Play videogames in German (I've done so with Assassin's Creed 2, Mass Effect 2 and Final Fantasy XIII), make German friends who are interested in languages (Important that they like languages, or else they'll be annoyed by the questions about the language). A way I've found to used to the German language is to watch Let's Plays in German. If it interests you, you could check it out!twistedmic said:I've recently decided that I'm going to work at learning both Russian and German, starting with German. And I was wondering; what is the best way to get started on that, short of actually moving to or living in that country?
I got excited when we did in Shakespeare in school, because I felt like his English was very German. "What hast thou?" sounds sooo much more like "Was hast du?" than "What do you have?".ExileNZ said:German will introduce you to two parts of language that don't even exist in English - conjugation and declination. In a nutshell it means that every verb is different depending on who does it, while every noun is different depending on context. You're looking at long nights revising charts just to be able to tell the difference between "I'm going to the store" and "He's going to the store".
But if learning German is anything like you say it is, it is like learning Latin, and I learned Latin, and it was the hell.ExileNZ said:EDIT: And as Creator said, if you're doing German, learn the gender for all your nouns. It sucks now but it'll be even more work to catch up later.
Get a "mail-order bride" from that country!twistedmic said:I've recently decided that I'm going to work at learning both Russian and German, starting with German. And I was wondering; what is the best way to get started on that, short of actually moving to or living in that country?
Quite, there are a lot of words which are similar or identical but very different in meaning. I'm an English teacher and sometimes I devote an entire lesson to these words. Some of them are funny, others necessary - and some are bothDyme said:I learned English because (pop) music, computer games and the internet are English.
And English is the most simple language in the world I guess.I got excited when we did in Shakespeare in school, because I felt like his English was very German. "What hast thou?" sounds sooo much more like "Was hast du?" than "What do you have?".ExileNZ said:German will introduce you to two parts of language that don't even exist in English - conjugation and declination. In a nutshell it means that every verb is different depending on who does it, while every noun is different depending on context. You're looking at long nights revising charts just to be able to tell the difference between "I'm going to the store" and "He's going to the store".
It was interesting to see that English doesn't have to be the simple, stupid, efficient language you see in games/music/interwebz.
But if learning German is anything like you say it is, it is like learning Latin, and I learned Latin, and it was the hell.ExileNZ said:EDIT: And as Creator said, if you're doing German, learn the gender for all your nouns. It sucks now but it'll be even more work to catch up later.
And to contribute: Sensibel doesn't mean sensible, gift is not Gift.
Die Ärzte, Farin Urlaub and Die Toten Hosen make good German music.