Spotlight on Navajo
I have been slowly working on Navajo, a native American language. I love that Duolingo is including endangered languages as well as commonly spoken language at have lots of speakers as a second language. I am looking forward to when Duolingo adds Maori soon.
Navajo - shizhe'é hóló (a dad I have) |
---|
English - I have a dad. |
Reflection: 'holo' goes at the end of the sentence.
Vocabulary comparison across languages:
English - father German Deutsch- Vater Danish Dansk- far Dutch Nederalnds- vader Swedish Svenska- vader Norwegian Norsk bokmål - far Italian Italiano - padre French Francais - père Romanian Română-Tată Haitian Creole kreyol ayisyen- papa Esperanto - patro Latin-pater Welsh Cymraeg- tad Irish Gaeilge- athair Scottish Gaelic Gaeilge- athair Zulu isisZulu- ubaba Hawaiian ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi- makuakāne Swahili Kiswahili-baba Czech čeština- otec Hungarian Magyar-apa Polish Polski-ojciec Turk Türk-baba Indonesian Türk - ayah Japanese 日本Ni hon-お父さんOtōsan Korean 한국어 hangug-eo 아버 abeoji Hindi हिन्दी hindee पिता pita Yiddish יידיש eydish -פאטער fater Ukranian українська ukrayinsʹka-батько batʹko Vietnamese Tiếng Việt-cha Greek Ελληνικά Elliniká- πατέρας patéras Russian Русский Russkiy отец otets
Spotlight on Hawaiian
I first tried Japanese in year 6 at primary school. My older sister was learning it at high school and later during her university. I was homeschool by my mum that year. I found her hiragana flash cards to learn while I was sitting in the splits. Trying to multi task, so I would be distract from the discomfort of stretching my legs to deepen my split while sitting on a pile of phone books with sharp corners.
I can see now that I am in my thirties the knowledge has stayed with me, so I have remembered the first part of hiragana and now need to work on the next years with the double lines ( i think they are called tentens) and the little circles used to make the other syllables like ta -> da, and ka -> ga etc.
Hawaiian - He kumu'o Kéhau.
English - Kehau is a teacher.
Reflection: I wonder if the name goes at the end of the sentence because the teacher is the subject.
Vocabulary comparison across languages:
English - teacher German - Deutsch - Der Name Danish Dansk- navn Dutch Nederalnds- naam Swedish Svedska- kaka Norwegian Norsk Bookmål- Navn Italian Italiano - nome French Français - Nom Romanian Română-Nume Haitian Creole kreyol ayisyen - non Esperanto - nomo Latin-nomen Welsh Cymraeg- enw Irish Gaeilge - ainm Scottish Gaelic Gàidhlig na h-Alba - ainm Zulu -isisZulu igama Hawaiian ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi - inoa Swahili Kiswahili -jina Czech čeština - název Hungarian Magyar-név Polish-Polski Nazwa Turkish Türk --isim Indonesian Bahasa Indonesia- nama Japanese-日本Ni hon 名前Namae Korean 한국어 hangug-eo 이름ileum Hindi हिन्दी hindee -नाम naam Yiddish יידיש eydish- נאָמען nomen Ukranian українська ukrayinsʹka-назва nazva Vietnamese Tiếng Việt- Tên Greek Ελληνικά Elliniká- όνομα ónoma Russian Русский Russkiy имя imya
***Do you LIKE my work? But not ready to comment as a beginner. Please ANSWER a quick 4 questions mulitple choice survey. It will inform me about my audience and their interests :-)
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/W6GVWJQ
***I would love some discussion in the comments comments. Is your target language (the language you are learning as a foreigner) similiar to another language in this comparative list? Please comment any similarities or differences you notice?
***If you want to see my future blog spots, please FOLLOW this blog.
No comments:
Post a Comment