



Wow! Most young immigrants / ABC's tend to reject their native culture. Not only do you not reject it, you actually study it in school!NoWoRRieS wrote:My first language is Chao Zhou (also Chiu Chao or Teo Chew). I started learning English in pre-school. Then some time in elementary school, I started learning Cantonese, but that didn't go far. I can understand little to none now. Afterwards, I started learning Mandarin at the insistence of my parents, which I have become truly grateful for. I am a Chinese language and literature major now.I also took 3 years of Spanish in high school, but all I got out of that was "no se". Quite pitiful, but that's my bit.
Nothing to feel bad about, knowing japanese makes you in high demand around here as many are j-culture fans around heresweetxvanilla wrote:erm i know japanese and english..that's it
I guess I'm just lucky my parents wouldn't let me.... I've met a lot of people who know little about their native culture. I can't say that it was a conscious decision though. I feel like it's more often than not a consequence of situation.auroragb wrote:Wow! Most young immigrants / ABC's tend to reject their native culture. Not only do you not reject it, you actually study it in school!NoWoRRieS wrote:My first language is Chao Zhou (also Chiu Chao or Teo Chew). I started learning English in pre-school. Then some time in elementary school, I started learning Cantonese, but that didn't go far. I can understand little to none now. Afterwards, I started learning Mandarin at the insistence of my parents, which I have become truly grateful for. I am a Chinese language and literature major now.I also took 3 years of Spanish in high school, but all I got out of that was "no se". Quite pitiful, but that's my bit.
iceberri wrote:My first language was Cantonese so I can speak and understand, but I can't read & write unfortunately. >_< I know a bunch of phrases in Japanese that are common in anime, and I want to learn Korean... badly but pronouncing it is just so hard!! @_@
I found a site that teaches you korean.. http://korean.sogang.ac.kr/index.html but still, their pronunciation is much too fast for me.
UGH. I hate that. At my old high school, we had an amazing Japanese teacher, and a terrible Spanish teacher. No one wanted to take Spanish because she just didn't care. She didn't like the language, and she didn't like the kids.martina_SMO wrote: And I tried to study Korean but I hated it, I'm sure it was the teacher's fault
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