>>13960121you would grant one token attack to make that player feel like a snowflake?
weeeeeeeeell, it's not like my experience is universal, i probably have alcohol brain damage and i'm not as young as you so less neuroplasticity in my brain so your mileage may vary. but i find the duolingo model extremely useless for words that are more than two syllables long and their exercises are dumb as shit. 여자가 동물하고 한국어로 대화합니다 "the woman converses with the animal in korean". yes i suppose this exercises all the words i've learnt so far but it's not really working for me. also duolingo uses the excessively polite verb form for some reason which also probably damages my comprehension. the verb here is 대화합니다 but i don't know how to extrapolate the infinitive from it, so i can't conjugate it for more uses so it's useless knowledge to me.
well i'm sure knowledge of japanese grammar helps A LOT but i can't help but feel like similarities in vocab would make you mix things up. like learning spanish and italian together seems like a nightmare to me.
maybe, idk. my point was that even though i knew like 50 words of korean and japanese in total, i still managed to mix them up. so it probably occurs way more often if you actually learn both together.
wow that's fucking cringe. you have to work hard to learn a language? count me out then, i was hoping for a smooth ride
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp6v1OSCdJ8>>13960128i don't think i've ever had yams. i bought something that was labeled as a sweet potato once and it was orange and everything and i cut it into potato wedges shape and baked it but it tasted like a pumpkin to me. i don't get it. that can't be what a yam is right? and even so, don't potatoes come from america?
pretty irresponsible of yves to treat her position as an instructor to smear her members
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ks9GX2Fe-E