|
Member
(06-28-2012, 12:27 PM)
|
Is there any way we can get a Senate back? I have a limited understanding of qld political stuff.
I think I'm going to comic con on Saturday. |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 12:36 PM)
|
V My being a tourist is starting to show through. -_-
Last edited by shanshan310; 06-28-2012 at 12:40 PM.
|
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 12:45 PM)
|
http://www.coop-bookshop.com.au/book.../9784789004541 I have now progressed to going through the advanced dictionary. I really need to improve my vocab and kanji! |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 12:50 PM)
|
I'm self studying Japanese now during holidays. Need to revise stuff because I plan to pick up Japanese again next year in uni after taking a huge break from it. |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 12:55 PM)
|
Midonnay is like the master of self study, he's posted some really useful links in the learning japanese thread so check them out too! |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 01:01 PM)
|
:( sorry I dont mind the rice dishes they have now, even if they are of questionable quality. Also the sushi :o
Last edited by shanshan310; 06-28-2012 at 01:07 PM.
|
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 01:44 PM)
|
BTW here is another really good link for ANY language learner ...even obscure ones like Persian, Somalian and Uzbek (probably more suited to immediate level and above though).....
(I didn't post it in the Japanese thread because it's probably not legal to access unless your school subscribes to it but the login details have been around for years and can easily be found through googling) eg: https://www.google.com.au/search?q=s...ient=firefox-a http://www.scola.org/Scola/Default.aspx Scola is a non-profit Cable access organisation which takes foreign programs (mainly news) and retransmit it with transcripts and translations. They are often used by language learning institutions because they don't have to worry about breaching copyright. They have so much content on there on so many different languages that it boggles the mind @_@. I'm slowly working through them in my spare time. eg: The section called Insta-class......and for japanese, there are around 300 downloadable files of snippets of video news with transcripts and translations with more added every month. |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 02:16 PM)
|
1) totally ignoring Kanji and just learning vocabulary by hiragana and picking up the odd chinese character here and there. Result - works fine for the first 500 to 1000 words but then you hit the problems of homophones and different words having the same pronunciation. 2) Trying to master each kanji totally ie: learning every On and Kun reading at the same time as Writing and Vocabulary. Basically writing kanji over and over again. Result - works fine for maybe about the first 500 kanji but then you get past all the low hanging fruit and similar looking kanji really mess with your memory. 3) Kanji in context - basically just learning kanji compounds and other words as they come in sentences rather than worrying about total mastery. Result - Works for some words but others didn't really seem to stick very well.....again similar looking kanji mess with your memory. 4) Mneumonics - using the Reviewing the Kanji website and Heisig keywords. Basically an advanced version of using radicals and creating little wordgames/stories to help remember how to write them. Result - works really well for basically any chinese character no matter the complexity. Furthermore learning new characters actually reinforces the kanji you have already learnt because they are often made up of similar components. The stories help keep each character distinct from each other in your memory. Furthermore, now learning Kanji in context actually works really well because I don't have to worry about characters I don't know and similar looking characters. It doesn't have to be Heisig.....some people like books by Henshall, Joseph De roo etc. In short what worked best for me is to keep each task separate from each other. ie: instead of total mastery of each character, first learn how to write, then learn the readings of the words, then learn how to use it in a sentence. Trying to do too many things at once just leads to frustration.
Last edited by midonnay; 06-28-2012 at 02:31 PM.
|
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 02:25 PM)
|
Here's a bit of non-progress in mine and Mega's "game". Note: not a game yet.
We've been steadily coding up the grid / movement system for the game. Which is taking a while, on the basis that we only really put in about 2 hours a day on it. Maybe a bit more thinking about what we want to do. Dundeon - Build 03 Click and drag the mouse around to create a path. TODO: Make the path do literally anything Make a video game BUGS: If cursor moves too fast, path loses track of where it should go. So, yeah. Whole lot of getting distracted trying to feature complete something, making it look pretty and trying to code in a bunch of use case senarios so it can handle them. Instead of actually making progress. That's my fault, not Mega's. I get too easily distracted on aesthetics when coding. Next build I show off should hopefully have units to move around and do stuff. Maybe. :( /badGameDesign |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 02:50 PM)
|
|
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 03:20 PM)
|
wooooooooooo.
i caught up on like 30 pages of the thread before the meet tomorrow (today!). i see no one booked a table. im sure at 4pm there should be a big table free outside but yeah come 5 o clock i really dont know if there will be room on the inside i also find it amusing that they are streaming the tim thing to right outside the building. that may also make finding room easy or hard. the outside seats only fit like 3 people on each side comfortably anyway. #whoknows |
|
but ever so delicious
(06-28-2012, 09:55 PM)
|
You need to turn up for a quick drink. Wind down a bit if work is that busy. Perv on some city girls, excellent. |
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 10:06 PM)
|
Thanks mid. I'm still not keen on heisig, to be honest. I got through like 700 with uni(many of which ive forgotten the stroke order or meaning of though) and I'd rather not restart unless I have to. It does seem to have worked for you, so If I get desperate I'll give it a go. I was thinking of going the other way, learning vocab before I learn their kanji, for a while. My uni courses won't focus on kanji from here on out.
I get mine taken up. Mums that can sew ftw.
Last edited by shanshan310; 06-28-2012 at 10:15 PM.
|
|
Member
(06-28-2012, 11:15 PM)
|
You just have to remember the components that make up the kanji which can be used as building blocks to learn other characters (some of them which follow traditional chinese/japanese radicals and some that don't). Also the heisig book is alittle outdated..... I mainly relied on the Revtk website. (Changed many of the keywords and primitive names because there were too obscure) Just to give an example of some kanji that went through the churn of learning and forgetting learning and forgetting until I used mnemonics to help tell them apart. 茂 誠 越 臓 歳 域 賊 裁 職 伐 幾 式 我 械 don't get me started on the number of kanji with 糸 in them. (around 90 that I've seen so far) seriously some masochists those chinese were :/
Last edited by midonnay; 06-28-2012 at 11:35 PM.
|