments you didn’t realise you had. Moments we instinctively bid goodbyes to include those spent waiting for and riding in elevators, waiting for the person you’re dialing to answer, waiting while he puts you on hold, waiting for a long outgoing message from someone’s answering machine to reach its conclusion. There are those moments when you’re helplessly trapped – when someone who’s too good a friend to hang up on delivers an unending narrative requiring no verbal participation on your part beyond an occasional grunt, groan, “dear me,” “gee whiz,” or other appropriate interjection to let him know you’re still there. It’s usually safe to divert some of your attention from your friend to your flash cards.
What do you normally do when you’re waiting in line at the bank, the post office, the airline counter, the bus or train station, or the supermarket checkout counter?
What do you do while you brush your teeth? You could be listening to a language cassette. What plans have you made for the time you’re going to spend waiting behind your steering wheel at the gas pump? Or waiting for the rinse cycle? Waiting for the school bus?
You get the point. An honest, thorough scrutiny of your normal week will yield dozens, even hundreds, of minutes that can be put to work learning your target language. And don’t forget, a scrap of time need be no longer than five seconds to advance you closer to your goal.
Arrange your life so you will never be caught without something to study in your target language. If you carry a briefcase or a pocketbook, your grammar book or newspaper, even your dictionary, can be your companion. Phrase books are usually so thin they easily fit into a coat pocket. There’s nothing holy about your foreign language newspaper. Cut off a page and fold it up and carry it with you, along with your highlighter.
Certainly we can all agree there’s no excuse ever to get caught without flash cards. The instant you get stymied – in line at the cash machine, waiting for a store clerk, etc. – pull out your deck of flash cards and get to work.
When you’re walking through town or through the park, jogging, riding in a bus or train too crowded for reading, or driving or riding in a car at night, obviously you can’t play with flash cards. These are, however, also hidden moments that offer exquisite opportunities for foreign language infusion. (Use that time to listening cassettes.)

- Barry Farber; How to Learn Any Language

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

female polyglots

I just realized something...

There's plenty of female polyglots, but WE DON'T COUNT BECAUSE WE ARE "GIRLS".
Why? Because guys see it as a pissing contest :D
It's not because of some misogyny or so, it's not that boys think girls can't do it as well as they can, it's just that in their mind we don't compete in the same category. So it doesn't matter if I am better than all the boys, I'm still not in the competition, simply because I'm a girl.

That is also why some guys are so openly hostile about Benny Lewis (Fluent in 3). He's "cheating". He isn't playing by the rules, but still claims the achievements. And while doing that, he's happily traveling the world and reaping the benefits, while the more studious and silent boys sitting in their studies doing it "the right way", have most likely never even been outside their country...

Anyway, I'm going to do a Paavo Nurmi. Keep pissing, boys, I'm out.

Here's a couple of female language bloggers and vloggers
(not saying they are female polyglots, not saying they aren't...)

Lindsay
Maha
Saara
Ellen
Susanna
Jana 
Aga
Shannon
Jennie
Rach
Fasulye
Koko
Kerstin
ChulyDarlyn
Judith
Charly 
Karenne 
Yangyang
Lynn
Catherine
Luciana
 

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

When it rains, it pours...

I know, I know, I'm not the most constant blogger :-D

So - now it's Korean.

I have my strategy to learn any language.

1) Learn the alphabet

Korean alphabet is pretty easy. Basically. Or, the basics are.

Omniglot; Korean alphabet

Some interesting information there:

Korean alphabet was invented 1444 and the shapes are based on the shape of the mouth when the sound is made.
Huh. I don't see the connection.

It was usd by the "uneducated people", like children and women.
Hmm...

But in the 18th and 20th century, the Hangeul system developed into what it is now, by mixing the "baby-writing" with the "civilised people's writing" (called Hanja), which was Chinese or based on Chinese writing, which is why there appear today some unusual letters in Korean writing today. There has been some ups and downs, and today an educated person knows some 2000 characters, and well-educated people know quite a lot more.

It was written vertically from right to left like Chinese, but is today mostly written horizontally from left to right like English. Some people are even trying to get the writing to change from syllables to letters, like English, but that is not getting much support.
I agree with that. The Korean writing is not difficult to write nor to understand, so why change it?

The shapes of the vowels are based on three elements: Man ㅣ, Earth ㅡ and Heaven •.

Basic letters and Korean word structure

I am gratefully using Amy's Hana Hana Hangul (Hangul step by step)

Also, Ryan Estrada's "Learn to read Korean in 15 minutes" is of great help :-)

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Some basic Korean to make the KDrama more fun :-)

At least to a language freak :-)

yes (I agree with your statement, that's right, OK, positive)


ne


ye

no (I disagree with your statement, that's not right, negative)

아니
ani

아니오
anio

I get it, I understand
알았어
arasso
(Funny thing is that in Russian хорошо - harasho - means "good", "well", "ok", "I agree", "enough"

shut up!
닥쳐
dagchyeo

get out!
나가!
naga!

let go!
가자!
gaja!

I'll kill you!
내가 당신을 죽일거야
naega dangsin-eul jug-ilgeoya

In Korean, kinship terms are often used when speaking of non-kinship relations. A younger co-worker could call an older co-worker of about the same age "big sister" or "big brother", but it could be considered uncomfortably familiar... but keep your ears open when watching the dramas. These words come up often.

big sister
언니   -  누나
eonni (used by a female) - nuna (used by a male)

big brother 
오빠  - 
oppa (used by a female) - hyeong (used by a male)

Also, all older people are your "aunts" and "uncles". 
Interestingly this happens also in Finland, EXCEPT THAT IT'S ONLY KIDS WHO DO IT. For an adult to call other adults uncles and aunts - unless they really are your parents' siblings - is... well, either you are intellectually a child, or you are being rude.

aunt, lady, madame (middle-aged woman, my parents' female friend)
아줌마
ajumma, ahjumma

uncle, mister (middle-aged man, my parents' male friend)
아저씨
ajeossi, ahjussi

Read this: Korean pronouns

Other things that are being said all the time is:

I will work hard. (The formal way, used when speaking with your boss for example)
열심히 일하겠습니다.
Pronounciation:
Yeol-shim-hi il-ha-get-sub-ni-da.

I will work my hardest.
최선을 다하겠습니다.
Pronounciation:
chwe-seon-neul da-ha-get-sub-ni-da.

I will try to work hard.
열심히 일하도록 노력하겠습니다.
Pronounciation:
Yeol-shim-hi il-ha-do-rok no-ryeok-ha-get-sub-ni-da.  


I'll work hard (informal way, with friends)
열심히할께.
yeol-shim-hi hal-ge

I will work hard, so please take care of me
열심히 일하겠습니다. 잘 부탁드립니다 

Yeol-shim-hi il-ha-get-sub-ni-da. Jal bu-tag-deu-lib-ni-da.
 
You have worked hard 
수고했어요
Su-go-haess-eo-yo

Other things of interest to know:
top 20 Korean conversational phrases you need to know
(It's on two pages, so don't miss page 2)

Useful Korean phrases
Korean phrases
Learn these Korean phrases first

13 Korean words we know just from watching K-dramas 

15 Korean Phrases Every K-drama Addict Should Know

10 interesting Korean phrases/words 


Added 7th of May 2018

1) kureso
I guess it might be "그래서(geu-rae-seo)?" meaning "so?" or "so, what?"

2) kureum
It could be "그럼(geu-reom)" meaning "so,..","then,...","well,..."

3) kureuseyo - 그러세요(geu-reo-se-yo)
I think this phrase needs examples.^^
A : Can I comment on your post? - 댓글 달아도 되나요?
B : Sure.(그러세요)

A : Mind if I comment on your post? - 댓글 달아도 되나요?
B : No, I don't mind, go ahead (그러세요)

A : I am the person who commented on your post. 제가 댓글 단 사람입니다.^^
B : Are you?(그러세요?) What a surprise!

4) kuruchi - 그렇지?(geu-reo-chi)
This phrase works like tag question in English.

You're kidding, aren't you? 농담하는 거지, 그렇지?
You did comment on her post, didn't you? 네가 댓글 달았지, 그렇지?


italki  

Monday, March 14, 2016

Korean

So, I have fallen for KDrama :-D.

I happened to see the trailer for "Marry him if you dare"...
I thought the idea of a woman going back in time to stop herself from marrying a guy was fascinating, and the first episode was funny and engaged me enough to want to know more about these people.
Also, the show gave me a view to a culture and mindset that was totally new to me, but in a very easy and comfortable manner.
As the show developed... well... it developed. It revealed layers more than in an onion, layers and colors and tones and notes... and I fell in love with the Korean culture.
The layers of politeness, complex rules of etiquette and respect of age, so very, very pleasing to me.

Then followed "The Prime Minister and I"
Watching that show I became very aware of how... unsophisticated we Europeans are. How rude, vulgar, shallow, brutish we must appear to the Koreans... but also... there are things in the Korean culture that to me seem very cold, insensitive and inconsiderate... the... feudalism of values and how the complicated courtesy, politeness, respect rules made it fully acceptable to be a total ass to the ones below you on the matrix.
On the other hand... that was what we had 200 years ago. And that thought makes me less ashamed of our brutishness. Perhaps it's not that after all? ;-) Perhaps we are not that uncivilized, but our civilization is different?
Another thing that was very apparent in this series was the food and eating. "Hunger" is almost synonymical to "sadness" and "lack" in every area of life. Food is extremely important and works as symbol for... everything. By feeding you I take care of you and I say you and your wellbeing, not just the physical, but the emotional as well, is important to me.

Then I tried to watch "Cinderella's Stepsister".
I managed 2/3, then I went to look for a synopsis for the last episode and decided not to watch the rest of it. Very emotional, very irritating, rather confusing and very boring.
But it taught me things as well. It confirmed some of the points from the previous two shows, pointed out a couple of things I hadn't noticed in them, and made me aware of some new things.
How the rank system and etiquette are also a support and sort of a guarantee of rights, even to the  lowest ones. How is it that you can do seemingly horrible things to people and it's still OK, while then some "minor" things can be totally unacceptable. (It reminded me of Upstairs, Downstairs, and the relationship between the staff and the masters... how treating your "inferiors" as equals can be very inconsiderate, even insulting in effect... and about the European cultural elitism, imperialism, colonialism, orientalism... how we are expressing our prejudices and "racism" in things we do in all wellmeaning and kindness... I was thinking about European feminists going to Africa being all sisterly and trampling on our "sisters" by simply assuming "sisterhood" means the same to them as to us... We are all asking why "they" aren't eating cake in our ignorance.

Any way, I want to learn Korean, of course.
And I want to have Korean food as I watch these shows.
But, now I am learning Korean. The pronunciation is a huge problem for me. I can't hear what sound D or N is. And the elusive Asian R. It's really not an R at all.

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Learning languages by reading III

Here are some selected parts from several blogs. Of course there is more, much more, in each blog, so don't just read this, go and read the article yourself and pick up what YOU need/want/note!


How to Read in a Foreign Language

"I do most of my reading with physical books. If it’s an article I’ve found on the internet I print it. Reading on the computer tires my eyes, it’s distracting and I am not able to digest information from digital sources like I am able to with physical literature."

"I make notes on the article and underline new words and expressions to make the content mine."

"Writers take the time to select appropriate words to express their thoughts and emotions. Immersing yourself in this refined form of language will refine both your thinking and language skills."

Learning a Language by Reading Books: 5 Super Strategies

"Books contain a richer language."
"Attack the language on all fronts."

"Your books will always be there for you. By reading a book, you remove another limiting factor of language acquisition—that of finding a capable and consistent instructor or mentor. The consistency issue is precluded because the lessons are permanently printed on the book. They’re not dependent on the moods swings or the availability of the instructor. Books never tire or get mad after the 20th repetition. You go at it at your own pace. Your self-esteem won’t take a hit because another person is witnessing your relatively slow progress."

1. Read Children’s Books

2. Read Parallel Texts

3. Read Extensively

"Don’t worry too much if you’re not fully absorbing the actual meaning of the material you’re reading. Just read on. Don’t be tempted to grab the dictionary on the first unfamiliar word you meet. Just barrel through the text and read on anyway."

4. Read Intensively

Actively be involved in what you’re reading. Meaning, try to absorb all the lessons presented on one page before moving on to the next.
Have a dictionary close by.
Write copious amounts of notes on the margins of the page.
Write your mnemonics, insights and examples.
Underline, highlight and encircle words.
Dogear the pages.
Your goal isn’t to finish the book or to get the story. Your goal is to learn the language along the way.

5. Read Your Hobby

If you are learning a foreign language, then you should be READING in it

"Reading at even a slow pace also exposes us to more sentences per minute than the average movie or TV show."

Start basic and small. 
Read things you’ve already read in your native language. 
Read books with their accompanying audiobooks. 
Watching TV or movies with closed-captioning in the native language can sometimes be a decent substitute for this last tip, but be careful: most closed captions fail to mimic the spoken lines word-for-word, which can result in a confusing audiovisual disconnect.

5 Hacks to Learn Languages by Reading Literature

1. Keep a Dictionary Close to Hand

Looking up words you don’t know in a dictionary is the most simple strategy, and also one of the most effective. This method consists of reading the text, underlining unknown vocabulary, looking up these words in a reliable dictionary, then writing down their meanings (in a specific language notebook you have for the notes about the language.)
(Learn the vocabulary through SRS flashcards)

2. Comparative Reading: Keep Two Books Side by Side (L1 and L2) (or bilingual books/parallel texts)

Take notes: write down quotes, commentaries, vocabulary, everything interesting - in the language notebook

3. Read Comic Books and strips

4. Read While Listening to the Audiobook

5. Use Easy Reading Books for “Facilitated Reading” (adapted, "easy", "simplified" version for learners)

How to Learn to Read Novels in a Foreign Language

"I have tried reading books in foreign languages before, such as when I was learning Spanish. Like most, I found it challenging. The number of unknown words and the sheer amount of confusion made it easy to give up, even with simple books. It seemed more like a chore than anything else.

I stopped at a newsstand in Geneva. I was picking up a snack when the “Best  Seller” wall caught my eye; a book by Michael Crichton called simply Pirates! in French. On a whim, I picked it up.

Within hours I was hooked. Sure, I had to have my dictionary handy the whole time. Sure, it took a long time at first. It ended up taking me exactly 7 days to finish the novel, but it was well worth it.

About 3 days an 10 chapters in, I got an idea; graphing the progress. I just recorded how long it took me  to read a chapter and the number of  words I looked up, then divided by the number of pages in the chapter to get a time/page and words/page average.

Reading books like this has really expanded my vocabulary and even my sense of grammar. It has resulted in me developing a  more natural comprehension of the language.

On the other hand, books do nothing to help pronunciation, oral comprehension, etc."

Extensive reading: why it is good for our students… and for us

Extensive Reading (ER) (reading for leisure, fun)

principles for successful ER: read a lot, read often, read widely (many different types and topics), read what interests you, read because you like reading, you like stories, you want to know what is being said in the text.

Remember, life is too short to read "bad" books. There's an ocean of reading material in the world, so you don't need to stay by any specific puddle or bucket of water.

No-one is going to test you about the book. There are no rules and no expectations. There is no comparison. You read in your own pace and what you chose to read. You don't read because you have to or ought to or should, you read because you want to. You are not to understand the exact meaning of every word, you shouldn't be using a dictionary or grammar when you read (you don't use that in your mothertongue either).

"Reading is, by its very nature, a private, individual activity. It can be done anywhere, at any time of day. Readers can start and stop at will, and read at the speed they are comfortable with. They can visualise and interpret what they read in their own way. They can ask themselves questions (explicit or implicit), notice things about the language, or simply let the story carry them along."

Learning a Foreign Language by Reading a Novel

The notion that you can learn a foreign language as a side-effect of reading for pleasure in that language is called extensive reading, as contrasted with intensive reading, which is when you analyse a text until you have understood it thoroughly.

The #1 principle for a successful extensive reading program is that "the reading material is easy." For this reason, most extensive reading programs direct students to what are called "graded readers."
(Actually, it's not "easy" but "adjusted to the skill level of the reader")

The Process - INTENSIVE READING

You will need:
- a monolingual and a bilingual dictionary
- language textbooks, grammar
- a reference grammar
- the book in L1 and L2

The general idea is to read some unit (say a paragraph) and make a solid attempt to understand it before resorting to any of the materials above.
Then you use the resources in roughly this order:
- monolingual dictionary (MD)
-- Whenever you look up a word, decide whether it's worth memorizing. Highlight anything you think you should memorize and add it to your flashcards later.
- bilingual dictionary (BD)
-- When you've figured out the word, switch back to the MD and see if you can make sense of the definition now.
- monolingual + bilingual
-- try to understand the definition with the help of the BD
- Wikipedia
- grammar
-- maybe the word is just another version of a word, like a verb in an unknown tense.

"Other times the dictionary fails you because it doesn't support compound words or because the inflected word happens to look the same as a different word. A good English example is "carving". If you wanted the definition of "to carve" it won't help much for the dictionary to show you a definition for the noun "carving." In those cases, you open the dictionary as a book and manually look the word up."

- "If all the words seem to make sense individually, but you're not sure how they work together, then it's time to consult the reference grammar."

- google it, bing it

- "If all else has failed, go ahead and look at the English translation"
-- then go through these steps again with the basic understanding of the meaning, find out why you didn't get it earlier

* collocations, idioms, slang, sayings, quotes, references

- For things that you can't figure out to save your soul, highlight the sentence, bookmark the page, and bring it to a native speaker for help.

Expensive reading?
"If students read approximately a million words of running text a year, and if they know 96-98 per cent of the words, they will be exposed to 20,000 to 40,000 new words… If students learn one word in ten through context, they will learn somewhere between 2,000 and 4,000 new words through extensive reading in a year."
The blog entry and comments is a discussion about why this doesn't happen. Very interesting!
"For me reading in a second language has always been a bit of a chore. I always used to start out with good intentions of working with a dictionary and recording new vocabulary in a notebook but I find that these things take me away so much from immersing myself in the world of the book that I ended up losing the will to carry on.

Recently I’ve tried out a few things which have been more motivating and have also helped me to learn.

1) Reading a book in L2 which I know really well in English.
2) Reading screenplays.
3) Reading an author in L2 that I am very familiar with in English."
How To Read Effectively In A Foreign Language

In our native language we use a lot of micro-skills to adjust the intensity of reading. When it comes to reading in a foreign language, we abandon these skills and try to understand every single word...

But to gain the benefits of extensive reading (which is what builds up our language without us "doing anything") one must read for the fun of reading, read a chapter at a time, not interrupt to find out words and note grammar, but ignore what one doesn't readily understand - the goal is to have read the book, not to understand every word.

(Now, this doesn't mean that you are to read the words of a foreign language and believe you can learn the language - on the other hand... that might as well happen. There's plenty of stories of people who started with a book, a page, a sentence in a foreign language, who then figured out the meaning of it and managed to understand the language. But I suppose there was something familiar with the language... I doubt you could learn anything from a book written in foreign letters. Like, if you don't know Hangeul, staring at Korean won't do you much good.)

How to deal with words you don’t know

* Look at the word and see if it’s familiar in any way.
* Go back and read the problem sentence many times over. Try to understand the word by context.
* Make a note of the word in a notebook, so you can check the meaning later. (Note also the company of the word.) Stop yourself from rushing to find out the foreign word immediately when you see it.
* if you find a verb you know but is conjugated in an unfamiliar way - can you understand the gist of what's going on? Good, continue and let the word be.

I am not quite sure of what he suggest one should be doing, but what I understand is this:
- read the first chapter, from beginning to end without stopping or making notes.
- write a summary of what you just read. If you think you have an idea of what you just read, just move on and read the next chapter. Otherwise, read it again, and this time make notes. Make notes of what you think you understand, interesting words, grammar points etc. Mark word you believe to be important for you to understand to understand the story. Check those words. Read it a third time. Now you should have a humm. Continue to the next chapter.

Reading-Listening method