User talk:LctrGzmn

Welcome
Hi, welcome to Conlang! Thanks for your edit to the Adwan page.

Please leave a message on my talk page if I can help with anything! -- Sannse (Talk) 07:16, February 12, 2010

Featuring
I would like to redirect your attention our Featuring contest that is being held now and every month, your votes and nominations would be appriciated so we get something that represent the oppinion of the community. Please visit there and cast your votes, they may be cast and or changed until the 28th while nominations are open until the 21th.

PS: This message is automated and sent to multiple people, come to my talk page for questions

Best Wishes The Emperor Zelos 19:46, April 3, 2010 (UTC)

Featured
Considering your conlang is almost certain to win as its less than 2 and a half hour elft, I would want that within 2 days you give me a description of your conlang like the previous ones

Español
Agh I feel dumb now. I can talk fine in context but when I have to translate something I had no plan to translate into Spanish, I have lots of trouble. And those cursed genders… Just curious, and you don't have to answer, but what dialect of Spanish do you speak? Like, what part of Spain, what country, or foreign-schoolbook Spanish? —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 03:41, June 4, 2010 (UTC)


 * Haha don't be. Many people think Spanish is easy, but there's more to a language than its grammar. What's your native language, by any chance? I was just wondering. Oh, Mexican Spanish (of the Tamaulipas region, if you really want to know). P.S. I think it's a good idea to translate things into other languages, particularly the ones you're learning. Helps immensely. LctrGzmn 04:02, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * My first language lol was Spanish from my mom, who's moved from Lima at a young age and picked up the schoolbook dialect from school and Mexican from talking to people at fast-food restaurants and other places. Thus you could call it my "mother tongue." My grandma speaks with a Peruvian accent but it's been influenced by Mexican a little. Of course the differences are slight. Anyway, my dad spoke to me in English because he's not completely fluent in Spanish, and soon my mom would speak 99% in English to me as I grew up (because I live in an English-speaking country), even though my grandma speaks mostly Spanish when giving commands but English when telling a story. I forgot a lot of my Spanish before relearning it in school beginning in 7th grade. So yeah. I also have Chinese tied in there, but neither of my parents speak to me in Chinese so I learnt it myself. —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 04:18, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * Oh that almost happened to me. I grew up with Spanish first, and then English, but as soon as my parents split, my mom would only speak English to get better at it. It's a good thing I didn't just go along, or I probably would have forgotten Spanish! so you're learning Chinese on your own? LctrGzmn 04:26, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * Lol. You know the horrors of being in a Spanish class and knowing Spanish?
 * Maestra: Can anyone tell me what "dormirse" means?
 * Me: (...can you please just let me go to sleep...)
 * Not to mention I usually get hungry around that time. But yeah, I learn Chinese by myself. A crazy genealogy makes it so I don't know any of my relatives in Guangdong or whether they're still alive. I'm decent in Chinese though. I mean, I can't read Wikipedia articles written in formal Chinese but hey, I can talk behind people's backs with other Chinese people. Lucky I go to a school with lots of Chinese so I can practice with friends. Some are more forgiving of my pronunciation than others, I learned that... —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 04:59, June 4, 2010 (UTC)

I was in Spanish for a week by accident, and I had to listen to girls be like "Howlah, yoh may yamoh .... yo ser dyesysayz anos...". It's terrible, I agree. Ah I could never get Chinese down. I have a friend who's fluent in it and explains to me the mechanics of it (as I do to Spanish for her) and it's kind of scary. I'm much too westernized to get used to tones and the like -_- LctrGzmn 05:16, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * Lol. I heard that for two years of my life but lol I speak like that whenever I'm too lazy to put on my perfect accent to Americans. But half the time I'm just wondering what's so hard about conjugations. Anyway, yeah Chinese is hard, but luckily for me I've been at it some years and I can read and write decently. But my tones still need major remedial help. I started out with this children's book series I was already too old for when I bought those books, and they did no explanation whatsoever on the constructions, just hammering in vocabulary. That didn't scare me away from Chinese and it was the perfect supplement to a Chinese grammar book. So now my Chinese is pretty good at a low level. —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 15:58, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * Psh conjugations are easy. I think the main problem is A: most people are English speakers and English verbs don't conjugate too much, and B: Spanish has just about as much tenses, as English (different ones, of course), but unlike English, they're not analytical (compare We were eating to comíamos),not to mention most languages, while they do have conjugations, they're not as complex as Romance ones (compare Polish, which only has about 3 tenses, to Spanish, which has much more). I understand tones. I can hear them pretty distinctly, but on a basis of me actually having to pick them out, rather than using them naturally like I do declensions and conjugations.LctrGzmn 21:12, June 4, 2010 (UTC)
 * Lol yeah. I don't get how some people don't get them, just by person, and how most people have to start their sentences to translate "we eat" they never just say "comemos" they always use "nosotros" and that sometimes drives me nuts even though it's grammatical. And onto tones, yeah I get them and everything, and I'm not like most Anglophones that just smear them together, but they do weird things for me whenever I say long sentences and I don't have the timing down so iI tend to pause at random places. —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 05:05, June 5, 2010 (UTC)
 * Eh, it doesn't really bug me. Only adding "yo" annoys me. The rest are just as commonly seen as their pronoun-less counterparts. Most don't get that Spanish is pro-drop, but it's whatever. Well no, you're not like most Anglophones because, well, are you an Anglophone? More specifically, an Anglophone alone? While Anglophones tend to screw up tones, Chinese speakers have no intonation in their sentences in English whatsoever, because, really, it doesn't exist in Chinese, what with tones and particles, a regular sentence almost sound exactly alike to a question. What Chinese do you speak? Mandarin, Cantonese? Or...? funnily enough, I feel bad for people who aren't native Spanish speakers. Mexicans in general tend to speak Spanish really, really fast, so not only do we eat up vowels, but it all sounds like one big word. My friend, who, like you, nearly forgot Spanish, can't understand my mom when she talks. It's quite funny. LctrGzmn 06:53, June 5, 2010 (UTC)
 * Lol. Doesn't Mexican Spanish have strong intonation?  I speak Mandarin, but I'm considering Cantonese just as a hobby.  The beauty is that if you can write Chinese, it's all the same in formal literary style and anyone speaking any dialect can understand you.  Of course I will have to improve my Mandarin first before attempting another language.  —Detectivekenny; (Info) Preceding text certified by R. Xun as of 14:09, June 5, 2010 (UTC)