Only the Kanji have their own meaning, and there are over 10,000 so even most Japanese don't know them all. You just need the important ones like 'water'. Hiragana and Katakana are just those straight forward sounds.MikailCaboose said:The difficult problem with Japanese is the fact that all of the characters each have their own meaning, which when combined in a word can completely change the meaning of the character as opposed to it just remaining separate.DarkLordofDevon said:Japanese is actually really easy. All the 'letters' only have a single sound. E.g. Ka is always pronaunced 'kah'. However a in English can be 'ah' as in cat, 'ay' as in cake etc.
How are all languages very identical? And what language are you talking about?Khaiseri said:This and Russian, but most of the languages in the world are very identical, we just need to start learning them.Julianking93 said:I've only ever heard that Japanese is the hardest language to learn.
There is one language in South America (I think) that doesn't has any vowels. Now THAT'S hard to learn.
I mean in difficulty mostly, and if you compare Chinese to Japanese, Spanish to Portuguese, they sound very similar, but obviously not quite.megamanenm said:How are all languages very identical? And what language are you talking about?Khaiseri said:This and Russian, but most of the languages in the world are very identical, we just need to start learning them.Julianking93 said:I've only ever heard that Japanese is the hardest language to learn.
There is one language in South America (I think) that doesn't has any vowels. Now THAT'S hard to learn.
Correct, knowing Russian grammar adds absolutely nothing to your knowledge of the spoken language.The_root_of_all_evil said:...
Russian, from the very little I know about it though, is a very guttural language ( as in "from the gut" rather than gutter), and hearing someone whisper sweet nothings in Russian sounds like having a fight in English.(Also Gujarati/German)
You have 4110 posts, don't you know better then to go around insulting people?Zeeky_Santos said:No, you fool, that would simply mean "It is bag". "Its bag" would imply possession, you dolt.kurupt87 said:and "it's bag" - implying the possesion "it" has of the bag.
You do know that phonology and phonetics are included in grammar since the grammar is everything the speaker knows about the language right?some1else said:Correct, knowing Russian grammar adds absolutely nothing to your knowledge of the spoken language.The_root_of_all_evil said:...
Russian, from the very little I know about it though, is a very guttural language ( as in "from the gut" rather than gutter), and hearing someone whisper sweet nothings in Russian sounds like having a fight in English.(Also Gujarati/German)
It has a Catch-22 in it, you need to have a good feeling of the language in order to speak correctly. Though I guess Slavic people won't have too much trouble mastering it, due to some similarities.
See, that always confused me when I was studying French and German. Why do inanimate objects have genders? Is it really just to fuck around with school kinds, making them remember three or four tables of endings for verbs and all that? Never understood the need, really - that's one layer of complexity English is without, thank God!The_root_of_all_evil said:Because English is an insane language.
There are two genders instead of three,...