About the Author
Angela Lansbury is teacher of English. (Advanced English and English as a Second Language or English as a Foreign Language, French and other languages, an aspiring polyglot.)
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is teacher of English. (Advanced English and English as a Second Language or English as a Foreign Language, French and other languages, an aspiring polyglot.)
These notes are for my own benefit but I am sharing my knowledge with you. Here's a tip from the polyglots Facebook page which feeds onto my website.
Facebook Polyglots
https://www.facebook.com/groups/polygotcommunity
translate google
Chineasy Flashcards from
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and other languages to Toastmasters clubs and businesses.
Please share links to your favourite posts.
Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 VC5
The Author - Quick Quotations
Let's start at the top of the body and work down. If you are learning English, or want to teach children and foreigners in a fun way, you can use the song Heads And Shoulders Knees And Toes.
HUMAN BODY PARTS
Heads
I'll give you a heads up (start)
please get it into your little head (meaning brain, not head, condescending, implies you are stupid, ill informed)
I can't get it/her/him out of my head (always thinking of it, can't forget)
Hair
if you don't get in my hair (annoy me)
Face
let's face it / face up to it (recognize it, admit it, be courageous, or confront it)
Neck
it's a pain in the neck (annoying)
Eye
get some shut eye (sleep)
Nose
don't be nosey (inquisitive)
he/she is a nosey Parker (inquisitive and interfering)
Mouth
bad mouthing somebody (speaking ill of them)
paying lip service (following the exact rule but not the intention of the rule)
get your teeth in it (get started, get involved in a task or problem)
on the tip of my tongue (trying to remember, I was about to think it or say it)
you took the words out of my mouth (you said first what I was thinking and about to say)
Chin
chin up (be cheerful and confident or courageous)
don't stick your neck out (don't get noticed, get involved)
Neck
necking (kissing)
UPPER BODY
Shoulder
put your shoulder to it
Heart
she's/he's/it's in my heart (fond feelings towards him or her)
heartfelt (strongly felt, emotional, sincere)
Don't be half-hearted (using little effort)
Stomach
we couldn't stomach it (felt uneasy and queasy - could not face it!)
I had a gut feeling (instinctive, not rational but strong, unnerving, worrying, insistent feeling, a conclusion based on no evidence about a person or situation but experience of previous similar situations)
ARMS
Arm
at arm's length (distant)
Hand
keep it handy (useful, nearby). You have to hand it to him/her/it (you must concede, give him/her/it credit)
Fingers
at my fingertips (nearby)
Nails
Nail it (not from fingernail but hammering a nail, meaning got the meaning)
LOWER BODY
Butt
He's a pain in the butt (pain in the buttocks)
put it where the sun don't shine (hide it)
let's sit on it/don't sit on (do nothing)
LOWER LIMBS: Legs and feet
Knee
a knees up (dance)
Run
give somebody a run for their money ( )
Sit
a sit down (rest); don't sit on it (procrastinate, take no action)
getting away with it (going uncaught and unpunished, not confronted)
confronted (opposed and stopped and spoke accusingly to somebody)
Back
glad we've seen the back of him/her/it (glad they it or he or she are gone)
Leg
give somebody a leg up (help, help somebody up the social or work or professional or career ladder)
Foot
playing footsie (playing by nudging toes and feet, kicking for attention and entwining ankles)
get off on the wrong foot (start aggressively or confrontationally, with an argument or disagreement or insult, or dispute, or misunderstanding)
Put your best foot forward (do your best, start energetically)
Toe
tip-toeing around it/the problem (avoiding the problem, not speaking clearly and not taking firm action)
a slip-up (a mistake)
Action
let's kick off (let's start)
TREE PARTS
Family Tree (diagram of ancestors and descendants)
Chip: He's a chip off the old block (just like his parent(s) or family or ancestors)
Leaf: let's turn over a new leaf (start again with something new)
Branch: in our branch office (subsidiary)
You could compile your own list, laboriously, by going through each body part in a large dictionary.
Then you could do the same in your favourite foreign language if you are bilingual or learning, to see if the other language uses the same phrase, something similar, or a totally different equivalent idiom.
When I did an online search for body parts I found a website on idioms and I was surprised and pleased to see that their list and mine were totally different.
To give just one example, break a leg, said in the theatre before a first night performance, an old superstition, not a hostile remark, but thwarting an ill-wishing devil.
Useful Websites
https://examples.yourdictionary.com/reference/examples/common-idioms-using-body-parts.html
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is an author, personal tutor, class teacher, and workshop trainer for adults and businesses.
The writing is so pretty. But so complicated. How about a couple of easy words. The Duolingo course was not yet available in January 2021 so I looked at Memrise. Tamil has specific singular words for older brother and other concepts where English uses two words, but I wanted to remember just the most basic words which are used most often.
English - Tamil
mother - amma
father - appa
you - nee
Tamil - English
amma - mother
appa - father
nee - you
The words for mother and father are similar to so many other languages.
English - mum/mummy. American - Mom/mammy . Pop. Latin - mater. pater. Hebrew ima - mother. Papa. Mama.
Nee for you is the same as Mandarin Chinese, where a popular greeting is ni hao, literally you good.
Useful Websites
https://app.memrise.com/course/80049/100-tamil-words/1/
Useful book
Foreign Workers and Domestic helpers Language guide, published by Mighty Minds. Sold in Singapore at Mustapha's department store near Little India, and in Popular Bookshop which has several branches including one near the National Library.
Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author, teacher of English and other languages, language evaluator at toastmasters International. Workshops on the English language and business English..
Flag of Spain.
In Spain we checked into our hotel, a parador, late at night. Next morning we came down for breakfast. Where was breakfast? What was the Spanish word for breakfast? The receptionist did not understand English, breakfast, nor French, petit Dejeuner, german, frushstuck. Niet (Rusian for no). She did not understand. We had to wait another fifteen minutes whilst I caught the lift back to the bedroom floor, walked the corridor, hunted for my key, found the key to my suitcase, located the Spanish English dictionary, and retraced my steps to my husband ('What kept you so long?')
Desayuno!
The Spanish for breakfast is desayuno. We could not have worked it out in a million years. Now we know. Never forgotten. Desperate for breakfast. Ay-yi-yi. You know. (Now you know.) Desayuno.
So far, so good. Now we wanted to order eggs. The waitress and chefs offered many choices. What were they?
English - American
Fried egg - sunny side up
American - English
sunny side up - (normal) fried egg
over easy - fried egg (turned over and) cooked both sides (to seal the white)
English - Spanish
Boiled Egg
hard boiled egg
soft boiled egg
fried egg
scrambled egg
peached egg
omelette
From translate google I received these translations
Spanish
Huevo duro Huevo cocido huevo pasado por agua huevo frito huevos revueltos huevo escalfado tortilla
Malay
Telur rebus telur rebus telur rebus lembut telur goreng telur hancur telur rebus telur dadar
French
Oeuf dur œuf dur oeuf à la coque oeuf frit oeuf brouillé oeuf poché omelette
German
Gekochtes Ei
hartgekochtes Ei (hard cooked)
weich gekochtes Ei
Spiegelei (mirror egg)
Rührei
pochiertes Ei (like a pocket egg)
Omelette
水煮蛋
水煮蛋
水煮蛋
煎鸡蛋
炒鸡蛋
荷包蛋
煎蛋卷
Shuǐ zhǔ dàn shuǐ zhǔ dàn shuǐ zhǔ dàn jiān jīdàn chǎo jīdàn hébāodàn jiān dàn juǎn
If you want any more languages, just copy my English words above, paste them into Translate Google under English on the left, select your chosen language on the right.
Either reverse the words from the chosen language back to English to see if you get the same thing. Or check with a native speaker. Or a physical dictionary - now at least you know what to look for in the other language. Or al of the above. If you read aloud each time, you should have memorized it. You can also get the pronunciation from translate google, just look for the lousepeaker symbol, or from dictionary.com or wikipedia and wikirecipe
On the Facebook Polyglot page this was suggested succinctly.
The Spanish word for fried egg, estrellados, comes from the word star, describing the yellow in the middle of the white like a star. (The English name Stella comes from the word star.)
(I keep writing f r i e d and a spellchecker waits until I look away and then keeps turning the word back to f r i e n d.)
Spanish omelette, according to Wikipedia:
ortilla de patatas, tortilla de papas or tortilla española
Useful Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_omelette#:~:text=Spanish%20omelette
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_cuisine
https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Spanish_cuisine#Q622512
Facebook Polyglots
https://www.facebook.com/groups/polygotcommunity
translate google
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and other languages to Toastmasters clubs and businesses.
Please share links to your favourite posts.
Angela Lansbury B A Hons ACG ALB PM5 VC5
The Author - Quick Quotations
Years ago I went to a Chinese speaking Toastmasters club in Singapore after I saw somebody had written on Facebook that he went to a Chinese Toastmasters club to learn Chinese.
Singapore flag.Chinese Challenges In Singapore
I could not understand a word.
In the interval. I had enormous trouble finding the toilet in the interval. I tried pointing to my groin and miming hand washing. Eventually somebody showed me the floor with the toilets and left me. I did not know which toilet was which.
Now I have learned the sign for women from the Chineasy flashcards, with their explanation that the old-fashioned idea was that a woman is kneeling, I prefer to think of it as a woman in the ladies toilet, maybe a Japanese woman, adjusting her hair with a hat pin or adjusting her hat.
I know that men is the other sign. To me it looks like a man running, maybe running to the toilet.
At the end of the meeting I had trouble explaining that I needed a taxi or railway station to get home. If you are a complete beginner, your best bet is a bilingual club.
I went to a bilingual club and I kept hearing 'knee how?' followed 'by how!' After somebody who was bilingual explained to me that Ni is you and hao is good, and ni hao, you good? ia a greeting, wo which the reply could be simply, hao, meaning good, I had that ingrained for life.
In China I thought I had learned the toilet signs. I copied the sign outside the ladies toilet. An hour later I passed a toilet, recognized part of the sign and thought, that's it, the Ladies.
However, I went in a saw men's backs. I retreated fast.
Downstairs I found the guide and insisted that the guide come up to the toilets to look at the sign and compare it with what I had written down. The sign I had copied was indeed over the ladies toilet. What was wrong? I had not copied down the sign for ladies. I had copied down the sign for toilet.
Now I have learned the signs for men and women. The woman sign looks like either a woman with breasts or the classic drawing of a kneeling woman.
Useful Websites
Chineasy Flashcards
Chineasy Book
Earworms disc and language book
Foreign Workers and Domestic Helpers Language Guide from Mighty Minds
https://www.livinglanguage.com/languagedemo/chinese/2501/essential-essential-expressions
To learn Mandarin Chinese, here are some websites for you:
Youku(优酷),
Tudou(土豆),
CNTV, and
Slow Chinese.
Some good apps are (alphbetically)
ChineseSkill,
Duolingo, (better on your laptop than on the phone)
Hello Talk.
Memrise
About the Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, brought up British speaking British English. Has lived in the USA, Spain and Singapore.
Numerous toastmasters International speakers groups are no meeting online and offer you the opportunity to hear speakers of other languages.
French
Mandarin
Spanish
Tamil
Useful Websites
https://www.meetup.com/en-AU/internationalspeakers/
ToastmastersInternational.org/find_a_club
Braddell Heights Advanced - has multi-lingual members
The current President (2020-2021) speaks American English, and Japanese.
The immediate past president and current PR, speaks British English and French.
The current Vice President of Education speaks Mandarin.
The club attracts many speakers of other Asian languages such as Mandarin, and Cantonese.
From Wiki
...
Mnemonics may be helpful in learning foreign languages, for example by transposing difficult foreign words with words in a language the learner knows already, also called "cognates" which are very common in the Spanish language.
A useful such technique is to find linkwords, words that have the same pronunciation in a known language as the target word, and associate them visually or auditorially with the target word.
For example, in trying to assist the learner to remember ohel (אוהל), the Hebrew word for tent, the linguist Ghil'ad Zuckermann proposes the memorable sentence "Oh hell, there's a raccoon in my tent".[20]
The memorable sentence "There's a fork in Ma's leg" helps the learner remember that the Hebrew word for fork is mazleg (מזלג).[21]
Similarly, to remember the Hebrew word bayit (בית), meaning house, one can use the sentence "that's a lovely house, I'd like to buy it."[21]
...
I have just made up one for the Hebrew word for boy, which is yeled. The boy yelled at the educator, yel-ed.
English - Hebrew
boy - yeled
fork - mazleg
house - bayit
tent - ohel
Hebrew - English
bayit - house
mazleg - fork
ohel - tent
yeled - boy
Useful Websites
duolingo.com Hebrew
translate google English - Hebrew Hebrew-English
If you are not sure if a word is Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, Russian, whatever, type in Detect language-English.
Wikipedia article on mnemonics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mnemonic
About The Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and a travel writer and photographer.
Please share links to your favourite posts.
If your spell checker or predictive text is writing nonsense it could be because of one of these confusions. I shall add to this list regularly.
hangar - aircraft hangar
hanger - clothes hanger
peer - equal, upper class
pier - walkway from beach out into sea, or projection into sea for boats
principal - chief person, first person, such as head of the school
Principle - rule or belief, such as it is one of my principles to be honest and tell the truth
to - direction towards
two - number, one, two, three
too - too much, too many
Pronunciation Confusions
career - emphasis on second syllable, profession
carrier - emphasis on first syllable, then second, then third, ca as in cat, re as in reverse, er as in the second syllable in error, carries something
Useful Websites
About the Author
Angela Lansbury
About the Author's Language Experience
Angela Lansbury is a travel writer and photographer, blogger and public speaker. She is British but she and her next of kin have lived in the USA, Spain, multi-lingual Switzerland and multilingual Singapore. She is active in toastmasters clubs and has visited Toastmasters clubs in the UK, China, Singapore, Thailand and the Czech Republic. She visits online Toastmasters clubs all around the world up to three times a day, morning afternoon and evening, sometimes attending and speaking at one meeting online on a laptop and on her mobile phone. She has attended meetings of toastmasters groups speaking English, French, Chinese and Malay, as well as bilingual and English speaking clubs in the USA, UK, Canada, Singapore, and Korea.
About the Author's Speaking Drawing and Blogging
Angela Lansbury is a author and speaker. She evaluates speeches, judges speech contests and runs language workshops. She also draws caricatures.
Please bookmark and share links to your favourite posts with your colleagues, friends and family.
Useful websites About the Author
dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com
travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com
See next post.
Angela's last words:
Please share links to your favourite posts.
Arabic names are similar and Hebrew names which are the basis of many English names. It is fun finding out. I remember my delight at discovering that Samsonite suitcases were named after the biblical Samson, a tower of strength, and that Jensen was Scandinavian for son of John. A local doctor called Dawood was actually doctor David, if you translated his name.
Hebrew
Allah (God, Arabic/Muslim)
Barack - blessed - Arabic/Muslim - as in Barack Obama, president of the USA
Baruch - blessed - Hebrew/Jewish
Bat - daughter
Ben - son
Ben-jamin son of my right hand (from Hebrew)
David (biblical)
Dawood - Arabic/Muslim version of David
El - God - El-ijah El-izabeth (Hebrew)
Ja/Yah-weh God - Hebrew - Jehovah as in Jehovah's Witness, Joseph,
Joel - combines Jo and El, both meaning God
John - (many variations in Europe such as Jan)
Moses - Hebrew/Jewish
Moishe - Hebrew/Yiddish - Moses
Reu-ben - see a son (behold a son) - Hebrew bible (Old and New Testament)
Solomon
Ya/Ja - God
Yusuf (Joseph)
Useful Websites on Languages
Wikipedia
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a travel writer and photographer, author and speaker. She evaluates speeches, judges speech contests and runs language workshops. She also draws caricatures.
Please bookmark and share links to your favourite posts with your colleagues, friends and family.
Useful Websites From Angela
dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com
travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com
Angela's last words:
Please share links to your favourite posts.
(This post is being expanded with further research. Other posts on the same subject are in the travel blog.)
中国
As I walked and rode buses and taxis through Hong Kong, I saw the overhead signs in Chinese and some of the symbols kept being repeated.
The sign which looks like a wide oblong with a line through the middle is the first character of the word for China and means centre. As far as the Chinese were concerned, their country was the centre of the universe, and the world. Just like the British considered Britain as the base with Britain being home, the Far East being far, and the Middle East being in the middle of a journey to the Far East.
You only need to be told once and you get it.
To find the name of a country and how it is pronounced locally you can look it up in an online dictionary or in Wikipedia.
To analyse the individual components, copy the entire foreign language part into Translate Google.
Copy again and separate the components.
Reverse the English and the foreign language to see if you have picked the correct item from two or three possible translations where a word has multiple meanings.
中国
China.
Useful Websites On Countries and Languages
wikipedia China
translate google
About the Author's Language Experience
Angela Lansbury is a travel writer and photographer, blogger and public speaker. She is British but she and her next of kin have lived in the USA, Spain, multi-lingual Switzerland and multilingual Singapore. She is active in toastmasters clubs and has visited Toastmasters clubs in the UK, China, Singapore, Thailand and the Czech Republic. She visits online Toastmasters clubs all around the world up to three times a day, morning afternoon and evening, sometimes attending and speaking at one meeting online on a laptop and on her mobile phone. She has attended meetings of toastmasters groups speaking English, French, Chinese and Malay, as well as bilingual and English speaking clubs in the USA, UK, Canada, Singapore, and Korea.
About the Author's Speaking Drawing and Blogging
Angela Lansbury is a author and speaker. She evaluates speeches, judges speech contests and runs language workshops. She also draws caricatures.
Please bookmark and share links to your favourite posts with your colleagues, friends and family.
Useful websites About the Author
dressofthedayangela.blogspot.com
travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com
Angela's last words:
Please share links to your favourite posts.
Please share links to your favourite posts.
Flag of China
In Singapore I bought a large thin plastic table mat for children. It had the numbers one to ten in Chinese.
Roman Colosseum in Rome, capital of Ancient Rome and modern Italy |
I learned Latin and school. At the time I wished I had instead learned a modern language such as Italian or Spanish or German.
But later I regretted not having learned Greek. My handy Concise Oxford dictionary gave me the etymology (origin) of words, the roots. I made two lists on the back pages of my dictionary headed NOTES. I listed the Latin words. I listed the Greek words.
However, some words were both Greek and Latin. Since they did not fit into either category, I ignored them. Wasted effort, I thought, wrongly. I was annoyed at being found thwarted in my neat division of word originas into two lists. But that changed.
Today I suddenly had a new idea. Make a list of words combining both, Latin and Greek, Greek and Latin.
No more wasted time. So here is the list of Greek-Latin words for your enlightenment as well as mine. Now every word whose origin I have researched is useful, has an explanation, and has a place.
Latin - Greek
bi (Latin for twice or two or double) + Greek (Kuklos wheel) - bicycle
How do you remember that bicycle is a hybrid word, and which half is which? Think of the two wheels being Latin and Greek. The more recent word, the Latin, is at the front. chronologically, behind, is the Greek word.
Greek - Latin
tele (Greek far) + visio - (Latin I see) - television
Now we can start to see patterns, which help us to remember, compare and contrast, classify and identify words.
This is an ongoing list. Come back to see more. Or look up words in a physical or online dictionary of etymology. Send me your suggestions.
About the Author
Angela Lansbury, teacher of English and other languages.
Flag of Greece.
Greek - English - English derivative word
anti - against - anti-aircraft (gun to shoot down invading aircraft); antibiotic - against living organisms especially bacteria
auto - oneself - autobiography (self life story, your life story, no written by another )
bios - life - biology, study of living things; biographer, person who writes about somebody's life; biographical, writing about somebody's life (as opposed to fiction)
deuteros - second (Deuteronomy - second book of the bible)
di/dis - double, twice, two - dialogue (conversation between two people)
graphia - writing or drawing (telegraph - far writing, autograph, self writing, signature); autograph book
khronos - time - chronological, in date and time order, Chronical - record of events in time order, books in the bible (called the Old Testament by Christians who added the New Testament about Jesus)
-leg/log/logue - speak/knowledge - biology
metron - measure
mikros - small - microscope (small)
monos - alone or single - monotone, monotonous, monologue (one person speaking on stage)
phone - sound - telephone (far sound)
tele - far - telescope
Theos - God - atheism (without God)
Post being expanded. Other posts on this subject already in travelwithangelalansbury.blogspot.com
You can find free charts of alphabets. The Greek ones are also created by teachers of maths. (The Americans say math.) You can reduced the size on your printer. To get them laminated you would have to spend on a lamination machine.
I am looking for laminated cards for the Greek and Hebrew alphabets. If you are a reader and buyer or customer and know a link, or are a manufactuer or seller, let me know.
Useful Websites About Greek
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Latin_and_Greek_words_commonly_used_in_systematic_names
Useful Websites About Languages
https://osxdaily.com/2017/03/22/type-accents-mac-easy/
https://context.reverso.net/translation/windows-mac-app
(Avast sent me a warning about this. My husband told me to ignore that warnings. 'Don't worry. Avast is just trying to sell an upgrade.' Check with your technical adviser.)
Useful Language learning Websites
Bella, 7 languages at the age of 4, shopping on stage on TV in Australian
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xd9u9N7Z4TU
Greek Flashcards
On Amazon
About twenty or 21 and a bit dollars, for postage might be included as I am an Amazon Prime member. (I need fast delivery as a landlord when a tenant needs a replacemnt part in a hurry, so the cost of prime is tax deductable for that.)
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B013ZCZLV2/ref=sspa_dk_detail_1?psc=1&pd_rd_i=B013ZCZLV2&pd_rd_w=wkcQs&content-id=amzn1.sym.84ea1bf1-65a8-4363-b8f5-f0df58cbb686&pf_rd_p=84ea1bf1-65a8-4363-b8f5-f0df58cbb686&pf_rd_r=W8D6QMZM3HZP8CZ4JSRS&pd_rd_wg=Oj20L&pd_rd_r=1be013e5-ee51-4ed7-91e1-96797cf421d9&s=kids&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9kZXRhaWw
Also because I signed up for Coupert, cheaper with a coupon from another supplier for a few hours after logging into offer.
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and other languages and gives talks and workshops on language and learning languages. For workshops contact annalondon8@gmail.com
Please share links to your favourite posts.
The English people used to be infamous for not speaking other languages. That's very strange, because many of the rulers, even the unpopular ones, spoke or read and wrote lots of languages. A wit said that the English spoke only two languages, English and louder English.
When my late father went to school in London in the nineteen twenties, he learned German. This was easy for him, because his grandmother spoke only Yiddish, which has many German words. However, after WWI and WW2 German was not favoured by my parents, who were keen for me to learn French. My mother wanted me to go the Lycee Francaise in London, a bilingual school. But I was not admitted because I did not have a French speaking parent.
Embarrassment In Switzerland
I learned French and we took holidays in France. When I went to Belgium I discovered that the Belgians had two languages, French and Dutch, with signs in both languages, and people who could speak both languages. Switzerland had more languages. Three well-known languages, French, German and Italian, plus another. I felt embarrassed that people of all professions and none, from waiters and receptionists to passers-by in the street, could speak two or three languages, when I struggled with a second.
If you don't live in these countries, why bother?
Russian Abandonment
The first time I was completely stranded because of my lack of languages was in Russia. At the age of 21 as a student I entered a contest for a trip to Japan (via Russia). I duly wrote the essay saying why I wanted to go, paid my fare, as part of a group of student. We were given free homestays in Japan with families, or in hostels, with most breakfasts and dinners free, sponsored by the local chambers of commerce whose members wanted to showcase Japan and practise their English with visitors.
So far, so good. Unfortunately, on a Russian railway station, I lagged behind. I turned the corner and the others has vanished. A train hooted past. My friends had all got on a train and left me. the group leader had the group railway ticket. I knew not one word of Russian. I burst into tears.
A passing railway official tried to help. I said, group, group, English group. He did not understand. But eventually he led me round the corner to a cafe where I could sit. there was my group, having snacks whilst waiting for the train. No idea that I was left behind or lost. I knew then that I needed to learn languages.
Our entire trip was escorted, with one or two of our students speaking Russian or Japanese, and the hosts or an interpreter.
After that I travelled to the USA.
Over on the American continent, I could use my French in Montreal, Canada. In their capital, Ottawa, government employees must be bilingual.
Nowadays in the UK, government publications are translated into several languages. The EU and trade mean that many products have instructions in several languages.
It is now easier than ever to learn languages. When you look at signposts, photos on the internet, or goods in the supermarket, you are surrounded by free language lessons.
When have my languages saved the day? I was an Euston railway station in London when there was a bomb scare March of the year 2000. I remember it well, because I declined to see my mother who phoned to invite me to lunch and instead I went on a trip to London for a travel writers' meeting. (My mother died the following week without seeing me again.) Because of the bomb scare I was delayed and missed my meeting.
At the station I was on the platform when we were told over the loudspeaker to leave the station. Everybody took the up escalators.
The down escalators were deserted except for a small group of girls who were speaking Spanish. I stopped them and said in English, "You must go back. They are evacuating the station."
The girls did not understand. They asked if I spoke Spanish. No. I asked, 'Parlez vous Francais? Sprechen sie Deutsch?'
I tried again. A girl at the back caught up, smiled, and said she spoke a little French. I explained.
They turned and took the up escalator. So could I.
I also read about a woman who survived WWII in a concentration camp because she knew languages and was kept as an interpreter.
But my main reason for learning languages is that it puts me in more control of my environment, of the world, my world. I get a sense of achievement. So many puzzles solved. So much fun.
How to be a polyglot?
You can start by reading signs, symbols and instruction booklets and labels and packaging. Pick up leaflets.
Then learn from a free website. Use Wikipedia. Use Duolingo which has a free basic course in several languages which starts with grammar tips.
Watch films with subtitles. Listen to nursery rhymes and songs.
Join the polyglot page on Facebook to find strangers who will answer language questions and are often looking to pair up with someone who wants to learn their language in exchange.
Can it be done? Bella, a little Russian girl has learned to speak seven languages by the age of 4. If you learned one language a year, at the end of four years you would be speaking four languages, five if you count your own. Who would that impress? Your grandparents, parents, siblings, spouse or date, children, grandchildren, potential employers. Or just yourself. Would you get a sense of achievement?
Just five minutes a day for a year. Learn one word a day and that's 365. Ten would be 3,650 words. Just six would get you to the minimum needed to hold a regular conversation.
Useful Websites
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a travel writer and photographer, and teacher of advanced English, business English and basic French. Do you want to learn another language? I can get you started.
When I visited wineries in Rioja in Northern Spain I learned that crianca (pronounced cree-Ann-ther) was young, basic wine. Crianca might make you think of the equivalent of the French vin de table, table wine.
Today I was reading the multi-language labels on goods from Daiso and found the Portuguese, on an item made in Brazil. Portuguese is similar to Spanish.
Keep out of reach of children - I found the word child - the same as the word on the wine. Easy to remember both.
Useful Websites
Duolingo languages you can learn for free, for English speakers, include Portuguese.
Toastmasters International
Portuguese printed material translated from the English, so you can compare with the original, or with words you hear often at Toastmasters Meeting.
Portuguese speaking Toastmasters club in Brazil welcomes others, eg from the USA, much of which is in the time zone or only an hour or two different.
English - French
of - de
table - table
wine - vin
French - English
de - of
table - table
vin - wine
vin de table - table wine
About the author
See previous posts.
(I am in meetings all day. Will come back to this later.)
Esperanto
I have tried the Esperanto course in Duolingo. It is the most logical language. Years ago I signed up for a correspondence course. I still have the dictionary.
The history fascinates me. It is a great language for beginners who struggle with languages. It is really good for people whose own language is not known outside their country. Hungarians like Esperanto and have it as a school and exam subject.
But all day long I am learning words from other languages because they sound similar to English. Therefore I realise that a language taking common words, rather than following a logical pattern, is the system which suits me. I would like to suggest Interlingua to Duolingo. How do I do it?
Interlingua
Meanwhile, even if Duolingo agree, I shall have to wait until they start the course. Meanwhile, I followed the link from Wikipedia and found a one way dictionary, from Interlingua words to English words. That would help with Interlingua's own website which is all in Interlingua. I tried looking up the word grammar in the one way dictionary and could not find it. What should I do next?
Useful Websites
https://osxdaily.com/2017/03/22/type-accents-mac-easy/
https://context.reverso.net/translation/windows-mac-app
(Avast sent me a warning about this. My husband told me to ignore that warnings. 'Avast is just trying to sell an upgrade.')
Useful Language learning Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlingua
Demo of how easy to read it is from the bible and the US declaration of independence.
Bella, 7 languages at the age of 4, shopping on stage on TV in Australian
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xd9u9N7Z4TU
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and other languages and gives talks and workshops on language and learning languages. For workshops contact annalondon8@gmail.com
Please share links to your favourite posts.
You might recall the Hebrew Shalom and the Arabic Salaam. Where can you speak both words and languages? In Israel. Now that some countries have recognized Israel, people who know Hebrew, or are Israeli or Jewish, can travel to Dubai, capital of the UAE, Emirates, and feel welcome. A big boost to hotels, restaurants and travel for Dubai. Time for more people to learn Arabic which is a handy language in many countries.
If you have seen pictures of the world's tallest tower, Burj Khalif, you might have suspected that the word Burj is tower. I mis-typed it as burg, which is German for mountain and small city. All the better. I can now recall that the correct spelling for the Arabic is like the German for mountain, or city, but with a j.
Arabic varies from country to country. However, these are some common easy to recognize and remember words which it is handy to know.
English - Arabic
(Similar to other Semitic languages such as Aramaic and Hebrew, with variations in Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Dubai capital of United Arab Republic, classical Arabic and spoken Arabic, Malay, Indonesian and some words in other languages)
God willing/please God - inshallah (run together but incorporating the word Allah)
Hello/peace - salaam (letters s-l-m, compare with Hebrew shalom and English Jerusalem)
1 tower - burj
2 sardines - sardine
3 salmon - salmon
4 thank you - shukran
5 tuna - tuna
Arabic - English
burj - tower
inshallah - God willing/please God
salaam - peace/hello
shukran - thank you
shukran habibi - thank you
So you can now say hello, tower, and goodbye tower, in Arabic.
From Translate Google I created this list, and found two or three words I already knew or easily remembered. When I reversed back to the English I got the translation which I have put in brackets.
sea
bridge
6 city - madina ( I have also seen the spelling medina)
7 market - suk
square
mosque
building
block
exit
entrance
open
closed
January
name / (noun)
date / (history)
year
8a day - yawm (like yawn - imagine yawning and going back to sleep instead of to work)
month
birthday
birthdate
anniversary
8b -(holi)day - ..... yawm (like yawn)
I recognized the word Eid which is very commonly used on holidays. I typed that in separately and got
9 eid - feast (holiday, festival)
Video of girl showing English words which sound the same but mean something different in Arabic.
I look at it differently, Arabic words which are easy to remember.
English sound (alphabetically) and Arabic meaning - English translation
sounds like English ' after' - in Arabic eat
what you say in Arabic is 'but' - duck (what you mean, in English)
'far' - mouse
'fat' - missed
'feel' - elephant
' fool' - beans
'feel' - elephant
'hat' - give me
'safe' - sword (also a boy's name)
'wish' - face
English meaning alphabetically - is the Arabic word (alphabetically) you say - although it sounds like another English word
9 beans - fool (memory aid - not the English word for a dessert but beans, fooled you)
10 duck - sounds like 'but/butt'
11 eat breakfast - sounds like 'after': 'after' we eat breakfast
12 elephant - memory aid for elephant - sounds like 'feel'
13 face - say 'wish', touch your face and wish they understand you mean face
14 give me - 'hat' (hold out your hand imploringly and beckon give me my hat, hat, hat
15 missed - sounds like 'fat' (memory aid for missed: after slimming I never missed being fat. How did you miss me? I was so fat that I don't know how you missed me!)
16 Mouse - sounds like far, (if you are scared then you will be glad it is far, or ask if the mouse is far. 'She shouted Fa Fa Fa - is she singing Do re mi fa?' 'No, she's shouting in Arabic that she saw a mouse!')
17 Sword / boy's name - 'Safe' (are you 'Safe' holding that sword?)
18 bin - son (similar to Hebrew Ben, as in Benjamin, meaning son of my right hand, and Reu-ben see a son, as I saw in an annotated bible telling the story of the 12 sons in the bible Old Testament and there are also other sons in the New Testament. Jesus is accepted as a prophet and holy man by many Muslims but not as the Messiah or Christ and Mohammed takes precedence over all preceding persons just as to the earlier Christians Jesus takes precedence over the characters in the Old Testament.)
19 Inshallah - God willing
If you go into Memrise you can record your memory aids and if you like you can share them)
Quiz
Now test yourself
You hear these words in Arabic. What do they mean?
1 after
2 but
3 burj
4 eid
5 far
6 fat
7 feel
8 fool
9 hat
10 inshallah
11 madina/medina
12 safe
13 salaam
14 salmon
15 sardine
16 suk
17 tuna
18 wish
19 yawn
20 el (conversational) /al Formal - the
21 tel - hill
22 salaam/ma salaam/ salaam aleikum (I recall the Israeli song, shalom alechem - peace to you)
12
13
14
15
16
17
You want to write or say these words in Arabic:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
Useful Websites
Useful Websites
https://osxdaily.com/2017/03/22/type-accents-mac-easy/
https://context.reverso.net/translation/windows-mac-app
(Avast sent me a warning about this. My husband told me to ignore that warnings. 'Avast is just trying to sell an upgrade.')
Useful Language learning Websites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlingua
You can learn half a dozen words of a new language to see how the system works.
For 134 dollars you get a lifetime's membership to learn more than 30 languages.
Bella, 7 languages at the age of 4, shopping on stage on TV in Australian
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xd9u9N7Z4TU
Song Shalom Aleichem in Hebrew with English transcription, female singer with guitar
https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=RDj-wAAtCvPnQ&v=j-wAAtCvPnQ
About the Author
Angela Lansbury is a teacher of English and other languages and gives talks and workshops on language and learning languages. For workshops contact annalondon8@gmail.com
Please share links to your favourite posts.