Beginning with Lernu.net and then where?
af jmatty2000, 25. jul. 2017
Meddelelser: 23
Sprog: English
Vestitor (Vise profilen) 30. jul. 2017 00.09.44
I still would advise people to use Duolingo first then do the interactive course here.
EmilioVdf (Vise profilen) 30. jul. 2017 23.52.20
Vestitor:It may be the cure but there's no point in speaking/writing it to people who need guidance first. This question was asked in English (with English indicated as the language) and yet it has a majority of Esperanto replies!It was my fault. I started it with my enthusiasm for writing in Esperanto. Sorry. :-[
jmatty2000 (Vise profilen) 30. aug. 2017 13.53.20
I'm actually at the 3-4 month point now in learning Esperanto so any illusions that I had about the language have now boiled down to the fact that Esperanto, like any langauge, other could still take years to master!!! And may even be or appear to more difficult to learn than other languages!! ... that is a possibility!!
In answer to my own question and to help others in the same boat as me, I tried to use lernu.net too early in my learning curve - knowing what I know now, I should have studied Esperanto for about 4 months first. Now I'm more ready to start with lernu,net I hope. I'll start with the Course tab and gradually work through the 26 chapters. The chapters also include questions to test yourself. Would anyone recommend printing out each page for ease of reference?
After the course, then a good option is to try the media section. After completing that, it looks as thought its up to each individual which avenue to follow e.g translations, conversation or even being an Esperanto author? etc...
Kind Regards
Mateo
EmilioVdf (Vise profilen) 31. aug. 2017 23.47.55
jmatty2000:EmilioVdf, thanks for your apology - I should perhaps report your remark and may still do so, so please only offer helpful advice in future. The same goes for any one else who gives off-topic / discouraging remarks.It is indeed a good way to start with the 26 lessons of "La teorio Nakamura", so you will see that learning Esperanto is easier then learning most of other languages. Although you make an effort for learning it - like everything.
I'm actually at the 3-4 month point now in learning Esperanto so any illusions that I had about the language have now boiled down to the fact that Esperanto, like any langauge, other could still take years to master!!! And may even be or appear to more difficult to learn than other languages!! ... that is a possibility!!
In answer to my own question and to help others in the same boat as me, I tried to use lernu.net too early in my learning curve - knowing what I know now, I should have studied Esperanto for about 4 months first. Now I'm more ready to start with lernu,net I hope. I'll start with the Course tab and gradually work through the 26 chapters. The chapters also include questions to test yourself. Would anyone recommend printing out each page for ease of reference?
After the course, then a good option is to try the media section. After completing that, it looks as thought its up to each individual which avenue to follow e.g translations, conversation or even being an Esperanto author? etc...
Kind Regards
Mateo
You don't need to print out the each page. You can always consult them again.
EmilioVdf (Vise profilen) 1. sep. 2017 00.00.03
jmatty2000 (Vise profilen) 7. sep. 2017 13.40.36
Its a shame that it doens't tell you what each chapter contains (like an index) as I would like to go back and re-visit some of the chapters again once I'm further into the course.
EmilioVdf (Vise profilen) 8. sep. 2017 04.26.18
I have also tried to do one chapter per day, but did not always succeed. But I did the course in 1,5 month.
Now I use the cours Pasporto al la tuta mondo for improve my pronunciation. I am glad to meet the actor Mr. Miko Sloper this month when he visits my club in Belgium.
jmatty2000 (Vise profilen) 8. sep. 2017 07.54.14
EmilioVdf (Vise profilen) 8. sep. 2017 23.56.43
jmatty2000:I might make a note of what the main topics are in each chapters to make it easier to re-practices them.... I hope you enjoy meeting Miko - he seems like a nice guy also.Yes I think it is a good thing to take notes. Sometimes when I repeat the exercises, it was not possible to type the special letters ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ and ŭ, but you can always copy them from elsewhere.
I am sure to enjoy the meeting with Miko to "philosophize" about esperanto.
Metsis (Vise profilen) 28. sep. 2017 10.12.15
For instance, my native language does not have articles, no indefinite nor definite one. Somehow I can for the most time grasp or remember when to put "the", but I mostly forget to put "a" (I see no need for them). And then Duolingo nitpicks about that. Or the future tense (my native language has it neither). For me a sentence with a reference to a future event, like "likely" in "The team likely wins." is enough (who doesn't understand that the event, "winning", is in future??), but no, both English and Esperanto demand here an explicit future tense, which for me is completely superfluous.
Sorry for the rage.