In the previous post Charles II found AITA:
Look, I, m, believe in live and let live. (And in not going on my travels again. Had enough of that to last a life time.) Why can't everyone else around me be more chill? Instead, my wife refuses to employ my girlfriend, my girlfriend won't budge and accept another office, my brother is set on a course to piss off everyone (he WILL go on his travels again), and my oldest kid shows signs of wanting my job which is just not on, sorry to say. And don't get me started about Mom (thank God she's living abroad). What am I doing wrong? AITA?
Look, I, m, believe in live and let live. (And in not going on my travels again. Had enough of that to last a life time.) Why can't everyone else around me be more chill? Instead, my wife refuses to employ my girlfriend, my girlfriend won't budge and accept another office, my brother is set on a course to piss off everyone (he WILL go on his travels again), and my oldest kid shows signs of wanting my job which is just not on, sorry to say. And don't get me started about Mom (thank God she's living abroad). What am I doing wrong? AITA?
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-15 11:22 am (UTC)Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-15 09:22 pm (UTC)Cahn, if you want an example, to help you get a sense of what we're talking about, without making you Google translate the original sentence, of the sort of thing she does, it's basically stringing together clauses and interjections, so that you have to, if you want to figure out what subject goes with what verb, link all the pieces together yourself, which is a stylistic issue I can be guilty of myself when writing in English, I know, but I also freely admit I'm not the clearest author ever either, unless I'm doing technical writing, which has different conventions, such as bullet pointed lists, that make it easier to naturally break your message down into smaller chunks for your reader. <-- That.
German has more tolerance for this kind of thing than English, so it's maybe not quite as bad in the original as it comes across in my example there, but she definitely does it more than any of the authors I've been reading in the last 4 months. I've developed an MO: notice when she's changed the subject in the middle of a complete thought, scan ahead to pick up that thought and complete it, and then go back to the part in the middle that's a separate thought and then read that. I'm getting the hang of it, except when I'm faced with a lot of new abstraction vocab on top of the convoluted syntax, and then it's off to Google Translate to ask for help.
Whew!
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-21 05:17 am (UTC)Tangentially related, I will say that after I dropped the ball in a major way in January and February, I've actually been pretty good since then at reading a page or two every day of French, and even though it's not even close to your study rate, heh, I can feel it getting easier to read with daily practice. The Bible is great because not only do I know the subject matter and often text in English reasonably well, it is quite repetitive so I get practice with any vocab I just learned. ...I guess the downside is that all the vocab I'm learning is stuff like "sin" and "altar" and "burnt offering," which is maybe not so useful for salon :D
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-21 08:34 pm (UTC)Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-21 09:10 pm (UTC)Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-25 10:43 am (UTC)belägring = siege
åderlåtning = bloodletting
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-28 09:35 pm (UTC)ETA: In conclusion, as I meant to say, I can see that I'll soon be able to talk to the ghost of Charles XII. ;)
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-30 02:10 pm (UTC)When I read that Linneaus book, it was interesting to compare 18th century Swedish with 18th century English. There were some cool similarities! For example, the Swedish word which is currently spelled "bra" was spelled "brav" back then, showing it's relation with English/Scottish "brave/braw". and I found a word "fäj" which I didn't find even in the most comprehensive Swedish dictionary, but which the notes explained meant "fated to die". That is, it's the same word as English/Scottish "fey"!
ETA: What would you ask his ghost, if you could?
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-30 02:16 pm (UTC)All of them. Old English, Middle English, Gothic, Old Norse/Icelandic, Old High German, Middle High German--okay, not a lot of Old Saxon, but I did look at the Heliand once, just for completist purposes, when I realized I was missing Old Saxon. :P
showing it's relation with English/Scottish "brave/braw". and I found a word "fäj" which I didn't find even in the most comprehensive Swedish dictionary, but which the notes explained meant "fated to die". That is, it's the same word as English/Scottish "fey"!
Yay! I can also tell you that having a smattering of Scots* is tremendously helpful in my German studies, for exactly this reason! Just like you, I wouldn't have recognized "fäj", but once the notes told me the answer, knowing "fey" would have helped me remember it forever!
* Well, and Tolkien. Tolkien helps. :D (The man actually *knew* all the dead Germanic languages, and didn't just study them without actually learning them.)
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-05-23 11:00 am (UTC)I obviously know Swedish and English, and I took French in school, and also studied some Latin back then, and spent a summer studying Quenya. But that's about it!
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-30 05:53 pm (UTC)ETA: According to my word-counting tool, salon just crossed the 3-million word mark today, meaning we're averaging a little over a million words a year. :DDD
Whenever I see this, I think, "Gambitten, come back!" :(
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-05-05 04:48 am (UTC)Whenever I see this, I think, "Gambitten, come back!" :(
I agree!!
Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-05-05 08:12 am (UTC)Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-05-05 05:53 pm (UTC)Re: Reading rec question
Date: 2022-04-21 08:57 pm (UTC)Right? I'm pretty sure I couldn't have handled it right up until this month, but my German's been improving in leaps and bounds since January. So last week I was a bit like, "Hold my beer while I read these 20-line convoluted sentences." :P
(And then had insomnia strike HARD this week, so despite the sentences about Matilda of Tuscany being so much easier that it almost feels like cheating, I've read hardly anything. Sigh.)
I've actually been pretty good since then at reading a page or two every day of French
Ah, good! I was wondering how that was going. I'm glad to hear it's going well! I was hoping to be ready for French by now, but...I persevere with German. I'm now hoping to be ready by the end of 2022!