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wai_muna Joined: 05 Jan 2006 Total posts: 212 Location: malaysia Age: 25 Gender: Female |
Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2007 10:01 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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1st chinese word=torche(thanks)
1st korean word=biane
hiihihiih
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Néa Vanille Joined: 26 Mar 2005 Total posts: 123 Location: Seoul, South Korea (whooooza!) Gender: Female |
Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2007 10:21 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| Aulcard wrote: | | One of the Korean students also studying here was trying to encourage me to learn Korean... despite having told me numerous times that the pronunciation was extremely difficult for foriegners to learn. She tested me on some pronunciation and I just couldnt get it right. I seriously couldnt tell what I was doing wrong, as far as I was able to tell I was copying her tones as well as I possibly could, but she told me it was totally wrong. |
Korean pronunciation isn't easy, no doubt about it, but I wouldn't be too discouraged by you not being able to repeat words correctly. Korean is a language that is almost impossible to parrot because, due to its phonetic differences to English and Japanese, you need basic knowledge of the sound system and the way things are written in order to pronounce them correctly. Learning the alphabet helped me a lot with the pronunciation. Koreans compliment me on my pronunciation these days and even tell me that I sound almost like a Korean.
Korean is also a flat language and you won't need to learn any tones. Therefore, I'd say that Korean pronunciation can't be that much harder than Chinese pronunciation (though I'm not 100% sure, I never attempted to learn Chinese yet.)
Before I started learning Korean, I was also in the difficult position to decide which to learn first. I originally wanted to learn Mandarin first, but eventually got sucked into Korean entertainment and decided to try to live in Korea, as I find to be it a very fascinating place to live in with high and safe living standards. I do want to learn both Japanese and Chinese after I feel secure with my Korean (hopefully after about 2 years of living in Korea), though. Since I'm still young, but have many languages to learn ahead of me, I fully plan on moving to China after the completion of my language education in Korea. In retrospect, I don't feel like my decision to learn Korean first was such a bad one - Korean writing can be learned in a day, but learning how to speak Korean takes a lot of time. With Chinese, it's the complete opposite, so it seems to me like spending time in Korea now and in China later is a rather good strategy to follow.
If the question was learn EITHER Chinese OR Korean then, as much as I love Korean, I'd probably pick Chinese. Nobody can deny how important the language is and you can practice it almost everywhere, with so many Chinese around.
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Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2007 1:34 pm Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| IMHO, Chinese is definitely much harder to learn.
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kobe23 Joined: 06 Jun 2006 Total posts: 741 Location: Melbourne, Australia Age: 30 Gender: Male |
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kclass Joined: 13 Jan 2008 Total posts: 7 Gender: Unknown |
Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 8:41 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| I speak Chinese, Japanese and a little Korean, and I don't think it's right to say that one language is harder than another. Different languages are difficult for different reasons.
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Néa Vanille Joined: 26 Mar 2005 Total posts: 123 Location: Seoul, South Korea (whooooza!) Gender: Female |
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kobe23 Joined: 06 Jun 2006 Total posts: 741 Location: Melbourne, Australia Age: 30 Gender: Male |
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kclass Joined: 13 Jan 2008 Total posts: 7 Gender: Unknown |
Posted: Tue Jan 22, 2008 10:07 am Post subject: Post Rating: -1 |
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Hi!
I speak Korean and Chinese, Chinese much better than Korean though. I learnt Chinese first, and I'd probably do it that way again.
Chinese would probably be easier because where I live there are a lot more Chinese speakers. Also, Chinese seems to be more popular, with more resources around for learning it. Seriously, I've found KoreanClass101.com for Korean and not much else.
All the learning 'tricks' that I learnt picking up Chinese meant that I was much better off learning Korean, from limited learning resources. If I had started with Korean, I think it would have been much harder.
Another thing that helped was that more than half of my class in university (in Shanghai) was Korean! That so many Koreans are learning Chinese was a big help.
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mjf Joined: 19 Jan 2007 Total posts: 81 Location: France Gender: Female |
Posted: Tue Jan 22, 2008 10:40 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| I think it's better to learn the Chinese first because If you can write the tradition Chinese character, you can have a simple communication with the Japanese by writing, but not all Japanese would knew Chinese character only those middle class one or above are more likely to knew it, that's what I've been told.
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hoosdathu Joined: 30 Dec 2007 Total posts: 27 Gender: Male |
Posted: Fri Jan 25, 2008 9:42 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| well chinese or korean first depends on ur needs, doens't it?
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viviers_x Joined: 19 Feb 2008 Total posts: 4 Gender: Unknown |
Posted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 4:59 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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i'd learn korean. :]
since i'm so obsessed with the people now.
already know chinese. my mother tongue.
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ImL0st Joined: 25 Oct 2007 Total posts: 289 Gender: Unknown |
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pongalong Joined: 22 Jun 2007 Total posts: 21 Gender: Unknown |
Posted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 5:21 am Post subject: Post Rating: 0 |
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| hm, i'm chinese, well taiwanese to be exact, and i may be biased, but i believe chinese to be the easier language to learn because there aren't so many grammar rules as there are in korean and plus, chinese/mandarin has a more direct pronunciation to it than korean does. koreans tends to slur their words when they speak and everything kind of flows together. don't get me wrong, it's a beautiful language, but it seems very hard to learn.
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kurotori_83 Joined: 24 Feb 2008 Total posts: 3 Gender: Unknown |
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