FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 14 hours ago
It’s not an easy language to master even if you lived full-time in Japan. Everything about the language is needlessly complicated. The grammar, the writing system, the social conventions that influence word choices. Anime Japanese is its own kettle of fish. Overly colloquial or stylized samurai talk - neither of which you’ll get taught in most language courses.
Now, you could be a savant who picks it up in no time. More likely you’ll be in it for a couple of weeks and give up - or life. It’s not a bad hobby. Even beyond Duolingo you’ll find plenty of resources online and lots of it free.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 13 hours ago
I mean, there is no language that isn't needlessly complicated. At least Japanese doesn't have gendered nouns.
tanisnikana@lemmy.world 13 hours ago
I mean, I thought Japanese was super straightforward compared to English. I’ve been speaking English for three goddamn decades and I:
Eq0@literature.cafe 13 hours ago
The last point resonates with me! 😭 all other European languages are actually write-as-you-speak. Why, English, why???
FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 12 hours ago
Danish has entered the chat. They don’t pronounce anything the way it’s written either. And French consists of 80 percent silent letters or thereabouts. It’s not just English in Europe.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 13 hours ago
The Great Vowel Shift. English writing was sensible in the early 14th century around the time of Chaucer, but then shit got out of whack speaking-wise and the writing system was never adjusted to reconcile the difference. So you can blame the Black Death I guess.
ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml 11 hours ago
In my mind drink is exclusively for liquids, which is why drinking a solid sounds weird to me. Because there’s no chewing involved swallowing pills makes more sense than eating them, but I’ll admit I don’t know why “take” is the usual verb.
FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 13 hours ago
Consider the needlessly complicated to be applied on top of a general baseline of needlessly complicated that applies to any language.
While they don’t have gendered nouns, they have something equally unnerving for the beginner learner. Their noun classes evolve mostly around the nature of shapes and sizes, which becomes an issue the moment you need to count anything. For which there are two systems, one of which stops at ten, and the other is highly irregular in its forms. And don’t get me started on the calendar. English is relatively unsophisticated by comparison.
NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io 12 hours ago
I think you mean Wago and Kango counting, in which case Kango isn't irregular at all. There are sound changes, but they almost all follow a handful of basic rules. Wago is plenty irregular, but it also stops at ten and is only used for a handful of things.
The calendar? Their months are literally just firstmonth, secondmonth, thirdmonth, etc.
tanisnikana@lemmy.world 13 hours ago
toki pona li pona.