omgggggg
ImM GOING THROUGH MY ARXCHIVE AND I FORGOT ABOUT THIS IM GONNA CRY
Schlagwort: non sims
… I don’t like it.
*crawls out of cyber-grave*
Still not dead!
Woo! I survived the first week of college! It’s still just introduction week, but I’ve finally got my courses assigned. Apart from the Anglistics stuff (or English Studies for the British), which are very methodical, I’ve got one class about the basics of dramas, one about opera in the 18th century, one basic course about the history of theatre and one class about the “Irish Renaisscence” in theatre. This is bound to be interesting!
On an unrelated note: I’m loading up my game in the first time for weeks!
Not dead- just busy writing! (And college)
So after the building bug caught me the writing bug did. 😀 I’ve been using my spare time writing lately and with college just around the corner (starts monday) I’m pretty busy. I set a goal to finishing the story I’m currently writing til Halloween (so I keep going- I need motivation!). So don’t expect much Sims stuff from me this month. I’ll be back, I promise!
I don’t care who the fuck you are, or what you’re doing. You can take 3 seconds to reblog this.
I miss you..
German synchronisation is weird… “Elementary” and “Sherlock” ’s Mycroft’s share the same voice actor… interesting coincidence!
didilysims said: Argh, verb in second position! I should KNOW that! It’s only been a few months since I stopped taking German and already I’m forgetting so much. 😦 Thank you for correcting me, though. Can’t improve without corrections! 🙂
Ah, don’t worry! Your German is…
Wow, that’s sad! I actually learned English first by actually using it- in songs, short stories etc in Grade 3-4. it’s very playful and great fun. Years 5-8 is more about grammar (where I really sucked… almost failed it once). And after Year 8 it’s again mostly improving. I might have been lucky because after Year 7 all my teachers were really focussed on speaking. (In retrospective, I think I just didn’t care about grammar :D) Being abroad might’ve helped, too.
English is our main second language- actually, all I can do in Latin is insult someone as a donkey and impress my youth group kids by translating old church inscriptons. ^^ And we had the option to choose between Latin and French in Year 6, which makes a max. of 7 years to learn the language. And I’ve heared most of the ones to choose French (well, the one who chose it in Year 10- 2 years of French) can’t really speak it either. The most common phrases known are (no way I can get the punctuation right): “Je suis desole!” and “Sacre bleu, un piscon!” Don’t ask me about the last part, I think it was a running gag. So it’s very common for german kids to be able to fluently speak English, but depending on teacher and school, be unable to really communicate in any other language…
Oh, Latin is great for getting a basic understanding of grammar and all this stuff (I heard ;)). I can sometimes make out English words or the basic meaning of some words in a language I don’t speak by knowing it. (By the way, Latin was very theoretical. Vocabulary and grammar exercises and translating texts word-by-.word were the main content of our classes. It was sad, because even if I don’t really like the language (maybe because it was such a theoretical process of deciphering- and there’s no way you could call our chores there-), Latin is such a great language for getting a basic understanding of our “modern” languages and is a surprisingly complex language- more complex than German, if you compare what we learned about grammar in German vs. what we learned about grammar in Latin- even with the native speaker bonus.
German music and books? *stares at bookcase and ITunes library blankly*
didilysims said: Argh, verb in second position! I should KNOW that! It’s only been a few months since I stopped taking German and already I’m forgetting so much. 😦 Thank you for correcting me, though. Can’t improve without corrections! 🙂
Ah, don’t worry! Your German is just fine and that is such a common mistake between our two languages! If it helps, my little brother and I just sat in front of his english homework and were both completly clueless!
You have/had German in high school? Wow, that’s great! German schools are often very limited in languages (apart from English, French, Spain and the “dead” languages of Latin and sometimes Greek). I love how many of the english-speaking schools (atleast the ones I encountered) offer more languages and languages who are not necessary considered to be used worldwide!
yes.
It may be impressive, but it’s also annoying when you run out of space on the shelves.
Then again, it was also annoying when I ran out of space on the Kindle too.
Anyone noticed the guy in the upper picture? No? Might be hallucinating…