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Old May 09, 2018, 11:23 AM
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OctobersBlackRose OctobersBlackRose is offline
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Member Since: Jun 2012
Location: Michigan
Posts: 2,484
Quote:
Originally Posted by ArcheM View Post
So I've been trying to limit digressions about other languages, especially Dutch, since I thought you'd made it clear you weren't interested. But... it turns out, you are.

I just wanted to mention that I listened to a Dutch podcast on a whim, and it's pretty ridiculous how much I could understand with so little study. I'd probably estimate my efforts as about a lesson a month. And granted, I missed a lot, although there was also a lot of dialect and I don't count that . And I don't listen to Dutch on the regular basis, so it took time just to get my brain into the groove of being able to recognize spoken words.

I think one defining characteristic of my approach to Dutch is laziness. It's really hard to make myself care about studying it systematically because every other word (if not more) - I look at, it's written exactly like in German, means the same thing, only is pronounced a little differently... I suppose it's kind of boring to study.

Although at the same time it makes me think what other languages I could get away with acquiring by only half-assing them. Like Italian. I've known that it's very similar to Spanish for a while. And yesterday I saw a video that instead compared it to French. And that's two languages which I've already studied quite in depth...

Anyway, if I ever get bored with Welsh, I have options.

Oh, yeah, Swedish and Norwegian - yes, technically they are Germanic, but they are actually in a separate branch from German, Dutch, and English - North Germanic (whereas English is West Germanic). They split off quite early on. I don't know exactly when, but certainly around the beginning of our era.

Old Norse was a separate phenomenon by the end of the first millenium. East Germanic went extinct around the middle... Yeah.

Anyway... The only problem with Dutch is that it can be harsh on the ears in fluent speech. It's a language that is unexpectedly fond of various "h" sounds, so a sentence to me often seems to be an unrelenting avalanche of hissing and gargling, out of which you'd be lucky to extract any meaninful vowels (or other sounds).
I mean I just got curious mostly out of boredom amd insomnia to look at other courses on Duolingo to see what I could accomplish in the first lesson, hey with Dutch I only got one wrong in the very first lesson so there's that. I might still add Spanish just as a refresher and to see what if anything I may know. And as for Swedish and Norwegian, I'm not sure I'll be trying those again anytime soon, I couldn't even complete the first lesson in either language. I don't want to over do it with languages while I'm still a beginner at German, but I'm just curious of others, so at the very least I can take a peak at them.
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