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I'm gonna be reblogging a bunch of language reference stuff, so just blacklist the tags I've put on this post if you don't want them clogging up your dash 💕
seen from China
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seen from Yemen

seen from Brazil

seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from Brazil

seen from Brazil
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seen from Türkiye
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seen from Türkiye
🌸🔮💗
I'm gonna be reblogging a bunch of language reference stuff, so just blacklist the tags I've put on this post if you don't want them clogging up your dash 💕
scoutingcorps replied to your post: do any other non-american...
Most southern state names are from the Native Americans! Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Missouri are from past tribes that lived there. The eastern states come from english Nobles, like the Carolinas and Georgia.
ahh that does explain a lot :3 thank you!
mikecyr replied to your post: spanish is such a relief after french and japanese...
see Japanese would be a living nightmare ofr me to learn, yet its on my list of things I want desperately.
okay the thing is
here's a comparison of japanese versus french
the pros to learning japanese are:
japanese is spoken the way it is written so the only thing you need to worry about in terms of pronunciation is getting the sounds and stresses right
unlike french where literally nothing is spoken and written the same way and spellings are a nightmare as a result
japanese is also a concise language, somewhat like spanish, where pronouns are mostly done away with in informal conversations
also things don't have genders unlike french so that is a huge huge relief if you ask me
verbs are for the most part not conjugated according to subject which makes things hard to understand sometimes but is a plus for learners
there are really only two tenses (no future tense as such)
the sentence structure is actually very sensible though it takes some time to get used to
cons of learning japanese
kanji
kanji
kanji
~2000 kanji just to read newspapers and signboards
also two sets of alphabets besides kanji (which don't take very long but still) called hiragana and katakana
the problem with not learning kanji (which some people do) is that japanese is a sound-poor language and infested with homonyms so without the visual distinction afforded by kanji you'll remember jack shit
if you only speak english the sentence structure will take some getting used to (luckily my mother tongue uses a somewhat similar structure -_-;)
several registers of speech depending on politeness levels and situations
infinitives of verbs are often irregular and not very easy to learn (but then french is definitely worse in that regard)
since colloquial japanese is so concise compared to the "correct" classroom japanese it's hard to learn through assimilation (like watching anime or learning japanese songs, which is something you can use to supplement learning french)