Help me learn Mandarin Chinese

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in northern jiangsu, there's a general rule that the second tone becomes the first tone and the third tone becomes the second tone, and the first tone becomes the third tone.

oh jesus

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 06:23 (thirteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep_II02ZZM4

:( fair enough buddy 2 months, but don't make youtube videos it you cunt

dylannn, Thursday, 30 May 2013 06:26 (thirteen years ago)

LET'S KEEP IT POSITIVE

dylannn, Thursday, 30 May 2013 06:30 (thirteen years ago)

http://tindeck.com/listen/gnff

dylannn, Thursday, 30 May 2013 06:51 (thirteen years ago)

no more negativity!

dylannn, Thursday, 30 May 2013 06:51 (thirteen years ago)

lol, the "fluent in three months" guy

clouds, Thursday, 30 May 2013 12:52 (thirteen years ago)

"nī zhìdāo nī zhìdāo"

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 12:57 (thirteen years ago)

i actually want to kill that guy

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 12:57 (thirteen years ago)

tonight i was working with a learner who was doing all the right tones with her hand but *saying* the wrong tones, over and over again

bless

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 12:58 (thirteen years ago)

the three types by which i'm constantly surrounded are

1. those who genuinely think they're saying the right tones but are not
2. those who don't even try
3. people like that 3 month guy who make up tones like it's all just fucking decoration, "hey look at me i can speak ~chinese~ because i'm all Doing Tones and shit"

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:03 (thirteen years ago)

Not studying Mandarin but I'm down with
1) Thinking the hyper-correcting teacher who interrupts after the first word is spoken is a bad teacher
2) Being irritated by other students who babble and don't even try to get it anything close to what it is supposed to be.

Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:06 (thirteen years ago)

this week i asked the coordinator of the whole course to be strict as hell on first year students' tones, because i am sick to death of dealing with their disgusting habits two years later

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:09 (thirteen years ago)

oh and i complained about hyper-correcto and was told that i'm several people deep in the queue to make the same complaint, so

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:11 (thirteen years ago)

Are these corrections made in English?

Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:22 (thirteen years ago)

yeah

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:23 (thirteen years ago)

Yeesh.

Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:24 (thirteen years ago)

'我对老师烦死了' probably wouldn't have cut it tbh

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:26 (thirteen years ago)

oh wait you said 'corrections' gah

yes, all made in english except the word she's correcting

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:27 (thirteen years ago)

they tell us what's in the exam, and then they send us off to prepare (which i spent seriously 40 hrs doing), and we get in there and it's suddenly OH THIS IS OPEN BOOK YOU JUST WASTED YOUR TIME WITH ALL THAT STUDY LOL and we basically just copy the course notes. then there's a whole surprise second part of the exam which is reading a load of junk about the spring festival (this is year 3 and we're STILL doing the fucking spring festival but they haven't told us what a chair or an elbow is) but FULL and i mean FULL of words nobody in the course has ever seen (i can pick up any old book and get the gist but this crap might as well have been greek, so much so that at one point the invigilator was suddenly and without provocation all 'oh no this might be too hard oh no sorry') and we had to answer the questions in chinese ON THE BACK OF THE SAME SHEET OF PAPER, so everyone spent the whole time constantly flipping the page back and forth trying desperately to copy stroke-for-stroke a pile of brand new characters. it didn't help that someone in the room had death breath. one question (a) didn't make sense (i put the whole thing into google translate and google couldn't even work out what it said) and (b) didn't seem to be addressed by the text. at all. i have never written I DON'T UNDERSTAND THIS QUESTION on a test paper before today. that was seriously the second stupidest exam i have ever sat in my entire life (and i probably passed tbh)

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 3 June 2013 10:58 (thirteen years ago)

Yeesh, sounds brutal; fingers crossed my character exam on Thurs doesn't spring anything like that on me. Been spending a lot of time up at the library w/characters and wishing I'd started doing that a few months ago. Fingers crossed yr 40hrs of study isn't wasted time in terms of general proficiency, I guess?

etc, Monday, 3 June 2013 11:32 (thirteen years ago)

oh it's definitely paid off in terms of proficiency, like a billion times

what's in your exam?

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 3 June 2013 11:33 (thirteen years ago)

http://i39.tinypic.com/14m9rb8.jpg

Nothing fancy; the whole "create a dialogue" thing can wrong-foot me if it has to be done on a topic I've blanked (hai @ 京剧) or about some of the NPCR textbook characters whose, uh, characters I shouldn't have neglected.

etc, Monday, 3 June 2013 19:58 (thirteen years ago)

ah yeah, it's easy to forget topics/chars when there's so much to absorb

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 3 June 2013 21:47 (thirteen years ago)

sad lol @ 京剧

dylannn, Monday, 3 June 2013 22:53 (thirteen years ago)

haha yeah

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 01:46 (thirteen years ago)

we did all that in first year too. too much chinese language instruction is backward looking imo.

slightly apropos of that: at the weekend i got trapped in a conversation with a guy about the 三国. on and on and on. that's all nice etc, really, but dude, my exams are about finding a job in network engineering in ~this millennium~

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 01:52 (thirteen years ago)

speaking of which, apparently i did all right in last night's exam (although why they're telling other students how i went i've no idea)

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 01:53 (thirteen years ago)

A few years ago, a few other translators and I were talking with employees of a Chinese publishing house who said that they had some books that they wanted to translate into English — things that they said would show foreigners the real China. There was a brief and intense period of excitement, until the publishers said that these were coffee-table books about Peking Opera masks and different varieties of tea. Ever since then, I’ve used “Peking Opera masks” as mental shorthand for the Chinese habit of attempting to interest the world in aspects of itself that most Chinese people don’t give two-tenths of a rat’s ass about. (This same thing affects Chinese-language instruction, but I’ll save that rant for another post.) Even just a couple of years ago, almost all officially backed Chinese cultural offerings were of this sort — books about tea and opera masks, yes, or Foreign Languages Press translations by non-native English speakers, or poorly subtitled documentaries about the Potato Festival in some godforsaken corner of the Shandong peninsula. (“Since late Ming dynasty, the town of Pirang is acclaimed as ‘hometown of potato!’”)

http://www.rectified.name/2012/04/30/peking-opera-masks-and-the-london-book-fair/

dylannn, Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:22 (thirteen years ago)

yes!! i use that term to describe the hideous bloody chop suey english fonts and ancient scroll backgrounds in every second piece of chinese language software

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:25 (thirteen years ago)

i spend like 80% of my mandarin exposure time listening to electropop and 0% of it studying the qin dynasty

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:29 (thirteen years ago)

2000 years of history
DOWN THE DRAIN

dylannn, Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:38 (thirteen years ago)

oh hey there's a baby down here

dylannn, Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:39 (thirteen years ago)

haha oh god

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 05:44 (thirteen years ago)

Bleak laughter, etc.

I feel you re: "Peking Opera masks" but I'm not sure if any culture really escapes that in the language-instruction field (based on my uh limited exposure to learning Dutch/German in NZ before my stint in Europe).

Got talking about 三国 w/a girl in my class who got into it via Dynasty Warriors. I wonder if I've still got my old PSX copy of Suikoden & if so whether I'd recognise any bits of 水浒传.

Wld be keen for an electropop YT/Spotify playlist or links to a mix or w/e, AA.

etc, Tuesday, 4 June 2013 07:53 (thirteen years ago)

here's a few mainly taiwanese things to get you going (i love the crap out of all of these):

elva hsiao - super girl (disc 1 is great, disc 2 is all hideous ballads)

http://lightyearsofcy.files.wordpress.com/2012/12/elva-hsiao-super-girl.jpg

jamaster a - dong fang shen mi

http://mjchip.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/00-jamaster_a-dong_fang_shen_mi-front.jpg

da mouth - influenza

http://i.eimg.com.tw/d/alb/17/321917.300.jpg

da mouth (again) - one two three

http://music.yule.tom.com/uimg/2010/1/30/caiyingzhe/1264832880300_35468.jpg

girl and the robots - parallel universe

http://img001.photo.21cn.com/photos/album/20121202/o/29B53DC6BA0EC5214B1CCE179969EE35.jpg

a couple more that i love for some reason but might be difficult to find:

mosaic (马赛克) - self titled

http://www.mask9.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/thumbnail_150x150/mt0x0001/info_thumbnail/57713/57713_event-mosaic-chian-tour-bt-mask9.jpg

郭易yodai - if there was a time machine

http://m.yyq.cn/upload/avatar/504849657cdf8772903.jpg

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 12:15 (thirteen years ago)

no point in me looking for any of this on spotify etc because geoblocking is shit

the Quim of Bendigo (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 4 June 2013 12:16 (thirteen years ago)

two weeks pass...

nearly four years in, i go into a cafe and the lady asks me a question in chinese and i have not got any idea what she is saying

one day i am going to flip a table and walk the hell away from this fucking language

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:02 (twelve years ago)

advice for learners

1. don't

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:02 (twelve years ago)

advice for learners

1. move to china :(

dylannn, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:07 (twelve years ago)

fuck

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:08 (twelve years ago)

like, i expect that by now when someone says 'are you learning chinese' in chinese that i can do more than stare back like a gormless fucking bell-end

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:12 (twelve years ago)

if she had written down the finer details of last week's eye surgery i'd be sound as a pound

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:15 (twelve years ago)

i have more to say but not out in the open like this

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:23 (twelve years ago)

but it's probably more helpful to reflect on what you've learned after four years and what your longterm goals are. understanding cafe ladies might be part of the 5 year plan but it's not the whole package.

this is thin advice but i think the best way to advance is to:
-- quickly move from instruction in the language to instruction in the language. i like the idea of having a second year chinese course that's not CHINESE 201: YOUR SECOND INTRO TO ABSTRACT GRAMMAR RULES AND MORE LISTS OF VOCABULARY and more like... in my second year of chinese at school, we had a class that was an intro to chinese folk tales, where the goal wasn't the peking opera masks learn about chinese culture but more about choosing a neutral peripheral topic that just became the stimulus as much as chinese folk tales can be stimulating and the theme and vocab/grammar was something that students were pointed toward and even better encouraged to seek out for themselves to approach the topic. instruction started at 70/30 chinese-english slowly moving to 90/10, which is frustrating but helpful. in the third year, the topic advanced to, like, modern chinese short stories... international business? stuff like that.

the years at university i advanced most in spoken/written chinese was when we moved to what were simply undergraduate courses taught in chinese. so, the discussion at the start of class-- say, we were discussing yellow earth, chen kaige movie--became a moment of supreme personal anxiety. i'd carefully write out my talking points and work to come up with answers to potential questions lobbed into the group by the prof. i spent hours working on just the opening discussion, just to produce 2-3 minutes put together of cogent thought/reasonable responses.

-- move from instruction to use of the language. when i finally got a friend to translate my resume into chinese and scammed my way into a job where the people hired me thought i could read and write and speak chinese at a level that wouldn't embarrass their company and might make them money, i was in a daily panic and i was forced to do a lot of: 1) last minute research into a topic so that i would have the vocabulary to talk about, say, brake pads, 2) bluffing and learning the talent of bluffing. but if that's not possible, you could come up with some sort of personal project in one of your areas of interest. my interest was literary translation, modern literature, so deciding to sit down and translate abandoned capital (the great work of modern chinese literature, untranslated!) and just work through it and hope that i'd finish even a single chapter of it. that was crucial.

dylannn, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:28 (twelve years ago)

my chinese activated out of the blue is pretty weak, though. if you aren't speaking chinese every single day, hours a day, your language is going to be shakey mo collier.

dylannn, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:30 (twelve years ago)

just chalk it up to her nonmainstream accent. she's probably a primary school graduate from a village in guangdong, right? haughtily demand that she speak standard mandarin and then walk out of her shabby little cafe.

dylannn, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:35 (twelve years ago)

http://www.hdpth.com/upload/image/ubfkCr70.jpg

dylannn, Monday, 24 June 2013 10:36 (twelve years ago)

haha brilliant.

my chinese (listening and speaking) does improve after a warm-up, so i'm probably being too hard on myself tbh.

your lengthy advice is ace. thanks heaps. i must owe you at least 12 beers by now.

i've ramped up the learning pretty sharply just recently (going to way more language groups, going to way more chinese cafes, have started weekly (2 hr session) one-on-ones with a proper teacher) and might be being a bit impatient. also, this might be my last year in the course for a number of reasons raging from (a) it's shit now to (b) they're losing funding to (c) my ~grand plans~ re the language (that i really can't discuss until/unless something real happens).

re practising answers to questions &c.: that's a thing i plan to do alone in the form of drills, then roll out when i feel confident enough to freeball my way through a broad range of relatively simple constructions. doubly so in my field of work.

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 11:39 (twelve years ago)

lengthy/detailed posting on a phone is still pants btw

Autumn Almanac, Monday, 24 June 2013 11:39 (twelve years ago)

http://i.imgur.com/sF77BKh.png

乒乓, Monday, 24 June 2013 11:59 (twelve years ago)


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