Welcome! Everything teachers need to teach evolution, culture, language and archeology to middle and high school students.
Bambara: A Niger-Congo language
As many of you know, France and West African
countries have decided to invade Mali and push out Islamic militants
responsible for the coup d’ état. Now is a good enough time to discuss Bambara,
one of the largest indigenous languages of Mali.
As Mali was once a French colony, the official language
of Mali is French. However about eighty percent of the population, 13 million
people, speak Bambara.
The Bambara language is the mother tongue of the
Bambara ethnic group, numbering about 2,700,000 people, but serves also as a
lingua franca in Mali (it is estimated that about 80% of the population speaks
it as a first or second language).
Linguistic
Classification
Bambara is a Niger-Congo language. It is closely
related to the languages Jula and Marka. Bambara belongs to a group of closely-related
languages called Manding, within the larger Mandé group.
Bomara is an SOV language. This means: subject,
object, verb usually appear in that order. If English were SOV, then "Sam
oranges ate" would be an ordinary sentence, as opposed to the actual
Standard English "Sam ate oranges".
Mandarin Chinese Progress January 2013
I have been following the input based learning system for Mandarin Chinese, and it is going along smoothly. All this time, not once have I picked up a single pen or piece of paper. Everything I have been learning in Chinese has been one hundred percent audio lessons.
Yesterday I listened to Chinese on the bus, the subway, and walking. When I started getting bored, I switched over to Spanish vocabulary. On my way home, I went back to Mandarin. Living Language lessons are different in that they go over sentences, nuts and bolts, then the sentences again with English translation. I have been slowly moving up in my Chinese abilities. I am understanding basic sentences, basic greetings, and able to recognize Chinese words in new sentences.
As I listen over and over to the tones of the language, they are slowly growing on me. I read that Chinese tones are one of the more difficult things for anglophones to acquire. I do not know how I have acquired them yet because I am still in the listening phase.
So the progress is going along slowly, but consistently. I am wondering when I should start practicing the writing system?
Yesterday I listened to Chinese on the bus, the subway, and walking. When I started getting bored, I switched over to Spanish vocabulary. On my way home, I went back to Mandarin. Living Language lessons are different in that they go over sentences, nuts and bolts, then the sentences again with English translation. I have been slowly moving up in my Chinese abilities. I am understanding basic sentences, basic greetings, and able to recognize Chinese words in new sentences.
As I listen over and over to the tones of the language, they are slowly growing on me. I read that Chinese tones are one of the more difficult things for anglophones to acquire. I do not know how I have acquired them yet because I am still in the listening phase.
So the progress is going along slowly, but consistently. I am wondering when I should start practicing the writing system?
What alphabet is this?
Let the game begin with this image. It contains several alphabets, most of them ancient. You are looking at their numerical system only. (1-10, 1-200 etc.) This is a test to see if you can identify which ancient language it is by only their numbers.
Leave your answers in the comment section.
Skype Me Maybe
Many of my friends got together and made a great YouTube video, Skype Me Maybe. Benny did a fantastic job!.I really love how us language learners share our passion for something, connect, and enjoy what we do. I hope you enjoy the video as much as I did.
Dawdling along in Mandarin Playlists
Hello Amigos,
The Winter Holidays are here, and I wish I was shopping on fifty-seventh street in New York City.
I have been spending a lot more time indoors, and less time walking with the kids whilst listening to Chinese on my Ipod. This evening I thought it would be a good time to make a quick playlist for myself. I can watch the playlist on my television screen and on my notebook. It is a simple playlist of videos from my favorite linguist, Glossika.
I decided to embed the playlist below so that if you are also learning basic Chinese you can enjoy the videos as well.
Enjoy!
The Winter Holidays are here, and I wish I was shopping on fifty-seventh street in New York City.
I have been spending a lot more time indoors, and less time walking with the kids whilst listening to Chinese on my Ipod. This evening I thought it would be a good time to make a quick playlist for myself. I can watch the playlist on my television screen and on my notebook. It is a simple playlist of videos from my favorite linguist, Glossika.
I decided to embed the playlist below so that if you are also learning basic Chinese you can enjoy the videos as well.
Enjoy!
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