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Old 03-23-2006, 04:16 AM   #21
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I can imagine that it's difficult without visual reference. The terminology with back, front, high, low, rounded and unrounded can be quite confusing.
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Old 03-23-2006, 01:36 PM   #22
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I do have the movies Wild Strawberries and Persona, so maybe after I watch them as movies I can go through and carefully watch how everyone's mouths are moving.

Granted, without Swedish subtitles, I don't think I'd know exactly which sounds they're making.


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Old 03-23-2006, 03:32 PM   #23
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good luck with that!
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Old 03-23-2006, 03:59 PM   #24
 
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I say learn a language worth learning. Like...Yiddish.

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Old 03-23-2006, 04:14 PM   #25
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Of course you can only see the shape of the mouth when you see someone talking. You can hardly see the position of their tongue, which is the most important articulator for vowels.
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Old 03-23-2006, 04:36 PM   #26
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^^ I'm studying Japanese, too.

I also took four years of Spanish in Middle and High School, and have forgotten 95% of it (didn't help that I never really had my heart set in learning it)


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Old 03-23-2006, 04:45 PM   #27
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oh well, when do you need to use another languege?
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Old 03-24-2006, 03:22 AM   #28
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I'm using one right now, and I use it every day. I agree, though that when you're a native English speaker you don't need to use a foreign language as often as when you have another native tongue.
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Old 03-24-2006, 09:05 AM   #29
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Koga
It's not the sound in 'euh' (I assume you mean the sound you utter when thinking, also spelled eh, or erm), which is schwa.
Hmmm... I didn't mean the erm. But I was asking because I don't know exactly how you pronounce euh. If you say it is pronounced erm, I made a mistake.
I'm not sure whether you know, but I'm a German guy. Just an information

You seem to know a lot about languages and pronounciation. Do you have something to do with these things?
Do you know whether the Swedish ö is pronounced different than the German one?
Edit: Oh, just read the last post. Didn't know that you are a non-English person as well. But isn't your language (Dutch?) very similar to German? Do you have an ö too?

Quote:
Originally Posted by CodieKitty
I also took four years of Spanish in Middle and High School, and have forgotten 95% of it (didn't help that I never really had my heart set in learning it)
Hehe, I'm also learning Spanish in the moment. But well... learning isn't the right expression. Let's say I have the subject in school and... that's all
But I chose Spanish as an optional subject. I think it's a good thing to know at least the basics of as many languages as possible. Although I can't really talk with a French person (and neither with a Spanish) without problems, and although I have bad marks because of these two subjects, I am glad to have had them.
It's a good thing to know you can pronounce foreign words properly (I hate people in restaurants that can't pronounce the food properly they are ordering) and you can also understand the main part of a foreign text.
In my opinion that's a very important thing, although I hate it to have to stay in school when all the others are allowed to go home.
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Old 03-24-2006, 02:58 PM   #30
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Joy of joys. Finnish also has a dotted O. I haven't played the discs so I don't know what it sounds like, but I wanted to cry when I saw that.


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Old 03-26-2006, 06:25 PM   #31
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Maybe yet another reason I can't find anything is because of the area of the country I'm in, although people on Amazon were also complaining about the lack of decent Swedish material.

If I lived in Minnesota, I could probably find plenty of material. But I live in New Mexico, where everyone wants to learn Spanish.


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Old 03-26-2006, 06:40 PM   #32
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they made nukes
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Old 03-27-2006, 01:10 PM   #33
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Crazyswordsman
Sweden is a Socialist country, so naturally there'd be some tension between us and the Swedes, especially considering who's in power right now here. I honestly think such tension is silly, as Sweden is a democracy, heh. -CSM
Okay, last night while I was looking at a book I have about humans (human body, human mind, politics, culture, etc.), and it says the only Socialist/Communist countries that exist anymore are China, Cuba, and North Korea, and China is starting to lose its communist ways. Since the book is only two years old (maybe even a few months less) and Sweden's had the "free hospitals and colleges and other luxuries" deal for a while now, it would probably know. And it's written by a joint of the Smithsonian and DK books so I think it knows what it's talking about (although I was wondering what was going on when their books and signs kept calling pandas bears, then somebody online informed me they did more studies and found pandas are more closely related to bears than they previously thought).

Except for Communism/Socialism, it doesn't list "What nations follow these economies", so I couldn't figure out what Sweden really was. The closest thing I could find based on the description was "Government Regulated Capitalism".


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Old 03-31-2006, 03:03 PM   #34
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Hey Koga, are you still alive?
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Old 04-03-2006, 05:17 PM   #35
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Yes, I am. I've just been away on a skiing trip for a week.

I'm indeed Dutch and it is quite similar to German. I can still understand German very well, but I can't speak it as well as I used to. It's mainly voacabulary that I lack nowadays.

I study English language and culture, but I'm much more interested in the language side, especially phonology, which is why I know so much about languages and pronunciation. I'm currently writing my honours dissertation on the acquisition of the 'th' sounds by German speakers of English, so I've read quite a lot about German phonology as well. In case you are wondering why I chose German speakers and not Dutch, it's because someone else already did that. It shouldn't be a problem, because I live quite close to the border near Niedersachsen.

I think the dotted o is similar to Swedish in hoert, but not in schoen. Dutch doesn't have a dotted o, but it does have the same sounds. 'oe' in 'hoert' is usually spelled 'u' and in 'schoen' it's 'eu'. German and Dutch have almost the same sounds, but the spelling is very differen, as well as the distribution of sounds.
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