Is it true that if your fluent in Spanish, then learning Italian shouldn’t be much of a problem?

January 13th, 2010

My French teacher told me that. I wanna learn Italian. I know perfect Spanish and English. So do I have an advantage of learning italian faster than others cause I already know Spanish?

Yes, it’s true if you have an ear for languages.
Portuguese and French will follow as well. You’ll pick it up quickly, especially if you apply yourself.

—————————-

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Worksheets to assist in learning German?

January 13th, 2010

I’m working on learning the German language, and wondering if perhaps someone can direct me to printable worksheets of some sort? Even if they were made for children, I’m sure it would be a help. : ]

Not worksheets IN German, but assist in learning it?

http://www.livemocha.com

Where on the web is the best place to learn french online for free?

January 13th, 2010

I just want a website that provides different words, spelling, and pronuciations in it THANKS!

Well, if you are serious about learning french……

First, I would go to http://www.frenchassistant.com/default.asp
This website is good and free!

Also, if you really want to become fluent, you will need to go to France to immerse yourself. You may also want to consider joining the Alliance Francaise. There should be an Alliance chapter in your city http://www.afusa.org/

Want to Make Language Learning Easier? Rhymes to the Rescue!

January 11th, 2010

Learning a foreign language can be enjoyable – but exasperating. Anything you can do to accelerate learning or make language acquisition more enjoyable is a valuable weapon in your learning arsenal. Kathy Steinemann shares a helpful and unique approach to this challenge.

Take a look at the following two sections of text:

Version 1

The sky is blue today. I’m sitting on the beach. A bully kicks sand in my face. Too bad for him! Here come my bodyguards!

Version 2

One, two, a sky so blue. Three, four, a sandy shore. Five, six, a bully kicks. Seven, eight, he’s sealed his fate. Nine, ten, here come my gunmen!

Now go back and re-read the verses.

Did you notice that you have already started to anticipate what comes next in the second version?

Conclusion: It is easier to memorize rhyming poetry than to memorize prose.

So what implication does this have for learning a foreign language?

If you memorize well-written modern foreign language poetry, you can accelerate your learning curve. (Notice the keyword ‘modern’.)

Poetry written in the 18th Century may have deep cultural and educational significance. However, words penned to page over 300 years ago will utilize obsolete vocabulary, spelling, and grammar formations.

As an example: consider the popular King James Version of the Bible. If you started using ‘thee’ and ‘thou’ in your daily speech, people would understand you – but they would treat you like an alien in a time warp.

You can search the internet for poetry written by contemporary authors. Try searches like:

  • parallel translation poetry

  • parallel translation poems

  • parallel translation poems German English

  • parallel translation poems French English

  • parallel translation poetry Italian English

  • parallel translation poetry Spanish English

Substitute search terms as necessary with the name of the specific language you are studying. Review the webpages you find with a tutor, professor, or knowledgeable person to determine grammar and vocabulary suitability.

Attempt to have the poetry dictated and recorded by a native language speaker. Softly recite the poetry while you listen to the recordings. This will improve your verbalization skills. With luck, you may find online audio for some of the poetry.

Are you a budding poet? Try creating foreign language poems yourself.

No poetic talent? Attempt the following simple approach. If you are learning german, for example, you might produce a ‘poem’ like this:

the dog – der Hund

the mouth – der Mund

the air – die Luft

the scent – der Duft

to buzz – summen

to growl – brummen

little – klein

clean – rein

to brood – grübeln

to iron – bügeln

You don’t have to worry about grammar – just definitions, pronunciations, gender, and spelling. Alcor (alcor.com.au) has several rhyming dictionaries that can assist you with this process.

If you have an audio dictionary on your computer, listen carefully to the pronunciation of each word. There are also excellent online dictionaries with audio.

Now produce your own poetry recording using audio capture software.

  • First, dictate each English word or phrase and save as an individual file.

  • Next, save foreign language audio clips from your dictionary or from the internet.

  • Now load your audio capture software and play the files in the correct order. Try to create short productions of a minute or two in duration.

  • Edit if necessary to eliminate excessive pauses or add definite articles.

  • Finally, convert to MP3 or WMA. Now you can use your iPod or portable media player for something besides music.

The 21st Century is a wonderful time to be learning a foreign language!

©Copyright Kathy Steinemann: This article is free to publish only if this copyright notice, the byline, and the author’s note below (with active links) are included.

Kathy Steinemann
http://www.articlesbase.com/languages-articles/want-to-make-language-learning-easier-rhymes-to-the-rescue-131570.html

Where on the web is the best place to learn french online for free?

January 9th, 2010

I just want a website that provides different words, spelling, and pronuciations in it THANKS!

Well, if you are serious about learning french……

First, I would go to http://www.frenchassistant.com/default.asp
This website is good and free!

Also, if you really want to become fluent, you will need to go to France to immerse yourself. You may also want to consider joining the Alliance Francaise. There should be an Alliance chapter in your city http://www.afusa.org/

Want to Make Language Learning Easier? Rhymes to the Rescue!

January 8th, 2010

Learning a foreign language can be enjoyable – but exasperating. Anything you can do to accelerate learning or make language acquisition more enjoyable is a valuable weapon in your learning arsenal. Kathy Steinemann shares a helpful and unique approach to this challenge.

Take a look at the following two sections of text:

Version 1

The sky is blue today. I’m sitting on the beach. A bully kicks sand in my face. Too bad for him! Here come my bodyguards!

Version 2

One, two, a sky so blue. Three, four, a sandy shore. Five, six, a bully kicks. Seven, eight, he’s sealed his fate. Nine, ten, here come my gunmen!

Now go back and re-read the verses.

Did you notice that you have already started to anticipate what comes next in the second version?

Conclusion: It is easier to memorize rhyming poetry than to memorize prose.

So what implication does this have for learning a foreign language?

If you memorize well-written modern foreign language poetry, you can accelerate your learning curve. (Notice the keyword ‘modern’.)

Poetry written in the 18th Century may have deep cultural and educational significance. However, words penned to page over 300 years ago will utilize obsolete vocabulary, spelling, and grammar formations.

As an example: consider the popular King James Version of the Bible. If you started using ‘thee’ and ‘thou’ in your daily speech, people would understand you – but they would treat you like an alien in a time warp.

You can search the internet for poetry written by contemporary authors. Try searches like:

  • parallel translation poetry

  • parallel translation poems

  • parallel translation poems German English

  • parallel translation poems French English

  • parallel translation poetry Italian English

  • parallel translation poetry Spanish English

Substitute search terms as necessary with the name of the specific language you are studying. Review the webpages you find with a tutor, professor, or knowledgeable person to determine grammar and vocabulary suitability.

Attempt to have the poetry dictated and recorded by a native language speaker. Softly recite the poetry while you listen to the recordings. This will improve your verbalization skills. With luck, you may find online audio for some of the poetry.

Are you a budding poet? Try creating foreign language poems yourself.

No poetic talent? Attempt the following simple approach. If you are learning german, for example, you might produce a ‘poem’ like this:

the dog – der Hund

the mouth – der Mund

the air – die Luft

the scent – der Duft

to buzz – summen

to growl – brummen

little – klein

clean – rein

to brood – grübeln

to iron – bügeln

You don’t have to worry about grammar – just definitions, pronunciations, gender, and spelling. Alcor (alcor.com.au) has several rhyming dictionaries that can assist you with this process.

If you have an audio dictionary on your computer, listen carefully to the pronunciation of each word. There are also excellent online dictionaries with audio.

Now produce your own poetry recording using audio capture software.

  • First, dictate each English word or phrase and save as an individual file.

  • Next, save foreign language audio clips from your dictionary or from the internet.

  • Now load your audio capture software and play the files in the correct order. Try to create short productions of a minute or two in duration.

  • Edit if necessary to eliminate excessive pauses or add definite articles.

  • Finally, convert to MP3 or WMA. Now you can use your iPod or portable media player for something besides music.

The 21st Century is a wonderful time to be learning a foreign language!

©Copyright Kathy Steinemann: This article is free to publish only if this copyright notice, the byline, and the author’s note below (with active links) are included.

Kathy Steinemann
http://www.articlesbase.com/languages-articles/want-to-make-language-learning-easier-rhymes-to-the-rescue-131570.html

Want to Make Language Learning Easier? Rhymes to the Rescue!

January 5th, 2010

Learning a foreign language can be enjoyable – but exasperating. Anything you can do to accelerate learning or make language acquisition more enjoyable is a valuable weapon in your learning arsenal. Kathy Steinemann shares a helpful and unique approach to this challenge.

Take a look at the following two sections of text:

Version 1

The sky is blue today. I’m sitting on the beach. A bully kicks sand in my face. Too bad for him! Here come my bodyguards!

Version 2

One, two, a sky so blue. Three, four, a sandy shore. Five, six, a bully kicks. Seven, eight, he’s sealed his fate. Nine, ten, here come my gunmen!

Now go back and re-read the verses.

Did you notice that you have already started to anticipate what comes next in the second version?

Conclusion: It is easier to memorize rhyming poetry than to memorize prose.

So what implication does this have for learning a foreign language?

If you memorize well-written modern foreign language poetry, you can accelerate your learning curve. (Notice the keyword ‘modern’.)

Poetry written in the 18th Century may have deep cultural and educational significance. However, words penned to page over 300 years ago will utilize obsolete vocabulary, spelling, and grammar formations.

As an example: consider the popular King James Version of the Bible. If you started using ‘thee’ and ‘thou’ in your daily speech, people would understand you – but they would treat you like an alien in a time warp.

You can search the internet for poetry written by contemporary authors. Try searches like:

  • parallel translation poetry

  • parallel translation poems

  • parallel translation poems German English

  • parallel translation poems French English

  • parallel translation poetry Italian English

  • parallel translation poetry Spanish English

Substitute search terms as necessary with the name of the specific language you are studying. Review the webpages you find with a tutor, professor, or knowledgeable person to determine grammar and vocabulary suitability.

Attempt to have the poetry dictated and recorded by a native language speaker. Softly recite the poetry while you listen to the recordings. This will improve your verbalization skills. With luck, you may find online audio for some of the poetry.

Are you a budding poet? Try creating foreign language poems yourself.

No poetic talent? Attempt the following simple approach. If you are learning german, for example, you might produce a ‘poem’ like this:

the dog – der Hund

the mouth – der Mund

the air – die Luft

the scent – der Duft

to buzz – summen

to growl – brummen

little – klein

clean – rein

to brood – grübeln

to iron – bügeln

You don’t have to worry about grammar – just definitions, pronunciations, gender, and spelling. Alcor (alcor.com.au) has several rhyming dictionaries that can assist you with this process.

If you have an audio dictionary on your computer, listen carefully to the pronunciation of each word. There are also excellent online dictionaries with audio.

Now produce your own poetry recording using audio capture software.

  • First, dictate each English word or phrase and save as an individual file.

  • Next, save foreign language audio clips from your dictionary or from the internet.

  • Now load your audio capture software and play the files in the correct order. Try to create short productions of a minute or two in duration.

  • Edit if necessary to eliminate excessive pauses or add definite articles.

  • Finally, convert to MP3 or WMA. Now you can use your iPod or portable media player for something besides music.

The 21st Century is a wonderful time to be learning a foreign language!

©Copyright Kathy Steinemann: This article is free to publish only if this copyright notice, the byline, and the author’s note below (with active links) are included.

Kathy Steinemann
http://www.articlesbase.com/languages-articles/want-to-make-language-learning-easier-rhymes-to-the-rescue-131570.html

Visit Spain And Learn Spanish

December 22nd, 2009

To learn Spanish then you need to learn the Spanish alphabet. Although it’s not dramatically different from the English alphabet, there are still some real differences. You also will have to learn how to properly pronounce these letter before you are ready to really get to the nitty gritty of the language. When you visit Spain you’ll be so happy you know a few words!

Rules and punctuation in the Spanish alphabet are different from the English one, as well. There is a combination of Latin and Arabic that can be seen in Spanish. If you are familiar with either of these languages or any other Romance language such as French, Portuguese, or Italian than you will have an easier time learning Spanish.

Here are a few differences in the Spanish alphabet:

Spanish uses vowels that have accents, although not all have accents.
The vowels with accents are pronounced slightly differently than those without accents.
You can use the letter n either with or without a tilde.
The n with a tilde is a different letter than the without a tilde.
Ll and ch are also separate letters in the Spanish language.

If you are an English speaker than the pronunciation will be different, but not impossible for you. For instance you can pronounce the letter C like a K or an S just like you do in English. These similarities should help you in your studies.

There are other letters that also mimic the sounds you find in English. For instance in Spanish the letter j sounds like an English h. The letter v in Spanish also sounds like the letter b in English. You can hear the English letter S when you say a Spanish letter Z. If you pronounce a rolled r in Spanish this is also a sound that you can hear in English.

In Spanish accents on the vowels are very important because they help to tell the difference between words. The stress is used to mark the words and when you are first learning the language it is important to practice these accents.

You put the stress on the last syllable of a word when you are writing. If the word ends in a consonant then the stress is on the last syllable. There are also exceptions to the rules of this. Sometimes like in other languages the rules are changed and we have to adapt to them.

When you learn the basic rules and exceptions as you learn the language you will have a better grasp of the language as you progress. So in this matter if a word as a stress with an accent on a vowel, then it does not have the automatic default on the consonant.

If you really want to master the Spanish language than understanding the how to properly pronounce every letter of the alphabet is vital to your success. You will be one step closer to fluency if you master the language letter by letter. You can go online for more handy help in becoming fluent in Spanish. There are many websites that offer audio help to master pronunciation.

Peter Wilson
http://www.articlesbase.com/education-articles/visit-spain-and-learn-spanish-95208.html

What is the practical way of learning German language?

December 14th, 2009

As of now I am trying my best to learn German language. But it seems that the school where I am enrolled to (here in Switzerland) is not quite so good and practical for me. The teacher do not speak the language I know – most of the time she draw something on the board that could help us understand what she says (it is like we are back in stone age or whatever age was it when people draw something to communicate to each other). Any way I find the strategy to be so unpractical it take us more than half an hour to understand a simple sintence. Most of the learning I have about German language as of now I learn it by reading books which I bought at the books store.
I want to learn German fast and easy. There might be a book which you can recommend. Thank you.

Sounds like your school’s method is immersion / the Berlitz method. The idea is that you’ll learn through context as babies do. It is frustrating at first but give it some time if you can — it really is a great way to learn.

Of course I am sure you are allowed to study on your own as well :-) and it is good you’re taking the initiative. If you’d like another way of supporting your learning, buy an easy book or a magazine in a subject you like a lot along with a dictionary German -> your native language, and go for it. Comic strips can be fun, or fashion magazines (stick to the descriptions of the models at first … you are female?).
When I was in Germany as a teenager, the book "Wir Kinder von Bahnhof Zoo" by Christiana F. had just come out. It is a haunting autobiography of a girl who became addicted to heroin when she was 12. I started reading it when I was able to understand people around me a bit (mostly teenagers), so because the book is written in "teenager language", I was able to understand it and read it quite quickly. I think it helped my German a lot, I got a better feel for the language, improved my vocabulary, moved a lot of terms from "passive" to "active knowledge" …
Don’t be afraid to browse the other sections of the bookstore, the children’s and teenager’s books, if you can understand the gist of the back cover and it sounds interesting, take it ‘home’ and try reading it. You may surprise yourself how well it will go.

Otherwise — IMHO, learning a language is fast and easy only if you are very talented or you already know a language that is very similar, like Dutch. Hang in there … if you’re in Switzerland in an immersion course, the start will be slow but soon the day will come when you’ll get a ‘feel’ for the language — something I think a book just can’t teach you.

Viel Glück

PS I presume you are in Zurich and not on Lake Geneva…

Learn to Speak Spanish Anytime, Anywhere–and for Next to Nothing

December 14th, 2009

Don’t know about you, but I hate wasting loads of time and hundreds of dollars just to learn the basics of a foreign language.

I mean, look at the price of university classes. Just to take a BEGINNERS’, Level 1 Spanish class, I have to spend at LEAST $300 just on the course, then another $100+ on the software! And that’s at a public university…forget Rosetta Stone: Spanish or similar software!

Clearly, there has to be a better way. A way that will teach you Spanish quicker…and for less.

The solution I’ve found is called Rocket Spanish.

Why do I like it? I’ll give you three good reasons. It allows you to:

1) learn Spanish thoroughly and in less than 8 weeks with full money-back guarantee if you’re not satisfied for any reason (no joke–you’ll get every penny back). So there’s really no risk.

2) have fun doing it

3) spend less than $100 to learn beginners’-advanced levels all in one. As it’s online, you can learn anywhere, and save yourself time going to classes, tutoring sessions, etc.

THE GOOD
Rocket Spanish gets my high marks for author, Mauricio Evarlampieff’s comprehensive coverage of everything from grammmar and writing skills, to spelling, vocabulary, and natural Spanish speaking.

Some people learn languages better through reading. Others, through listening to audio. And then there are those who need both, but in an interactive format.

Luckily, Rocket Spanish offers all three: it gives you detailed, colorful learning manuals; powerful audio lessons where you can hear a native Chilean speak proper Spanish; and through interactive games, such as flash cards, so that you can test and improve your overall command of the language.

I particularly enjoy the PERSONALITY behind the audio lessons. Mauricio has a very warm, charming personality, and a unique talent for teaching Spanish in a direct, friendly way. He interacts with his American co-narrator, Amy Waterman, to give you a fun, sometimes humorous journey through the wonder of the Spanish language. You even learn about the many Spanish-speaking cultures.

Additionally, Rocket Spanish shrewdly divides its audio, written, and interactive lessons into Beginner and Advanced segments, so that you can go at your own pace and learn what you need before jumping into advanced areas.

Overall, it’s a wonderful system for learning a fun, romantic language. And it covers all levels of learning.

THE BAD
Not many bad parts, but perhaps the Members Area could be more organized. Not a big deal because all the information is all there and accessible, but not always so obvious. A minor outcome, and still more clear than many other courses I’ve tried.

TRY IT..OR BUY IT?
Very highly recommended Buy. This is one of those rare products that eager Spnaish learners can’t afford to miss. If you’re serious about learning Spanish–while saving money–then Rocket Spanish is the right course to buy. The free course is ok to try, but it certainly won’t give you all the tools you need.

And hey, if you don’t like it before 56 days are up, you’re entitled to a full refund, for any reason at all.

What have you got to lose?

Ethan Parker

http://www.articlesbase.com/languages-articles/learn-to-speak-spanish-anytime-anywhereand-for-next-to-nothing-107109.html