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there's a lot of phlegm used when speaking GermanHaha. You guys would love German.
Dutch too.
there's a lot of phlegm used when speaking German
i have some learn german disks, and on both of the ones i have they tend to sound like that... perhaps they are both using the berlin dialect
i always have trouble with the pronunciations because all my life i have been taught not to make those sounds when talking and now i have to... its tough to break
Learn Spanish, you'll always wonder where the H went.
I found Spanish to be exceptionally easy once I got past the initial understanding of it. Not so much the words, but the conjugates and such.
I still have a hard time understanding when people talk fast, but for the most part, I can hold a decent conversation.
I think that's right. In our language we have something something similar("He"; sharp e sound). I guess you can compare it to improper English sentences, "That chick was hot, huh?"(along with some other basics like picking up how 'ka' turns the sentence into a question (I think? That's what I inferred from it anyway)). Once in a while I even catch a word.
I think that's right. In our language we have something something similar("He"; sharp e sound). I guess you can compare it to improper English sentences, "That chick was hot, huh?"
I had spanish classes for 3 years in middle school, but my teacher was insane. I learned almost nothing about communicating in spanish, but now I can read spanish aloud at full speed and enunciate like a native speaker (according to several native speakers) even though I don't understand half of what I'm reading.
We once took a field trip for spanish class... to china town. That's how crazy she was.
Or them too. Just wondering, the "eh" is that slang or whatever or is it actually part of "Canadian grammar"?