Here’s a song for you… MAGO by GFRIEND
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Kaledo Art
sheepfilms
styofa doing anything
NASA
taylor price
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

JBB: An Artblog!
KIROKAZE
art blog(derogatory)
No title available
No title available

Discoholic 🪩
$LAYYYTER
DEAR READER

Andulka

Product Placement

JVL
occasionally subtle
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan

seen from Brazil

seen from Poland
seen from Senegal

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
@ultradailylearn
Here’s a song for you… MAGO by GFRIEND
还是 and 或者
还是 and 或者, both mean or. This post is about the difference between the two. Though both mean or, one is used with interrogative sentences and the other with declarative sentences.
还是 is interrogative. Here’s a scenario. You have guest and you want to ask them if they would like either tea or coffee. Here’s how to do it.
The structure is Subject+ Verb+ Option A+ 还是+ Option B
你 要 喝 咖 啡 还 是 茶?
When you use 或者, it’s not really about a choice, but is more of an opinion.
The structure is Option A/Opinion A+ 或者+Option B/Opinion B.
今天晚上吃米饭或者面条都可以。
Note: you have to use 还是 n sentences that contain an interrogative clause. With sentences that imply a choice you have to use 还是. For instance, I don’t if this is my pen or my boy friend’s. This sentence will become the following in Mandarin.
我不知道这支笔是我的还是我男朋友的。
Here’s another example.
她的生日是10 月还是11月,我不记得。
Chinese Grammar: Passive Markers
This post will be to explain how to use the passive markers 被 (bèi) and 把 (bǎ). 把 is especially important because it is so commonly used to stress an object over the subject and what happened to the object.
First off, if you don’t know how to make a passive sentence, here’s a little tidbit for you. The object becomes the subject and has something done to them by someone/something (known as the personal agent). If you can stick “by zombies” into a sentence and have it make sense, congratulations! You just made a passive sentence!
e.g: My bike was stolen by zombies.
Let’s put that English sentence into Chinese using 被:
我的自行车被僵尸偷了。 (Wŏ de zìxíngchē bèi jiāngshī** tōu le.)
See how the 被 goes after the object which is considered the passive subject? It is most often an inanimate object because only an object with the ability to do something can be used after 被. So a rolling boulder, even though inanimate, can be the personal agent in this sense.
You can also drop the personal agent after 被 as well, but always keep the 被 in your sentence so it stays passive!
我的自行车被偷了。 ( Wŏ de zìxíngchē bèi tōu le.) - My bicycle was stolen.
我十点被捎脚了。 (Wŏ shí diăn bèi shāojiăo le.) - I am being picked up at ten.
** 僵尸 (jiāngshī) is a type of Chinese vampire-zombie that devours souls or spirits. I’m not completely sure of the whole lore but it was the closest thing I could find and I used it here. If you know more about them, or have a better word for zombies, let me know!
Now for 把!
This little bugger has a few uses like I said above, to emphasise something or what happened to it.
把 usually is placed in the second spot in a sentence. The personal agent (considered the subject here, though) will go before this, so it’s the opposite of 被. The object that goes after 把 must be a definite thing, not something abstract (like a table as opposed to peace, which is abstract). The action must have a conclusion or a result.
我把哈利波特系列看完了。 (Wŏ bă Hālì Bōtè xìliè kān wán le.) - I finished reading the Harry Potter series. / I took the Harry Potter series and finished reading it.
我把我最喜欢的杯子打破了。(Wŏ bă wŏ zuì xĭhuan de bēizi dăpò le.) - I broke my favourite cup. / I took my favourite cup and broke it.
So the book series is no longer unread, and the cup is now broken into pieces. Although it still looks active, it put the agent on the back burner and highlighted what happened to the object.
For other uses of 把, I really recommend reading Claudia Ross and Jing-heng Sheng Ma’s Modern Mandarin Chinese Grammar. They have an entire section devoted to using 把 and right after that section is the passive.
This is a just a basic explanation on something that is so huge, but I hope this helps a bit. Please let me know if you have questions or suggestions/edits!
Chinese Measure Words
个 gè: for people, abstract things and objects | Ex: 我有一个老师。
口 kǒu: for family people | Ex: 我家有四口人。
只 zhī: for animals | Ex: 我爸爸家有三只狗。
条 tiáo: for long and narrow things | Ex: 她有两条鱼。
张 zhāng: for flat things | Ex: 教室里有五张桌子。
把 bǎ: for objects that can be grasped by hand | Ex: 我房间里有一把椅子。
本 běn: for books | Ex: 桌子上有四本书。
支 zhī: for long and thin things | Ex: 笔袋里有一支笔。
家 jiā: for establishments (house, hotel …) | Ex: 我哥哥开了一家公司。
块 kuài: for portions or pieces | Ex: 来吃块西瓜吧。
岁 suì: for years (old) | Ex: 我今年40岁。
棵 kē: for trees | Ex: 这棵树又高又大。
台 tái: for machines | Ex: 这台电脑是新买的。
双 shuāng: for pairs | Ex: 一双筷子。
辆 liàng: for vehicles | Ex: 一辆汽车。
篇 piān: for articles and texts | Ex: 这篇报道是我写的。
节 jié: for time periods | Ex: 我们下午只有一节课。
杯 bēi: for liquid (glass; cup) | Ex: 我有一杯牛奶。
Japanese 101; How to improve your vocabulary
Hi everyone.
I’ve finished writing a lengthy post on how to improve your vocabulary only to lose it because I didn’t save it as draft beforehand. Writing in an iPad sucks because this is not the first time this happened to me. Why hand why.
Anyway, one of the secrets to learn new words quicker and improve your vocabulary is surprise surprise
To read.
HA. You think there’s a shortcut for success. No.
So back to reading, I found that by reading out loud, I memorize words quicker and plus it’s also improved my pronunciation.
During my first months of learning Japanese, I started by reading textbooks because that’s the only material that I could read with my limited vocabulary and kanji.
Then I tried reading manga but the interest quickly wears off. I’m the type who prefer words more than visual so I turn myself into the Internet and google articles on topics that I’m interested in like how to improve your Japanese but in Japanese lol.
And it works.
Next, I use the Quora Japanese version to increase my reading material which is a free app where people ask questions and answer. Sort of like Yahoo Answers and Japan 知恵袋. I love everything that is free and easily accessible by using phone *wink*
I’m not sure about android but iPhone has a built dictionary where you can select a word and look up the meaning. Plus, there’s also a speech function that you can use to hear the pronunciation.
Here’s a short video that I edit using InShot of me reading one of the answers in Quora.
Good luck! and if you’ve any tips to add please free to do so x
P/s: Is there anyone interested to do a language exchange on Skype? We can talk about the struggle learning Japanese lol, reading boring textbooks together etc. 😂 The invitation is only for girls 😉
speak your language day asks!
☾ : favourite word from your language ♧ : favourite word from the english language translated in your language ✌ : favourite proverb/saying from your language ☮ : translate the first lines of your favourite song in your language ☆ : give the first lines of a song which is originally in your language ☯ : what do you love about your language? ☪ : what do you hate about your language? ❀ : which language(s) would you like to speak fluently? ♡ : which languages do you speak/have you learned in school? ❁ : which language(s) do you think of as the most beautiful? ✓ : funniest word in your language ϟ : translate a sentence
CHINESE MASTERLIST!
*for future reference the masterlist link should be under my profile pic on my homepage!
FLASHCARDS
C-SERIES INTEGRATED CONTEXT VOCAB
01_10 Flashcards
02_16 Flashcards
03_18 Flashcards
04_18 Flashcards
05_17 Flashcards
06_15 Flashcards
07_18 Flashcards
RADICAL VOCAB
01_General Vocab
02_Colours
03_Valentine’s Day
HELLO TALK - Real life Chinese Conversations with Native Speakers
Part O1
Work, Continuing a conversation, Clarifying questions, Language ability, Getting ready in the morning
OTHER VOCAB
EMOTIONS
Emotions vocab list (w GIFS)
APPEARANCE
What type of boys do you like?
What type of girls do you like?
CHINESE PARTICLES
The three DE’s
MISCELLANEOUS VOCAB
01_My Mr. Mermaid + Body Parts
02_My Diary Phrases
03_My Mr. Mermaid + Body Parts PT2
04_My Mr.Mermaid ep 2 + 3
05_My Mr. Mermaid ep 3 + Chinese Pod describing drinks
06_PETS (describing animals/pets)
07_My Mr. Mermaid ep 4 + Home vocab
08_My Mr. Mermaid ep 4. cont
Sentence Order
Basic sentence order
Time/place word order
Test Yourself:
C-SERIES vocab lists 1-5
Hello! This is all the Chinese learning content i’ve created so far! I hope you are all learning well and enjoying your language journeys!
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Listen to music in that language. Listening to music in the language you are trying to learn surrounds you in the language and helps you develop a sense of how it sounds.
Watch TV and movies in that language. Listening to people have actual conversations in the language can help give you an idea of how it works. I recommend watching variety shows and children shows because the language is normally very basic. Plus, variety shows normally have certain words and phrases on the screen.
Use flash cards and take quizzes frequently. This helps you stay sharp with things you really need to know and remember. I personally don’t like flash cards, but when it comes to learning vocabulary, it can be a big help.
Practice writing and spelling. You can do this by writing daily in a journal. This can also help with forming your own sentences. Simply write about things like what you ate or what you did, or your thoughts in general. The more you write, the more comfortable you will be forming your own sentences.
Try speaking in the language whenever you get a chance. Do it with a friend who’s also learning or someone who already speaks the language. If you can’t do either one of those, you can practice by talking to yourself or an assistant on your phone. There are also apps such as hellotalk or kakao where you can talk to people. ALWAYS BE CAREFUL WHEN TALKING TO STRANGERS!!!
Learn words and phrases that you find yourself using often. Don’t try to learn advanced phrases and terms that you don’t use on an everyday basis. You may think it’s helping you, but it’s actually setting you back.
Learn more about the culture that surrounds the language. When you learn more about the culture, you will understand why certain things are said in certain situations. Understanding the culture = Understanding the language
Master the alphabet + pronunciation. Before you learn any sort of vocabulary or sentence forms, fully understanding the alphabet and each letter’s pronunciation is a MUST! In every language, there are those letters’ sounds that change depending on certain factors.
Master sentence structure. Sentence structure is a big problem that many people face when first learning a language. Chances are the sentence structure of the language you’re learning is the complete opposite from your own. (Unless you speak English and are learning Chinese; vice versa)
Become familiar with the keyboard. You will probably find yourself typing in the language often, so you might as well learn the keyboard. I recommend downloading a keyboard on your phone from the play store or app store.
Practice daily. When you do this, you’re bound to remember the information better. If you don’t and you stop studying for too long, there’s a high chance that you’ll forget some of the basics. I would know. It’s happened to me before.
GOOD LUCK
Hi, there! I have a big exam next month and decided to create an exam study kit to organize and increase my productivity. I hope this exam study pack help your final exam. Good luck with your exam, everyone! We can do it!
Exam Study Pack Including
Final Exam Schedule
Final Exam Time Schedule (week)
Weekly Study planner
Monthly Style Study planner
Essay Planner
Glossary (definitions & terms)
Note
Click HERE to download the printable (PDF). Please save the file to your computer and open with Adobe Reader DC. Use Adobe Reader, otherwise, it will not work correctly and colors may display completely different. Please let me know if you are having trouble downloading the file.
* Important note: All files are Personal Use (non-commercial) ONLY! Please Do NOT Copy and Edit. Please Do No distribute and sell these files or upload them to other websites.
By the way, I decided to post a new printable item each week (every Saturday). Tomorrow I will post “Free Printable Thanksgiving 2018 Wine Labels” including using a Japanese pattern. So please come back to my blog tomorrow!
this post is meant to be a directory of every resource I come across for Cantonese, a variety of Yue Chinese. it will be a continuous work in progress so thank you for your patience! if you have any issues or things to add, please reply to this post!
info
about world languages
glottolog
how different are mandarin and cantonese? [video]
language learning profile
omniglot
playlist of samples
“this user is learning (hong kong) cantonese” userbox
wikipedia
world atlas of language structures
Weiterlesen
hello where can i see all of your study tips?
Hey! Here are a whole heap of links :-) I’d also go through my /tagged/q for more answers (or emmastudies.com/archive and filtering by ask, since I haven’t tagged things for a while).
Organisation
2018 student planner
2019 student planner
2018-19 digital student planner
planner brand recommendations
planner vs bullet journal: pros and cons
how to set up a bullet journal
setting up a digital bullet journal
bullet journal spread ideas
bullet journal decoration hacks
bullet journal brand recommendations
whats in my bag
my favourite stationery
back to school basic supplies
how to improve your handwriting
handwriting font suggestions
balancing study and work
desk/workspace essentials
student finance tips
2018 monthly planner printables
Productivity
productivity and time management applications
how to remove distractions
types of procrastination and how to deal with them
google chrome new tab options for improved productivity
10 small ways to improve your productivity
applications to block websites
no distraction writing applications
100 days of productivity challenge
how to focus in class
how to stick to a schedule
how to stay alert
how to build self-discipline
how to organise for exams
my after school routine
how to reduce perfectionist ideas
Motivation
what to do when you’ve tried everything
how to gain back motivation
motivational monday printables
how to stop avoiding studying
what to do when you feel exhausted before studying
how I stay motivated
tips on maintaining motivation
10 tips to increase your motivation for study
how to start a studyblr
how to utilise your studyblr for motivation
how to set up a studygram
dealing with competitive people
how to bounce back from ‘failure’
how to learn from a lower than expected grade
how to structure a weekly review
how to deal with a difficult class
things to do during holidays/study vacations
Studying
applications for students
how to take effective class or lecture notes
how to take notes from a textbook
how to prepare for exams
my note-taking method
my notebook system
how to write faster
how to study more effectively
how to summarise information
how I organise my binders
good habits to implement
how to study (my method)
how to revise from notes
how to organise a colour code
how to memorise information effectively
how to memorise quotes
how to use flashcards
how I reduce waffle and narration in essays
tips for essay writing
how to find out where you’re going wrong
how I prepare to study
different ways to study
how to study during the semester
how to annotate a book/novel/etc
how to get ahead in school
how to break up a large textbook
studying as a visual learner
how to practice and present a speech
mindmapping apps and extensions
how to deal with online classes
how to study a language
how to study maths
how to improve group assessments/projects
ipad study inspiration
Self Care
how to improve your sleep schedule
how to wake up earlier
how to study when sick
over-coming self doubt
dealing with stress
how to balance studying and anxiety
how to balance studying and depression
apps that help with depression
ways to reward your productivity
my favourite tv shows
my favourite podcasts
ways to use empty notebooks
how to be more sociable
tips for getting a job
advice for the first day
things (personal, academic, etc) to do every week
Printables
all my paid student printables, planners, digital planners + stickers, etc
2018 monthly planner printables
2018 student printables (includes 2018 overview + calendar, daily + weekly + monthly planner, 30 habit tracker, class overview and timed worklog)
2019 free student printables (2018-19 overview, 2019 overview, 2019 key dates, year in pixels, monthly portrait planner)
weekly study schedule
weekly planner
weekend planner
daily planner
assessment planner
subject to do list planner
study session planner
exam revision printable pack (includes revision checklist, formulas + definitions sheet, essay + project planner, weekly schedule)
note-taking printables (includes dotted, grid, lined, cornell method)
organic chemistry printable
literary techniques and devices sheet
100 days of productivity tracker printable
ultimate student organiser pack
study and revision pack
2018 student planner
2018 weekly planner
pomodoro tracker
grade and assessment planner pack
essay guide and planner pack
productivity planner
student reading journal printable
student finance planner
goal and habit planner
customisable weekly study planner
xxx
Language learning in under 5 minutes
write 1 or 2 sentences to sum up your day
learn 5 new words
listen to a song
watch short video
conjugate a verb
read and attempt to say out loud a tongue twister
count from 1 to 100
sing the alphabet
read a page in a book
LANGUAGE LEARNING WEBSITES AND RESOURCES MASTERPOST
Hit Cmd+F or Ctrl+F to search for your language! I’ll update this list as I come across more, so contact me if you have something that you think should get added!
WEBSITES
Duolingo - Spanish, French, German, Italian, Dutch, Portuguese. More are coming very soon, including Irish and Danish.
Memrise - Any language, even Klingon. Over 200 languages are offered.
Lingq - German, Chinese, Russian, English, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Italian, Japanese, Dutch, Korean, and more.
FluentU - Chinese, Spanish, and French are offered currently. It’s like a youtube for languages.
Babbel - Russian, Indonesian, Polish, Spanish, German, French, Danish, Norwegian, Dutch, Swedish, Turkish, Italian, Portuguese. Similar to Duolingo or Memrise.
Ukgermanconnection - German children’s books for English speakers.
Babadum - Swedish, Polish, Russian, English, German, Italian, German, Spanish, French, Danish. Great for building vocab.
Radiolingua - French, German, Spanish, Italian.
DW - German.
Textfugu - Japanese.
Busuu - German, French, Arabic, Polish, Chinese, Turkish, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish, Japanese, Italian.
FSI - A whole ton of languages; if you want to learn it, chances are it’s on here. These courses were developed by the US government.
Kana101.com - Japanese. Learn Hiragana and Katakana.
Guidetojapanese - Japanese.
Imabi - Japanese.
Lernu - Esperanto.
RESOURCES
Conjugator for French, Spanish, and German.
Anki - Flashcards that use spaced repetition. Great supplements for any language.
Languagetool - A great tool for proofreading what you write.
Forvo - 318 languages. Listen to a native speaker say the word you’re having trouble with.
Lang-8 - Many languages. You post in a language and native speakers proofread it.
Word Reference - Spanish, French, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Italian, German, Portuguese, Russian, Polish, Romanian, Czech, Greek, Turkish, Arabic. It’s a dictionary and a conjugator as well.
Tatoeba - Get sample sentences for basically any language when you type in a word.
DICTIONARY MASTERPOST
pons [Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish]
shabdkosh [Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu]
wordreference [Arabic, Chinese, Czech, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish]
dict.cc [Albanian, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Latin, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish]
bab.la [Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Swahili, Turkish]
linguee [Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish]
cambridge [Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malaysian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese]
dicts.info [73 languages]
dict.com [30 languages]
larousse [French, German, Italian, Spanish]
hablaa [73 languages]
glosbe [2150 languages]
freelang [267 languages]
Afrikaans rieme.co.za
Albanian argjio
Amharic abyssinica, amharicdictionary
Arabic arabdict, almaany, firdaous
Armenian nayiri, english2armenian
Bengali / Bangla bword, english-bangla, ovidhan
Burmese burmese-dictionary, myordbok
Cantonese cantodict
Catalan catalandictionary
Croatian hrvatski-rjecnik
Czech seznam, slovnik
Dutch vandale
Estonian sõnastik, dukelupus, eki.ee
Farsi dictionary-farsi, farsidic, aryanpour, ariadic
Finnish kaannos, findc
Georgian lang.interes, translate, targmne, nplg.gov, margaliti
German langenscheit, leo
Greek greek-language
Hawaiian hawaiiandictionary
Hebrew morfix
Hindi hindi-english, hinkhoj, hindi wordnet
Hungarian sztaki, dictzone, topszótár
Icelandic snara
Indonesian kamus, sederet
Irish irishdictionary, potafocal
Italian garzantilinguistica
Japanese tangorin, excite, jisho
Javanese kamusjawa
Kazakh lugat
Korean naver, daum, zkorean
Khmer angkor-planet, kheng
Latvian letonika, latvianforyou
Lithuanian anglu-lietuviu, dict.lt
Macedonian time, off.net.mk
Malay bhanot, kamus
Maltese mlrs.research, englishmaltesedictionary
Mandarin dict.cn, mdbg
Mongolian bolor toli, englishmongolian
Norwegian ordnett
Palauan tekinged
Polish pitt.edu, ling.pl
Portuguese portuguesedictionary
Punjabi ijunoon, learnpunjabi
Russian multitran
Spanish spanishdict
Swahili kiswahili, africanlanguages
Swedish ord
Tagalog pinoydictionary, tagalog-dictionary, tagaloglang
Tamil tamildict, tamilcube, agarathi, tamildictionary
Telugu andhrabharati, telugupedia
Tibetan eng-tib
Thai thai-language, thai2english, longdo, linedict
Turkish tureng, turkishdictionary, turkishclass
Ukrainian slovnenya, cybermova
Urdu urduword, urduenglishdictionary, urdu123, studypart
Uyghur uyghurdictionary, yulghun
Uzbek zangorikema
Welsh geiriadur
Vietnamese vietdictionary, vdict
Zulu isizulu
Beautiful Chinese words
光 guāng - light, ray
阳光 yángguāng - sunshine
光明 guāngmíng - radiance
晨光 chénguāng - early morning light
彩霞 cǎixiá - rosy clouds at sunrise or sunset
櫻花 (樱花) yīnghuā - cherry blossom
星座 xīngzuò - constellation
露水 lùshuǐ - dew; fig. ephemeral
暮靄 (暮霭) mù'ǎi - evening mist
花蕾 huālěi - flower bud
白日夢 (白日梦) báirìmèng - daydream
雪花 xuěhuā - snowflake
蜂蜜 fēngmì - honey
雨傘 (雨伞) yǔsǎn -umbrella
明星 míngxīng - star
棉花糖 miánhuatáng - cotton candy
花火 huāhuǒ - firework
香味 xiāngwèi - fragrance
落花 luòhuā fallen petals
紛飛 (纷飞) fēnfēi - to flutter around (of snowflakes, flower petals)
Apps Lingodeer Pleco dictionary Chinese Skill Online courses ChineseClass101 ChinesePod Cambridge basic Chinese online course
Miscellaneous Mandarinbean Wordbrewery sentences with vocab from news (many languages) 100 most frequent characters BBC Chinese Reddit Chinese forum
Podcasts Slow Chinese BearTalk Hanzi and Pinyin Purple Culture Pinyin Converter How to learn Pinyin
Textbooks Berlitz Basic Mandarin Chinese Integrated Chinese New Practical Chinese Reader (PDF)
Traditional Chinese Speak Mandarin in 500 Words (PDF) Huayu world beginner to advanced PDFs (really good resource) Lee Katrina Youtube lessons BoPoMoFo Taiwanese song by Louis
Youtube Education YoYoChinese (one of my favorite Chinese-teaching channels) ChinesePodTV Learn Chinese with Litao HSK Exam prep channel HSK Academy channel ChineseFor.Us Chinese Zero to Hero Mr Yang (he teaches English to Chinese speakers but is super funny) Entertainment Mamahuhu (really funny channel) Laowhy86 AdvChina Namewee (Malaysian Chinese entertainer) XiaoYu (Taiwanese vlogger) EBCbuzz Interesting videos How to start learning Chinese (my video) Taiwanese Mandarin vs Mainaland Chinese video Compiled by Lindie Botes
Petronas Towers - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia (by whereisemil)