Do you use the language besides speaking to your relatives?
I thought ABC's are born in America therefore how would they be from Taiwan or China Mainland?
Do Chinese Descents even use their Chinese language skills a lot?
Would you say ABCs have a distinct accent when speaking it?
You must remember no mater how many generations a Chinese is born outside of China they will always be Chinese. Most are enriched in Chinese culture, writing, and dialect of their family. Most Chines Americans can read Chinese very well. Remember, Chinese are fiercely loyal to China, even 3rd or 4th generation Chinese. A Chinese American is always Chinese first and always loyal to China first.
You must remember no mater how many generations a Chinese is born outside of China they will always be Chinese. Most are enriched in Chinese culture, writing, and dialect of their family. Most Chines Americans can read Chinese very well. Remember, Chinese are fiercely loyal to China, even 3rd or 4th generation Chinese. A Chinese American is always Chinese first and always loyal to China first.
You must remember no mater how many generations a Chinese is born outside of China they will always be Chinese. Most are enriched in Chinese culture, writing, and dialect of their family. Most Chines Americans can read Chinese very well. Remember, Chinese are fiercely loyal to China, even 3rd or 4th generation Chinese. A Chinese American is always Chinese first and always loyal to China first.
This is over generalizing but I agree with your point
they are not loyal to China as in the country, but they are very loyal to the Asian Chinese way of living (familial piety, respect elders, family over individualism, etc)
Chinese is as hard to learn as it is to win the SuperBowl for the San Francisco 49ers
As mentioned, the one benefit of Chinese is that the grammar is extremely simple. In English "You went to the store yesterday" but in Chinese "You go store yesterday". In English "You are going to the store tomorrow" but in Chinese "You go store tomorrow".
Anyone here successfully learned Chinese as a secondary language?
I heard that pin yin is very hard to adapt.
You just explained so much to me. LOL.
Seriously, I never knew that that was the root of their particularly bad English conjugation.
Thank you for contributing absolutely nothing to the thread with one of the dumbest replies on this board in some time.
You must remember no mater how many generations a Chinese is born outside of China they will always be Chinese. Most are enriched in Chinese culture, writing, and dialect of their family. Most Chines Americans can read Chinese very well. Remember, Chinese are fiercely loyal to China, even 3rd or 4th generation Chinese. A Chinese American is always Chinese first and always loyal to China first.
You just explained so much to me. LOL.
Seriously, I never knew that that was the root of their particularly bad English conjugation.
So like illiterate Asian red necks?
I am surprised even Chinese people that can Speak Chinese don't know how to read/write the language. The writing system for it must be really something. 0.0
Shit.. I wonder if I can become more artistic by learning Chinese.
Rosetta Stone.
Please don't use that to learn a language. I beg of you....
Overpriced and useless.
Take a class if you can, or buy some books and find some language exchange partners, you will be better for it. I promise.
Ya... I'm trying to learn Mandarin using Rosetta Stone. I'm actually picking the spoken up quite well (guess why...), but gave up a few units ago on even bothering to learn how to read/write. I'm too lazy to bother to memorize so many characters.
IMO Rosetta Stone is horrible. It can get you speaking and understanding some spoken phrases, but it never goes through the basics of WHY things are the way they are.
I tried Rosetta Stone to learn Spanish. It just goes through phrases and different mixes of words they've gone over. But I had no idea why I was saying "to drink" in one way in one phrase but differently in another. And it offered no explanation. Infuriating. Right now I'm just fucking confused with the different tenses because RS offers no explanation. The best I can do is observe differences and make a guess as to what the rule should be, but with no real confirmation on if my guess is even correct...
The guessing game does get annoying... Sometimes I just want a simple explanation of what the hell is going on from the picture, but give up. Eventually the repetition of the same phrase a dozen or so times gets through to me. All could have been done with a simple translation though... I think of it as Ikea instructions up until a while ago -- they used to not have a single word of anything, if I remember right. It's kind of how a grade 1-4, ten or less kid might learn a language. I didn't start analyzing sentences in depth in English until grade 7.
On the otherhand, going through an exercise book or dictionary and looking up every word isn't the best way to learn a language either. Having a formal class plus a private tutor/native speaker would rock, but $$$$$$.
As it stands, I think RS is okay. I went a bit crazy and got both Mandarin and French. My French is passable (second national language), so I'm trying to sync the two up to kind of help translate.
I speak two Indian languages but I find Chinese (yes, I'm aware that there are different dialects like Mandarin, Cantonese etc.) to be a difficult language to comprehend. To an outsider, it sounds like 'ching chong chen niha...'. I've always wondered, if I go up to a Chinese person and say 'ching chong....(insert more Chinese sounding 'words' here)', would it actually end up meaning something ?
Apart from that, the script seems to be complicated.
If I go up to u and start speaking like Apu will u understand me more?