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They're all over the place near my place of work (Northbrook). They are hilarious watching them fly; they are so clumsy like they are drunk. Around there, I'm sure thousands of them a day are getting murdered by cars.rsmurphy wrote: Tue Jun 11, 2024 3:50 pm First cicada sighting of the summer. This little bugger hitched a ride on my backpack inadvertently jumping a turnstile to receive a free ride on the CTA. Freaked me out at first but then thought: awww, so I gently removed it and set in in the aisle but realized it would get squished, so I gently moved it under some empty seats. Someone noticed that it was beginning to crawl up my leg so this time I removed it and set it outside once the doors opened where it probably got squished by someone else. Godspeed, li'l one. You've waited 17 years underground just to end-up on a Chicago train.
Getting the hang of this now! At the stage of being able to recognize what I'm hearing as language, as something distinct, it sounds like this and it sounds familiar. Basic sentence-construction makes sense to me, and watching a video like this with English subtitles I'm able to identify easily, with a few exceptions, what parts I don't know.kokorodoko wrote: Fri Apr 19, 2024 8:33 am я вірю, що світ належить кожному.
Think I'll give this a try.
This is cool as shitkokorodoko wrote: Thu Jun 13, 2024 3:59 amGetting the hang of this now! At the stage of being able to recognize what I'm hearing as language, as something distinct, it sounds like this and it sounds familiar. Basic sentence-construction makes sense to me, and watching a video like this with English subtitles I'm able to identify easily, with a few exceptions, what parts I don't know.kokorodoko wrote: Fri Apr 19, 2024 8:33 am я вірю, що світ належить кожному.
Think I'll give this a try.
Some changes I made in my approach this time around, all for the better:
1) treating the spoken language as chunks of sound rather than individual "words"
1b) practicing speaking by imitating things heard (that are clearly spoken and intelligible), the rhythms, the pitch-shifts, the pauses... rather than repeating isolated words and phrases
2) learning vocab and grammatical patterns from contextual encounter and re-application for personal purposes, rather than through "word-collection" and drilling
3) not straining to comprehend things I don't grasp immediately (unfamiliar sentence patterns, words with unclear meaning, idioms, etc.)
... while still keeping a degree of systematicity and analyticity (e.g. saving conjugation lists for reference), but it's become apparent to me how for example the way descriptions of grammar are laid out in books and other resources tends to give things the appearance of sameness across the board. Like, it cannot easily show how some grammatical cases or verb forms occur much more frequently than others, or how the specific ways in which a pattern is deployed is that actual pattern, rather than an instance of a non-situational example. The most it can do is list every possible distinct use-case, but trying to learn them like this isn't very good I've found.
In any case - fascinating language and not what I expected at all. Excited to continue this.
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