lisalover1 wrote:I'm planning to be an electrical engineer, so I figure that it will eventually be beneficial to my career.
Better start learning Mandarin instead!
lisalover1 wrote:I'm planning to be an electrical engineer, so I figure that it will eventually be beneficial to my career.
Haha! That's so awesome you sound like a chinpira. My learning background is the complete oppsite of yours. I speak too formal (not casual enough) to a fault at times.hashiriya1 wrote:Checking in.
It's not good to learn Japanese (speaking) from me (but grammar is OK) because I picked it up from hanging out with mostly "yankees" which is Japanese slang for no gooders. People always say I kind of sound too rough or like a chinpira/yakuza when I speak Japanese. It's a bad habit that I need to get rid of, but I get compliments too. Of course I don't speak that way when I am speaking to elders or people who I have to respect. I use the best keigo I can. I live in the USA now with my fiance (she's Japanese), and I speak mostly Japanese at home, so it's as if I still live there because I hear and speak the language daily. I wouldn't say I am 100% fluent, but I rarely have trouble communicating.
It was hard when I first moved to Japan because based on my appearance, everybody thought I was Japanese, so they thought something was wrong with me whenever I spoke broken Japanese. I think if I looked like a foreigner, it would have been easier because they'll think "Oh, he's just a gaijin" But whenever I told people I was a foreigner they'd be like "Uso daaaaa!"
Anyway, never give up. It's difficult but every rewarding.
I have been told that my teacher has a thick Osakan accent, but I can't tell.Upsidedown Fuji wrote:Haha! That's so awesome you sound like a chinpira. My learning background is the complete oppsite of yours. I speak too formal (not casual enough) to a fault at times.hashiriya1 wrote:Checking in.
It's not good to learn Japanese (speaking) from me (but grammar is OK) because I picked it up from hanging out with mostly "yankees" which is Japanese slang for no gooders. People always say I kind of sound too rough or like a chinpira/yakuza when I speak Japanese. It's a bad habit that I need to get rid of, but I get compliments too. Of course I don't speak that way when I am speaking to elders or people who I have to respect. I use the best keigo I can. I live in the USA now with my fiance (she's Japanese), and I speak mostly Japanese at home, so it's as if I still live there because I hear and speak the language daily. I wouldn't say I am 100% fluent, but I rarely have trouble communicating.
It was hard when I first moved to Japan because based on my appearance, everybody thought I was Japanese, so they thought something was wrong with me whenever I spoke broken Japanese. I think if I looked like a foreigner, it would have been easier because they'll think "Oh, he's just a gaijin" But whenever I told people I was a foreigner they'd be like "Uso daaaaa!"
Anyway, never give up. It's difficult but every rewarding.
I've been struggling to break old habits drilled into me by my professors in college because they were preparing me for work in a Japanese company.
Upsidedown Fuji wrote:Haha! That's so awesome you sound like a chinpira. My learning background is the complete oppsite of yours. I speak too formal (not casual enough) to a fault at times.hashiriya1 wrote:Checking in.
It's not good to learn Japanese (speaking) from me (but grammar is OK) because I picked it up from hanging out with mostly "yankees" which is Japanese slang for no gooders. People always say I kind of sound too rough or like a chinpira/yakuza when I speak Japanese. It's a bad habit that I need to get rid of, but I get compliments too. Of course I don't speak that way when I am speaking to elders or people who I have to respect. I use the best keigo I can. I live in the USA now with my fiance (she's Japanese), and I speak mostly Japanese at home, so it's as if I still live there because I hear and speak the language daily. I wouldn't say I am 100% fluent, but I rarely have trouble communicating.
It was hard when I first moved to Japan because based on my appearance, everybody thought I was Japanese, so they thought something was wrong with me whenever I spoke broken Japanese. I think if I looked like a foreigner, it would have been easier because they'll think "Oh, he's just a gaijin" But whenever I told people I was a foreigner they'd be like "Uso daaaaa!"
Anyway, never give up. It's difficult but every rewarding.
I've been struggling to break old habits drilled into me by my professors in college because they were preparing me for work in a Japanese company.
Sílim go bhfuil tú iomlán de cac.dsheinem wrote:I can speak every language but Greek. Seriously.
casterofdreams wrote:On PC I want MOAR FPS!!!|
Ouyay ancay evenway eakspay igpay atinlay?GSZX1337 wrote:Sílim go bhfuil tú iomlán de cac.dsheinem wrote:I can speak every language but Greek. Seriously.
Yes, I can speak pig latin.lisalover1 wrote:Ouyay ancay evenway eakspay igpay atinlay?GSZX1337 wrote:Sílim go bhfuil tú iomlán de cac.dsheinem wrote:I can speak every language but Greek. Seriously.
That's Greek to me!GSZX1337 wrote:Sílim go bhfuil tú iomlán de cac.