As to pronunciation, grammar and language learning.
Look at this: 'to jest'
Do you know how to pronounce it?
Of course, you must be joking.
OK, say it aloud. I can't hear you. I still can't hear you. Where's the play button? The link is broken. There's no play button.
I've been looking at 'to jest' for twenty minutes and I still don't know how to pronounce it.
My neighbour has a daughter. She can read anything, give her a newspaper, she will read it. Give her a psychology book she will read it. She is extremely clever, but she's only four and still has trouble with some sounds in her mother tongue.
I wrote: 'to jest pszczoła' and asked her to read it. 'To jest pscoła' she said.
I wrote: '発音' and asked if she could read it. She laughed and said it was a picture, you look at pictures, you admire them or abhor them, you can't read them. It's a funny picture, says she, it reminds her of a scary clown.
I said you can read pictures like these.
So how do you say it? she laughed.
'Hacuon' I said.
'Hacuon' she repeated. Why don't you write it the way you say it, then.
I wrote: hatuon.
She looked at it. But it says 'hatuon', you can't even write, she said.
You're right, I said. In fact you write it はつおん or ハツオン.
You're pulling my leg, says she. Those are not letters, I can't read them.
I can, I said.
How?
Because I know. I learned how.
How did you learn?
I listened and looked, that's how...
I wrote: 'know'.
'Knof (k-n-o-f)' she read.
No, I said. You say it 'no'. And I wrote 'no'.
You're pulling my leg, she said. You say 'noł' and you write 'know' and 'no'? The same?
Yes, I said. More or less. But I don't say 'noł', I say '/nəʊ/.
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/know So you know now?
Yes, she said. I know you're pulling my leg.
Which leg? I asked. You have two legs.
By the way, 'To jest pszczoła' means 'This/that is a/the bee'. That what it means. But you still don't know how to pronounce it.
LETTERS DON'T TALK.