I went to Buy Rosetta Stone in December to help me learn Thai.
Rosetta Stone just Discontinued Thai the month before.
FUCK Rosetta Stone.
Fluenz doesn't offer thai either. Anyone know such a service that does?
I went to Buy Rosetta Stone in December to help me learn Thai.
Rosetta Stone just Discontinued Thai the month before.
I went to Buy Rosetta Stone in December to help me learn Thai.
Rosetta Stone just Discontinued Thai the month before.
FUCK Rosetta Stone.
Fluenz doesn't offer thai either. Anyone know such a service that does?
I own Japanese 1, 2 and 3. I've only ever used 1. That being said... I like it. I feel like I've learned some Japanese. If I were to actually use it as it was intended I think I could speak it pretty fluently with some real world practice.
"That is a nice school girl uniform."
"Is that school girl uniform comfortable?"
"Where can I get a school girl uniform like the one you are wearing?"
"5000 yen is a fair price. Now, go put on this school girl uniform and shut up."
adults SHOULD learn languages like children, which is simply through continuous absorption
Best way to learn any language to "Native" proficieny is to learn it like the natives(learn languages like children/ sink or swim you pussy). Organic learning will teach you how to "think" (imo most important thing) in the language you wish to learn. Artificial learning (grammatical rules/school style learning) are how you get robots (indian TA's that have perfect GRE's but cant have a conversation worth shit). If you're looking to learn japanese AJATT is your boy.
What a great tirade. Two thumbs up.
Just one problem: I'm (re)learning Latin.
So I guess I'll just pussy up since my shitty time machine is broken, making it impossible for "organic learning"
How silly of me not to think of totally immersing myself into a Latin-speaking population in the 21st century.
LOL. Obviously applies only to languages with living populations. Why learn latin though ? I guess it would be a curious challenge to learn a dead language. How would you learn to "think" in latin?