Difference between revisions of "Language/Multiple-languages/Culture/Ideas-about-language-learning"

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So I think there can be a website can provide such a service, even better.
So I think there can be a website can provide such a service, even better.


Review on https://babadada.com/: There is no gender, which is a huge defect. Also it is in lack of verification.
Review on https://babadada.com/: It is mostly translated by Google. There is no gender, which is a huge defect. Parts of speech are not clear.


=== Tutorials of languages ===
=== Tutorials of languages ===

Revision as of 12:16, 29 August 2018

This is for expressing your ideas about language learning and culture exchange.

Everyone may say something under its username. And generally do not delete other users' content.

GrimPixel

Better if they are well-funded and be freemium or free. I don't expect Duolingo to do that, at least before it makes its new courses acceptable.

Website of visual dictionary [REALIZED: https://babadada.com/]

I have seen three books:

5 Language Visual Dictionary

The Firefly Five Language Visual Dictionary: English, Spanish, French, German, Italian

Merriam-Webster's Compact 5-Language Visual Dictionary (English, Spanish, French, German and Italian Edition)

So I think there can be a website can provide such a service, even better.

Review on https://babadada.com/: It is mostly translated by Google. There is no gender, which is a huge defect. Parts of speech are not clear.

Tutorials of languages

I have seen two channels on Youtube:

https://www.youtube.com/user/ProgrammingKnowledge

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfx2dro_w4_MyA19Nm5badg

providing "tutorials" about programming languages such as C++, Java, Python, which last several hours. So I think somebody may give such "tutorials" about the grammar of human languages.

Filter of characteristics

This requires a database of characteristics of ethnics or nationalities, with a filter. Input the characteristics, and get the result of which ethnics or nationalities possess them.

Of course it requires update, because culture may change with time.

Sentence analyzer

Tatoeba has a lot of sentences, but it only shows what a sentence looks like. There should be something radical, to reveal the function of a sentence, to show people the logicality of a sentence. That is to say, syntax.

I imagine a service, which draws parse trees of each sentence, and shows how a sentence may be changed in structure into another one without changing its general meaning.