Poll: How many languages do you know?
This poll is closed.
The Queen's English is good enough for me!
23.08%
6 23.08%
Trying to learn a second...
34.62%
9 34.62%
I'm fluent in two.
23.08%
6 23.08%
I'm a language machine! Three or more!
19.23%
5 19.23%
Total 26 vote(s) 100%
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Anybody know more than 2 languages?
#1
I'm relearning Spanish for those easy 12 credits, and for work utility. Rosetta Stone is great! Big Grin I was thinking that after I complete the language packs for Spanish and felt solidly fluent, I would move on to Russian. So I was wondering how many other people learned another language after their second? Is it as much easier as they say than the first 'other' language?
[SIZE="1"]BS General Business, March 2010

CLEP College Algebra 51
CLEP Natural Sciences 63
CLEP Social Sciences and History 59
CLEP A&I Lit. 74
CLEP Intro to Sociology 67
CLEP Info Systems and Computer App. 58
CLEP Intro to Psychology 66
CLEP Intro to Business Law 64
CLEP Principles of Management 73
CLEP Principles of Marketing 63
CLEP Principles of Macroeconomics 61
CLEP Principles of Microeconomics 62
DSST Fundamentals of Counseling 49
DSST Principles of Supervision 61
DSST Substance Abuse 441 (Pass)
DSST Business Law II 67
DSST Management Information Systems 436
DSST Principles of Statistics 466
DSST Principles of Finance 435
DSST Civil War and Reconstruction 57
DSST Criminal Justice 431
ECE English Comp C :mad:
ECE World Population A
ECE Ethics, Theory and Practice A
ECE Organizational Behavior A
ECE Human Resource Management B
EC Business Policy B
Straighterline Accounting I B
Straighterline Accounting II B
CSU Pueblo Ops Management A
[/SIZE]
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#2
I am stationed here in Yokosuka, Japan and trying to learn Japanese. Rosetta stone is great for learning a second language! When i use the program, I learn alot. Unfortunately I get distracted from learning it because of work/college/clep study/ and coaching youth sports.

I told a friend at work that spoke spanish about the CLEP exam she could take and earn 12 credits. I let her log on to petersons and try the practice exam and she got almost all of the questions right and she thought it was pretty funny.

The question seems to be talking about one thing, and a couple of the answers are like off the wall like WTF and then one or two seem right. Spanish is totally doable if you study enough. Although you have to score higher than a 50 to get the full 12 credits with EC.
Passed (54 SH):
A&I Literature (60) : Criminal Justice (419) : Intro to Law Enforcement (68) : Intro to Computing (457): Information Systems & Comp App (63): Management Information Systems (423) : Intro to Sociology (53) : Intro to Psychology (56) : Here's to your Health (450) : Substance Abuse (428) : Technical Writing (49) : College Mathematics (53) : Business Ethics and Society (437) : World Populations (B) : Principles of Marketing (57) : Cultural Diversity (B) : Civil War & Reconstruction (54)

Military: (41 SH)
Other Schools: (15 SH)

Excelsior Courses Complete (10 SH): Information Literacy, Criminology, International Terrorism, Social Science Research, Research/Writing, Managing Homeland Security

Excelsior BS-Criminal Justice=DONE
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#3
Yes, there can be a bit of mixing them up, but basically once you get used to the idea of syntax and grammar being different than English, a third language is faster and easier to learn than a second, depending on the languages involved. Obviously, languages in the same family help. For example, if you speak Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and French are very easy to learn.

Some languages are just tougher. Russian, for example, has those pesky declensions, so it is frustrating. And of course you need to learn the cyrillic alphabet, although that's not too tough.

I am a polyglot, and plan on getting 12 credits each for Spanish, French and German. Yes, lucky me!
Aug. 3, 2009 - DSST Intro to World Religions score 476 = 3 upper level credits
Aug. 19, 2009 - DSST Environment & Humanity score 68
Oct. 21, 2009 - CLEP Math score 67 = 6 credits
Oct 23, 2009 - CLEP English comp w/essay -- waiting for score
Oct 23, 2009 - CLEP Spanish 77 = 12 credits
Oct 26, 2009 - DSST Rise & Fall of the Soviet Union score = 65; 3 upper level credits
Nov 12, 2009: DSST Intro to Computing score = 450;
Nov 12, 2009: DSST Substance Abuse score = 476; 3 upper level credits
Nov 18, 2009: CLEP French 77 = 12 credits
upcoming:
CLEP -, German, Humanities
enrolled at TESC; registered for one course to get a G.P.A. and hope to graduate in June.
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#4
I think that after you learn a decent amount of one it makes it easier to learn others. It seems like you just get a better understanding of sentence structure and how to learn the pieces better after the first one.

I also wanted to add to Mightymouse that for learning Japanese Pimsleur has been my favorite tool so far. It doesn't give you the written piece that Rosetta Stone gives you, but I haven't tried anything better for just getting you to the point of understanding the gist of what's going on around you and allowing you to participate in the conversations. I haven't had the chance to go to Japan yet, but Pimsleur has made dinners and activities with my boyfriend's family easier for me (his parents speak Japanese almost exclusively). I can actually understand what's being talked about for the most part (although speaking Japanese in front of his mother requires a level of bravery I haven't achieved yet haha)!
BBA, MBA/ACC

Currently pursuing AS, working on 35ish CLEP credit hours, 3/7 tests complete!


English Comp w/Essay (3) - 7/09 - 71
Intro to Sociology (3) - 8/09 - 72
Intro to Psychology (3) - 8/09 - 68
Biology (8)
College Mathematics (3)
College Algebra (3)
American Lit (6)
6/33 Community College Credits Complete
15/62 Total Credits Complete
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#5
Another useful tool for the Japanese language student, at least in my experience, was the magazine Hiragana Times. This magazine has articles in english, hiragana, katakana, and kanji with the associated hiragana above it (furigana). If you haven't already, I highly recommend learning to read the 46 hiragana and 46 katakana characters. It will vastly improve your speed in grasping the language, and as you perfect the sounds of the 46 characters, your pronunciation will only get better. I've never used Rosetta Stone, or any software for that matter, so I don't know if it teaches the alphabets.

Being in Japan is perfect for self-study; you have access to a lot of good materials and can immerse yourself in the language. I was also helped by children's books and various manga that are completely in hiragana. If you buy some of those books, just translate them as your vocabulary grows. Exercises like that really helped. It also helps to make some Japanese friends. In any case, good luck!

Nihongo ga daisuki desu yo! Korekaramo ganbatte kudasai!
M.S. University of Wisconsin-Platteville In Progress
M.S. University of Maryland University College 2011
B.S. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 2008

CLEP's passed:
College Mathematics
English Composition (w/o essay)
Information Systems and Computer Applications
Natural Sciences
Social Sciences and History


DSST's passed:
Ethics in America

General Anthropology
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#6
I know Engish (duh) and working on espanol.

My brother, though, can speak English, chinese, and spanish.
me = Cool
cr: 63
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#7
Learning languages has always been fun and easy for me. I guess it's because I grew up hearing two languages, English and Chinese mandarin, spoken to me all the time. In elementary, I easily picked up Spanish, then German in middle school, then French in high school. The only problem was I forgot the Spanish and German when I stopped practicing it. Now, I can read and write basic French, but the pronunciation is very difficult for me. As long as I keep studying and practicing, I gain more confidence and understanding in the sentence structure, grammar, and such. o(n_<)o
By the way, I usually use sites that offer free flashcards, exercises, or quizzes to help me out. Or I just borrow audio books or textbooks from the library. Whenever I'm stuck on a question, I just ask on a language site. For listening and speaking, I have some friends who can speak French, and plenty of relatives to practice mandarin on.
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#8
I've forgotten every one I've studied, but this is the list:
Latin
German
Spanish
French
Esperanto
Russian
English
I've tried chinese, vietnamese, and other oriental languages and I can't get hear the minor variations (in addition they sound unpleasant to my western ear).




How to learn a language in 1 hour:
How to Learn (But Not Master) Any Language in 1 Hour (Plus: A Favor)
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#9
Thanks for the link, Kevin. I think those ideas will come in handy.

Here's a link I found: Learning Languages

Probably fairly easy to find, given the url. :p Still, good content. The section on language difficulty and overviews was quite interesting.
[SIZE="1"]BS General Business, March 2010

CLEP College Algebra 51
CLEP Natural Sciences 63
CLEP Social Sciences and History 59
CLEP A&I Lit. 74
CLEP Intro to Sociology 67
CLEP Info Systems and Computer App. 58
CLEP Intro to Psychology 66
CLEP Intro to Business Law 64
CLEP Principles of Management 73
CLEP Principles of Marketing 63
CLEP Principles of Macroeconomics 61
CLEP Principles of Microeconomics 62
DSST Fundamentals of Counseling 49
DSST Principles of Supervision 61
DSST Substance Abuse 441 (Pass)
DSST Business Law II 67
DSST Management Information Systems 436
DSST Principles of Statistics 466
DSST Principles of Finance 435
DSST Civil War and Reconstruction 57
DSST Criminal Justice 431
ECE English Comp C :mad:
ECE World Population A
ECE Ethics, Theory and Practice A
ECE Organizational Behavior A
ECE Human Resource Management B
EC Business Policy B
Straighterline Accounting I B
Straighterline Accounting II B
CSU Pueblo Ops Management A
[/SIZE]
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