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Edited: 2011-02-05, 8:24 am

I would like to see your results. Haha.
Like Japanese, there are no spaces between words, you can leave out subjects of sentences, there are counters/classifiers for everything. Thai has 5 tones, but I think you can get comfortable with them pretty quickly with an SRS and audio files (or by talking to Thai people).fluxcapacitor Wrote:Wow, I was just thinking recently that people like IceCream and ta12121 could get so far in Thai in a short amount of time.Well a the moment i'm not interested in thai. It's all japanese. I won't stop until i finish!I would like to see your results. Haha.
I'm learning both Thai and Japanese right now. I suck at both of them, but I think Thai is the easier language. Simpler grammar. No conjugations. Fewer characters.Like Japanese, there are no spaces between words, you can leave out subjects of sentences, there are counters/classifiers for everything. Thai has 5 tones, but I think you can get comfortable with them pretty quickly with an SRS and audio files (or by talking to Thai people).
The weather is Thailand is hot, the food is great and cheap, the people are nice, and it feels pretty safe to me, although though there are protests going on right now in Bangkok: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8565658.stm
Delina Wrote:Indonesian, by contrast, is incredibly easy to learn. I lived in Indonesia off and on in elementary school and in middle/high school. I learned functional, but not quite conversational, Indonesian in just a few months (and that was just classes so it's not like I was really trying!). There is no conjugation, grammar is incredibly basic, pronunciation is straightforward and it uses Roman script so it's pretty much just learning the vocabulary.Yeah, I learned Indonesia in high school for about 5 years and have visited a few times. It's a relatively simple language to learn (much easier than Japanese). Although I disagree that there is *no* conjugation type stuff. Turning nouns into verbs using ber- or mem- can sometimes be confusing, but it's nothing near the level of Japanese type word ending changes.

IceCream Wrote:i have decided to ditch japan in favour of somewhere sunnier ^_^. For instance... Thailand. it seems there's a lot of teaching jobs there too, and TEFL courses are cheap. Plus it looks like there's a good standard of living for the wages. Might be a good place to start, i can always go to Japan in the future sometime. (or on holiday?)I went to Thailand during February and it was the stickiest I ever felt. I was sweating while taking a shower. From what others have told me, most teachers have several part time jobs and you have to cross the border ever month (I think it was changed to every three months recently) to renew your visa. The pay is equivalent to US$5/hour so making a trip to Japan will eat up a year's savings.
Asriel Wrote:Funny how sometimes -4°C can seem like "Oh, what a nice refreshing breeze," whereas 0°C can seem like "Jesus, why the hell is it so cold out?"Why would a lower temperature feel more pleasant? Windchill (in both metric and imperial) makes a big difference though if you're not accounting for that.
Guess I'll never get the hang of the metric system...

Babyrat Wrote:but why? Why go so far to give up something you have strived so hard to achieve? Somewhere warmer? try saying that in a Japanese summer down in the south, if you can mange to say it through the panting.Most people who study Japanese reach a point where they feel like giving up either through boredom or frustration with not progressing as they'd like, or burnout. This is when many switch to studying Korean or Chinese. The remainder keep on keeping on.
To me it just sounds really odd to give up something that you have poured so much time into, maybe you are just having a downer period? I had 1 a couple of months ago where I really wanted to learn korean and ditch Japanese.
Jarvik7 Wrote:Most people who study Japanese reach a point where they feel like giving up either through boredom or frustration with not progressing as they'd like, or burnout. This is when many switch to studying Korean or Chinese. The remainder keep on keeping on.I don't understand why someone would 'ditch' a language because it is too hard and then try to learn a new language that is about equally difficult (from what I have heard, never studied Korean or Chinese myself). Just go on to learn Spanish or something then
Aijin Wrote:You know you're fat when you see the title "all Thai all the time" and instantly assume it means going on an all-thai-food dietStay away from evil American food while abroad! Our biggest export is heart disease in the form of KFC, MCd's and Pizza Slut. It seems like everyone in Japan works themselves to death, smokes and drinks heavily and yet they outlive Americans by four years. It's the crap we eat.
Jarvik7 Wrote:I went to my last two years of university in Edmonton where it drops below -50C with windchill in February, so I have no sympathy for people who think Japan is coldAlso being from Edmonton, I never think it's cold here. When it crosses my mind that it's a little chilly, I just think to how cold it would be back home and then it's okay again. I never hear snow squeak like styrofoam here, my eyelashes never freeze together, and this is the first winter I never got frostbite.
RisuMiso Wrote:Damn and I thought cornwall got cold in the winter, -10c! makes it look like a summer day compared to that.Jarvik7 Wrote:I went to my last two years of university in Edmonton where it drops below -50C with windchill in February, so I have no sympathy for people who think Japan is coldAlso being from Edmonton, I never think it's cold here. When it crosses my mind that it's a little chilly, I just think to how cold it would be back home and then it's okay again. I never hear snow squeak like styrofoam here, my eyelashes never freeze together, and this is the first winter I never got frostbite.