language
Surely you've heard this one: the Chinese word for "crisis" (危機, weiji in Chinese, kiki in Japanese) is composed of the two characters for "danger" and "opportunity". This reveals the wise Oriental insight that a crisis is an oportunity for progress, an impressive outlook we'd all do well to emulate. Or so we've been told for decades by management gurus, New Age philosphers, generic pundits, and even world leaders. read more » |
|||
I'll dip again into my bag of old newspaper clippings. This one is from the October 10, 1994 issue of The Japan Times, in the Nihongo and I column: "Language change inevitable", a discussion with Professor Kikuo Nomoto, former director of the National Language Research Institute. read more » |
|||
Follwing up on the last post, I ran across yet another online stab at "the world's most difficult language". http://allphilosophy.com/topic/show/1483 The writer ends with a neutral "every language has something difficult", though he does menton Japanese in passing: read more » |
|||
What's the most difficult language to learn? It's a good question, and an extremely difficult one to field. What's the most uninformed response you could give to the above question? That one's not so difficult; I've got the answer right here! read more » |
|||
The last post looked at three items which I would list as the difficulties facing a would-be learner of Japanese. But they're by no means impossible obstacles. And take heart, o student: I can list a lot more than three things that I find make the language easy to learn! read more » |
|||
|
|
