Mesaĝoj: 3
Lingvo: English
Zvoc47 (Montri la profilon) 2017-januaro-25 02:31:54
Hello.
I've been studying Esperanto for a year and I can understand many words, but I can never remember all of them to speak without looking into the dictionary. I understand the grammar completely, but my vocabulary is so small. I was thinking if there's a flash card with around 100 words that one needs to know while speaking.
I'd like to have words like most common verbs: to be, to have, to make, to do, to go, to stop, to speak, to say, to intend, to refer to, to think, to think about something, to watch, to see, to seem, to say, to listen, to hear, to sound like something, to smell, to smell like something, to taste, to taste like something, to touch, to feel, to feel like something, to walk, to run, to stop, to turn, to eat, to drink, to swallow,....
Then nouns like bodyparts: head, body, torso, chest, stomach, arms, legs, hands, feet, knees, elbows, eyes, nose, mouth, teeth, ears, hair. And food to know, drinks to know, clothes, family members, colors, adjectives for geometrical description of things so that I can ask an Esperantist how to say a word without krokodiling.
The problem is that when seeking these words, I see that Esperanto has many words with each a different meaning from the other while in English, it is one word. I'm pretty sure someone has made this already. If not, could someone please be nice to do that for me? I'd really like to get fluent in Esperanto.
I've been studying Esperanto for a year and I can understand many words, but I can never remember all of them to speak without looking into the dictionary. I understand the grammar completely, but my vocabulary is so small. I was thinking if there's a flash card with around 100 words that one needs to know while speaking.
I'd like to have words like most common verbs: to be, to have, to make, to do, to go, to stop, to speak, to say, to intend, to refer to, to think, to think about something, to watch, to see, to seem, to say, to listen, to hear, to sound like something, to smell, to smell like something, to taste, to taste like something, to touch, to feel, to feel like something, to walk, to run, to stop, to turn, to eat, to drink, to swallow,....
Then nouns like bodyparts: head, body, torso, chest, stomach, arms, legs, hands, feet, knees, elbows, eyes, nose, mouth, teeth, ears, hair. And food to know, drinks to know, clothes, family members, colors, adjectives for geometrical description of things so that I can ask an Esperantist how to say a word without krokodiling.
The problem is that when seeking these words, I see that Esperanto has many words with each a different meaning from the other while in English, it is one word. I'm pretty sure someone has made this already. If not, could someone please be nice to do that for me? I'd really like to get fluent in Esperanto.
Kirilo81 (Montri la profilon) 2017-januaro-26 12:09:08
Here you are: https://ankiweb.net/shared/info/1586327721
TheLibrarian (Montri la profilon) 2017-januaro-31 03:05:58
Dankon! Mi estas komencanto. ĝi estas bono rimedo.