My Posting Place

I suppose investing in English, Spanish or French, Russian, Arabic and Chinese gives you a global passport and a good basis to learn other languages. But the above combination would seem impossible. On the other hand if we were cured tomorrow, i would go for it. Challenges of the pre-t life was a walk in the park. "Στερνή μου γνώση, να σε είχα πρώτα."

English is the best of these to be a lingua Franca. French and Spanish are okay. Not really Russian but whatever. Fuck Arabic and Chinese (coming from someone who speaks a dialect of it). It's possible but very hard. I've learned so many languages and that's why I support a universal one. Doing this is just far too tedious.
 
You're raising the standards. Hindi is hard too. Interestingly enough through this forum, my english writing skills has improved. That counts as post-t too. "Thank you tinnitus, now you can go to hell."

Sure. It's about as hard as Russian because it's in the indo-aryan family. Where are you from? Are you Dutch? Dutch is a very easy language for English-speakers to learn.
 
Greece is an interesting country for sure. I used to have a huge interest in it back when I was reading Plato and Aristotle.
It would also be interesting to read the original text form, which means Ancient Greek, which mean insanely difficult. However given that you speak Cantonese, you can learn everything.

I thought I remember you saying you could read Dutch. Must have been someone else.
Yeap, i can read Dutch as much i can read Cuneiform Script. :p
 
It would also be interesting to read the original text form, which means Ancient Greek, which mean insanely difficult. However given that you speak Cantonese, you can learn everything.


Yeap, i can read Dutch as much i can read Cuneiform Script. :p

If you're talking about cantonalise script, we use a very similar script to the Rest of china. Just traditional characters (which are slightly harder) and not simplified. It's hard to say we have our own script because it's very similar to the rest of china. Chinese is very difficult though.
 
Chinese is very difficult though.
3f020d7b087dd224d6a276100c44832f--law-students-medical-students.jpg
 
Funny enough I'm learning ukrainian as I'm gonna be spending christmas eve there and wanna feel somewhat familiar with their culture.
 
But you're facing away from it
View attachment 13878
Then I'm stepping away from anxiety (which there is a lot of here) into my future. Maybe? :ROFL:

I like that Tink you posted, might have to save her for my next update. She's kind of like, "Yeah, tell me again how great TRT is." Then she rolls her eyes.

And look, she's even covering her bad ear which I subconsciously do allllll the time!
 
Then I'm stepping away from anxiety (which there is a lot of here) into my future. Maybe? :ROFL:

I like that Tink you posted, might have to save her for my next update. She's kind of like, "Yeah, tell me again how great TRT is." Then she rolls her eyes.
LOL

Funny enough I'm learning ukrainian as I'm gonna be spending christmas eve there and wanna feel somewhat familiar with their culture.

From what I gather it's similar to Russian but it doesn't use that retarded letter ы (thank god)
 
Funny enough I'm learning ukrainian as I'm gonna be spending christmas eve there and wanna feel somewhat familiar with their culture.
If you have any specific questions, I would be happy to try to answer them.
From what I gather it's similar to Russian but it doesn't use that retarded letter ы (thank god)
But it has letter "yi" that doesn't exist in any other language: ï
 
If you have any specific questions, I would be happy to try to answer them.

But it has letter "yi" that doesn't exist in any other language: ï
True but at least it's one letter. ы is basically two letters crammed into one. If that's not bad enough, Ь is the letter that makes another letter softer. So it's easy to think that the Ь in ы is making the previous letter softer. I often do a double take whenever I see it in a word, to make sure I read it right.
 
If you have any specific questions, I would be happy to try to answer them.

But it has letter "yi" that doesn't exist in any other language: ï
Thank you Bill, I'm sure I will run into some questions that I can't find the answer to, in that case I will definitely send you a message.

Thanks :)
 
True but at least it's one letter. ы is basically two letters crammed into one.
To a native Russian-speaker, the opposite of the above seems to be true. ï is a combination of two letters й (yi ) and и (i). ы represents a second way to pronounce the sound и (i).
Ь is the letter that makes another letter softer. So it's easy to think that the Ь in ы is making the previous letter softer.
Oh, I see. You are referring to the actual symbols, and not to the sounds they represent.

To resolve the problem that you described above, recall that there is no letter that looks like "I" in Russian. So if you accidentally break apart ы into two symbols, the second symbol has no meaning, signalling to you that it is all part of one symbol.
 
To a native Russian-speaker, the opposite of the above seems to be true. ï is a combination of two letters й (yi ) and и (i). ы represents a second way to pronounce the sound и (i).

Oh, I see. You are referring to the actual symbols, and not to the sounds they represent.

To resolve the problem that you described above, recall that there is no letter that looks like "I" in Russian. So if you accidentally break apart ы into two symbols, the second symbol has no meaning, signalling to you that it is all part of one symbol.
Be that as it may, it's weird that this is the one letter in the whole of the Cyrillic alphabet that's like this. It's the only one that's divided into two parts. It's a consistency breaker and that's the main reason I dislike it.
 
Be that as it may, it's weird that this is the one letter in the whole of the Cyrillic alphabet that's like this. It's the only one that's divided into two parts. It's a consistency breaker and that's the main reason I dislike it.
When it is written in cursive, it looks like one letter
18px-29-Russian_alphabet-%D1%8B.svg.png
 
LOL The words on the first row of that example are actually easy to read. But all of the other words Are rough. I imagine the writer would be aware of it and would slow down when writing one of those words and ensure that it is more clear when one letter ends and the other begins.
 
LOL The words on the first row of that example are actually easy to read. But all of the other words Are rough. I imagine the writer would be aware of it and would slow down when writing one of those words and ensure that it is more clear when one letter ends and the other begins.
Personally I just dislike cursive in general. It's difficult to read, and it's obsolete. Plus unless you can write in it very well, it's probably just as quick as print-writing. I get in Cyrillic that letters like д and ж aren't easy to write quickly, but there's shorthand for that too.
 
I think we could all use a diversion every now and then. I came across this and wanted to share it. It seems the "future" is now ... as you see after viewing these awesome videos dealing with robotics. They are amazing!

8 Advanced Robot Animals You Need To See



10 Amazing Robots That Really Exist

(especially see 5:35 robot cooking arms)
 
I think we could all use a diversion every now and then. I came across this and wanted to share it. It seems the "future" is now ... as you see after viewing these awesome videos dealing with robotics. They are amazing!

8 Advanced Robot Animals You Need To See



10 Amazing Robots That Really Exist

(especially see 5:35 robot cooking arms)


Hey wait, I thought you didn't like this post. And you already posted this in the general chat, so why post it here?

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