I can read and understand a decent amount of Spanish, and I'm good at... I'm not sure what to call it... figuring out the puzzle of other languages, maybe? Like, I took German and it just clicked and made so much sense. But speaking other languages makes me feel like I have marbles in my mouth.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 15:55 (sixteen years ago)
Oh let me disclaim: most of my Spanish skills are focused on a specific subset of employment-related vocabulary words.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 15:56 (sixteen years ago)
this is kind of moving away from the topic a little, but when i was a kid i had serious anxiety issues about saying certain words - not because i ~couldn't~ say them or pronounce them, but the words themselves made me feel uncomfortable. i started calling my step-dad 'dad' after a couple of years simply because i COULD NOT bring myself to say his name out loud ('lex') - it just creeped me out.
even now, as an adult, i sometimes get this.
― DAN P3RRY MAD AT GRANDMA (just1n3), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:00 (sixteen years ago)
Ugh, I had French lessons at school for 7 years and got good grades in it thanks to written/reading work but faced with the average French word I can think of about 6 different options for what vowel sound they want and which letters are silent.
German is a lot less mysterious accent-wise (at times I even kind of enjoy trying to speak it) but goddamn if I will ever get the German "eh" vowel not to sound like the most English "ay" ever while still keeping it distinct from the "ie" vowel (it's sort of halfway between the two, but my mouth doesn't seem to have an in-between). Luckily it seems a lot easier to be understood despite bad accents in German too, in my limited experience.
successful language learners are not afraid to make mistakes, sound weird, or hear unfamiliar sounds coming out of their mouths.
Yeah, these are all things which bother me in other areas too - suppose it shouldn't be a surprise that language confidence should be related to, e.g., would I dare sing in public (not at all, can't hit the notes, don't even sing in private much because of that) but I'd never thought about it.
― ⍨ (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:08 (sixteen years ago)
Is it mostly people's names or a variety of words? xp to J.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:10 (sixteen years ago)
it's a variety of words. trying to think of others, but my dad's name is the one that sticks out.
― DAN P3RRY MAD AT GRANDMA (just1n3), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:11 (sixteen years ago)
i had a terrible stutter growing up, so i feel you on that.
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:14 (sixteen years ago)
taking 7 semesters of various diction classes makes me wish everyone knew ipa bc it realllly helps so much in pronunciation! still, even with the rules right there, people who were fine speaking and singing in german and italian would freak out over french! i don't get it! to me, the hardest of all was english lyric diction.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:41 (sixteen years ago)
also i've always been fascinated by code switching but language ego is a new term for me and i <3 it!
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:42 (sixteen years ago)
i'm excited about having a strong language ego
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:45 (sixteen years ago)
taking 7 semesters of various diction classes makes me wish everyone knew ipa bc it realllly helps so much in pronunciation! this is why i can't read pronunciation threads -- 150,000 posts could be eliminated if people would just use ipa
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:46 (sixteen years ago)
hahaha yes!!!
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:47 (sixteen years ago)
i was so nerdy about it i used to take notes in class by writing them in ipa when i got bored.
i like code switching too because i work with a lot of generation 1.5 students
haha -- i used to do that too!!
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:47 (sixteen years ago)
usually it was too hard though
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:48 (sixteen years ago)
You are a bunch of cunning linguists.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:48 (sixteen years ago)
i worked in a call center for a while and i would always catch myself switching depending on where the person on the other end of the line was calling from. it was kinda fun.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:49 (sixteen years ago)
accents, not languages, though.
my grandmother (from long island) used to "code-switch" on the phone but her code switching was more talking VERY LOUD to her german step-mother as if she was deaf
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:54 (sixteen years ago)
Okay, taking a page from the meta-thread and also the shopping poll, do we even want to broach the shopping question here? Or should we continue just organically talking about linguistics and stuff? Which is already pretty cool, esp the language ego stuff which I didn't know anything about!
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:44 (sixteen years ago)
it's more fun herewe can talk about shopping but not about hating shopping? i mean like, let's embrace it!
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:45 (sixteen years ago)
i don't want to embrace shopping
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:46 (sixteen years ago)
shopping? i could talk about that..
i guess i'm not bad at learning languages.. i want to work on spanish, my french is pretty good including the accent, but i had to sit down with a tape recorder and record/play back many many times to get rid of the obvious anglophone sounds. also uh drinking a bit helps, to get past the worry about making mistakes! after a couple glasses of wine i suddenly remembered a lot of francais vocabulary that i hadn't used in years.
― kicker conspiracy (s. suisham ha ha) (daria-g), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:46 (sixteen years ago)
i sometimes have dreams in spanish and my accent is perfect
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:47 (sixteen years ago)
I mean basically ILX wimmenz are NOT en masse going to respond "OMG I JUST LOVE TO GO TO THE MALL WITH MY BFFS EVERY SUNDAY" because obv lols. So we can get that out of the way. But are we free of the pressure to go too far the other direction and disavow shopping entirely just because it might have too-typically "feminine" connotations?
How about having an informed-consumer approach in which you are interested in getting the best thing that you need/want for its own sake?
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:48 (sixteen years ago)
i need to go back and relearn things. i feel bad for forgetting most of it!i tried teaching myself russian once but instead i just taught myself how to pronounce it by ipa-ing stuff instead of actually learning to read it/understand it.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:48 (sixteen years ago)
i feel more free when i stay out of the mall, feminine connotations aside
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:49 (sixteen years ago)
i think the thing i'm not good at with shopping is the informed-consumer approach! Most of the time, i just want to buy a thing and get out. I don't even like ebay cos it's too full of decisions you have to take a long time over.
― lords of hyrule (c sharp major), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:50 (sixteen years ago)
xp to harbl, agreed to infinity. I feel like a better person when I stay out of stores completely. I used to shop for "fun" because the variety of artistic and desirable things in NYC was mind-boggling to me. But it made me sadder and sadder that I would never be able to consume beautiful things at the rates that they were offered. Too many choices, too much stimulation, too much wanting.
So I stopped going to stores except on a mission for things. I also stopped reading ANY fashion magazines around the same time, for whatever that's worth.
Now I'm about 3x happier and have less stuff.
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:51 (sixteen years ago)
I don't feel pressured to hate shopping, but I find recreational shopping to be one of the most boring, disappointing, and pointless ways to spend my free time.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:52 (sixteen years ago)
i just hate everything in my closet right now (l, you experienced this to some extent when we tried to dress me for soul club!) but i don't have the $ to buy new stuff so i just dream about shopping for new clothes which i think makes me think i like shopping more than i do.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:53 (sixteen years ago)
I like shopping for books about language.
― tokyo rosemary, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:53 (sixteen years ago)
very low tolerance for aimless shopping or shopping with other peoplestill wearing clothes i had in college and one sweater from high schooli get bossy/intolerant when shopping with others and they are indecisive
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:54 (sixteen years ago)
ugh so do i!
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:55 (sixteen years ago)
i get frustrated when i shop too bc i always have a particular cut/item in mind and then i can NEVER find it.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:55 (sixteen years ago)
Hahahahahaha. Yes. My mom took me shopping in MI and I ignored her for basically hours as I blitzed through sale racks.
She kept being like, "How about this?" (holds up thing that I hate).
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:56 (sixteen years ago)
ugh
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:57 (sixteen years ago)
my mom got me work pants for xmas and i liked them except she accidentally (?) ordered xtra long. lol mom.
― jortin shartgent (harbl), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:58 (sixteen years ago)
No, she was good overall, esp when she started holding up joke items and we were so tired that it became hilarious. At one point she said, "Stop talking to me like I'm an idiot" and I said, "I will if you stop talking to me."
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:58 (sixteen years ago)
i still remember going to the thrift store with my high school friends and getting into a MAJOR fight with them about who was going to buy the smaller burgundy velvet blazer NEVER AGAIN thrift shoppin with friendsi turned into a monster!
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 17:59 (sixteen years ago)
i remember barking DO YOU WANT IT OR NOT YES OR NO YES OR NO
lol my high school self wants that blazer!
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:00 (sixteen years ago)
actually, i have very little tolerance for people who involve me in their long, arduous, vocal decisionmaking
― figgy pudding (La Lechera), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:01 (sixteen years ago)
over trivial things, like buying a sixty cent blazer
Important keys to efficient shopping, I think: a) have a really clear idea of what kind of thing is acceptable to you, and immediately mentally discard everything else. Do not get sidetracked by something that's on sale if it's not your style/on your list!! and b) Be willing to leave the store with NOTHING if you don't find what you wanted. Do not buy just to have something to show for your time.
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:10 (sixteen years ago)
that is pretty much what i do but then i will end up looking for a pair of tennis shoes i really like for 6 months while the ones on my feet are disintegrating. nagl.
― tehresa, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:12 (sixteen years ago)
I used to shop for "fun" because the variety of artistic and desirable things in NYC was mind-boggling to me. But it made me sadder and sadder that I would never be able to consume beautiful things at the rates that they were offered. Too many choices, too much stimulation, too much wanting.
So I stopped going to stores except on a mission for things.
Yeah - I'm the same way! Yesterday, I had to force myself to buy the vacuum cleaner I was there to buy, and nothing else.
― sarahel, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:16 (sixteen years ago)
I spend way too much on clothes and really need to not do that tbh. I do have a good idea of what suits me and would go in my wardrobe and all.. Trouble is that can still justify a lot of stuff. Maybe a lot of it is just interest in color and pattern and such and I should do collage instead
― kicker conspiracy (s. suisham ha ha) (daria-g), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 18:45 (sixteen years ago)
hahahahaha Daria the world needs more YSL vintage finds and less collage TBH - play to yr strengths.
― sacher torte reform (suzy), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 19:32 (sixteen years ago)
a) have a really clear idea of what kind of thing is acceptable to you, and immediately mentally discard everything else. Do not get sidetracked by something that's on sale if it's not your style/on your list!! and b) Be willing to leave the store with NOTHING if you don't find what you wanted.
Yeah, see the problem is that there is never anything that fits the really clear idea of what is acceptable to me, and I generally leave with nothing. Then an occasion arrives when I actually need a thing that I do not have, because I have been waiting until I find the thing I really want, at which point I have to make a furious round of all the plus-size clothing retailers in Chicago attempting to find something so simple and necessary and yet so fucking elusive as a plain god damn black cardigan made from a material that is suitable for a professional workplace. (Note: Talbot's, bless their conservative little hearts, finally started carrying such an item, and there is one on the way to me as we speak.) So shopping for clothes is just brutal for me.
When shopping for some other item, I tend to approach it like a precision military operation. Determine which item I wish to purchase through research. Determine the cheapest place I can purchase said item local, with allowances for location, convenience, and timing. Check to see if I can purchase this item on line somewhere cheaper and whether the shipping costs are offset by crazypants Chicago sales tax. If I decide to purchase said item from a local brick and mortar store, I will go in, secure said item, and GTFO.
Unless I'm going to Target. I'll poke around a little bit in Target.
Discount places like TJ Maxx or Marshall's are like living hell to me. I'll go to Nordstrom Rack but only for shoes because they have an awesome selection of size 10 shoes.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 19:35 (sixteen years ago)