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    <title>Smiley&#39;s Tropical Escape</title>
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    <updated>2008-02-07T17:56:11Z</updated> 
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        <name>Smiley</name>
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00c2251e70a18e1d/tags/study/</id> 
    <subtitle>Sad Songs on a Broken Ukelele</subtitle>  
    
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        <title>Perpetual Student</title>   
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        <published>2008-02-05T03:41:56Z</published>
        <updated>2008-02-07T17:56:11Z</updated>
    
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        <p>It&#39;s come to me recently that, could I go back and do university again, I would do a business degree.&#160; On the other hand, could I go back and study anything I wanted, I&#39;d like to study linguistics.</p><p>At the moment, I study Japanese and <a href="http://coffeebreakspanish.com">Spanish</a> and I dabble in Italian.&#160; And I just signed up for an <a href="http://www.oneminutelanguages.com/">introductory, tourist level course in Russian</a>.&#160; I don&#39;t really have many reasons for doing so.&#160; At least not for anything other than Japanese.&#160; But I enjoy it, so I do it.</p><p>Everyone needs hobbies, right?</p><p>So now I&#39;m thinking of going back for my masters.&#160; And here&#39;s the question:&#160; Getting my masters will not immediately benefit my family or my career.&#160; In truth, it would probably detract from them in that I&#39;m spending my time and money on myself only.&#160; And, frankly, it&#39;s a lot of work.&#160; But it just sounds...interesting.</p><p>Any thoughts?</p>    <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Lingo</title>   
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        <published>2008-01-02T05:59:57Z</published>
        <updated>2008-01-02T05:59:57Z</updated>
    
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        <p>So, I&#39;ve been thinking about languages recently.&#160; Nothing new, really, except that instead of the mechanics of language, I&#39;ve been thinking about how we acquire languages.</p><p>Many of my circle of friends are in mixed-nationality marriages and speak two languages as primaries in the house.&#160; This is great for their children, who are growing up bilingual, but it is also somewhat confusing for the kids as they don&#39;t always know how to express themselves to the people around them.&#160; Something that will change as they grow older and more fluent, but can be problematic in the beginning.</p><p>And it is no secret that kids learn languages from their parents and the other adults around them.&#160; What I think most of us forget is that that is how we adults learn best too.&#160; I actively study two very different languages - Spanish and Japanese and while Spanish is the easier language (for native English speakers), my Japanese far surpasses my Spanish.</p><p>Let me put that in a bit of perspective:&#160; I grew up in Arizona, not 20 miles from the Mexican border.&#160; I took Spanish all through high school and have spent quite a bit of time in Mexico, as well as having several friends whose first language is Spanish.&#160; Some of my friends had parents who spoke only Spanish, necessitating that we kids speak Spanish in their homes.</p><p>By contrast, I have lived in Japan for just over seven years and my wife is Japanese.</p><p>And my Japanese is much better than my Spanish.&#160; The only reason I can really give for this is that I hear Japanese being spoken on a constant basis, where as I hear Spanish only when I pop in a DVD (Seriously, Shrek?&#160; Much funnier in Spanish.)&#160; I can attribute much of my Japanese to what I have heard when I watch t.v. or listen to J-Pop, or just talk to our friends.&#160; Because I have spent equal amounts of time studying both languages and yet my Japanese is so much better than my Spanish.</p><p>So.</p><p>The other day, as my wife and I were driving around somewhere, I was being a fairly typical husband.&#160; In other words, I was not really listening to what she was saying, instead concentrating on my driving.&#160; My wife smacked me on the arm and said, &quot;Pay attention, bitch!&quot;</p><p>I almost drove off the road from laughing so hard.</p><p>But the point is, we acquire languages from those around us much more than we give credit for.&#160; All studying, reading, writing aside (and don&#39;t get me wrong, those things are necessary for learning another language), the most natural, most fluent pieces of language we have do not come from a textbook.</p><p>There is a similar point to be made in that all of us use the same expressions and phrases as our friends and media heroes.&#160; However, I have to get back to studying now.<br /> </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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