2008-07-09
The aubergine and the dictionaries
One evening for dinner, we had something I'd never seen or eaten before. It was a sort of stew of which the primary ingredient was aubergine. Don't ruin the story for anyone else if you already know what an aubergine is. I didn't and, when I wanted to find out what it was, I discovered a problem with most dictionaries. A problem I recently encountered again.
I went to look up aubergine in my English-German dictionary. It wasn't in there. That's odd. So, I went to my French-German dictionary. But, aubergine is a French word. So, I got a handy little entry that said, 'Aubergine - n. f. l'aubergine'. Big help. Could Russian help me? Nope, aubergine was aubergine. I asked people in Germany, I asked people in the States, I asked other UK students in class, I asked anyone I could think of and literally no one I knew had any idea what aubergine was in English (if they knew what an aubergine was at all) or they just knew it as aubergine. I remarked to my friend, Frank, at the time that perhaps we just didn't have aubergines in America. To which, he replied, 'You don't have the moon in the States but it's in the dictionary.' Arguably wrong, but his point was well taken. I won't keep you in suspense any longer. An aubergine is an eggplant. An eggplant. Common enough that it should have been well translated. We'll leave for another time a discussion about my ignorance of an eggplant.
Dictionaries are way too generic in some cases to be helpful and it's frustrating for me as an American to know that most language dictionaries cater to the UK than the States because we just aren't a polyglot or polyglot-interested country (present company excepted). The statistics for foreign language usage by native English speakers in America are scary and abysmal. It would be nice to have dictionaries that focus on American English. But, it's a question of audience and ultimately, I can't blame the publishers for making a dictionary that appeals to their audience.
That brings me to my dissappointment this week. I recently purchased the Hippocrene Compact Dictionary for Arabic. I was happy to find a very small tome that could fit in the side pocket of my backpack. Imagine my frustration when I found that some very basic things were missing from it. Months, days of the week, verbs like think and a list of other things were missing from it. But inexplicably it had words like kleptomania, lunar and optician. The one positive thing I can say about the dictionary is that it has a really good and straightforward verb conjugation appendix that shows how to conjugate the four types of Arabic verbs. But that's not worth the $9 I paid for it.
If I had the authors in front of me right now, I'd tell them the story I just told you and then finish with chiding them to think about who will use a pocket reference. It's not someone who knows the language well. Write for the audience. It will make your works much more enjoyable by your readers and bring them back over and over again, even if what you write is just a dictionary.
2008-07-07
Reading and Speaking Arabic
I also started listening to the ArabicPod101.com podcast today. I have to say I was much more impressed listening to it than the Arabic Podclass podcast. The people on 101 are conversational, natural and comfortable. They weave in some history and culture and they are very straightforward in explaining things to the listener. They break down the sounds and the grammar as it occurs, not fabricating the lessons in some artificial way. It's a nice balance between following natural language acquisition theories and practical acquisition exercises. My iTunes downloaded the 8th lesson as the most recent one for some reason although I see on their website that there are at least 9 episodes. They also have some tools and programs to use for drills and flashcards. I haven't tried them yet but if they are anything like their podcast, I'll be checking them out soon.
2008-07-01
MY First 100 Words
- I
- You (informal)
- He
- She
- It
- We
- You (formal)
- They (informal)
- They (formal)
- Be
- Have
- Go
- Walk
- Ride (whatever form is for going by vehicle as opposed to walking)
- Come
- Think
- See
- Write
- Read
- Hear
- Learn
- Find
- Want
- Need
- Can
- Will (sometimes not a separate verb)
- Yes
- No
- Not
- Maybe
- Today
- Tomorrow
- Yesterday
- Pen
- Paper
- Who
- What
- When
- Where
- Why
- Him
- Her
- Them
- Us
- Mine
- Yours
- Hers
- His
- Ours
- Buy
- Pay
- Become
- Send
- Get/Receive
- Take
- Give
- Friend
- Brother
- Sister
- Mother
- Father
- Family
- Numbers 1 - 20
- With
- Without
- Because (of)
- From
- To (as in direction)
- Until
- Against
- Through
- Over
- Under
- Beside
- Between
- Behind
- In front of
- Before
- After
- Left
- Right
- Except
- However/But/Rather
- For
- Around
- In
- Out
- Up
- Down
- House
- Car
- Work (place)
- Work (verb)
- Book
- Website
- Thing
- This
- That
- Those
- These
With these 100 words, you can start learning much faster once you have them down pat. And adding nouns is easy when you have them in context of an event. What makes it easier to learn is that you have an experience in which you put pieces together to come up with a memory that is unique to you. This is why learning by immersion is the best method; it's a string of memories associated with language acquisition that you can recall and use to get better.
So, why learn the present and simple past first? Something like 70% of all daily language usage falls into these two tenses. This is especially true if you are talking to someone for the first time. You will very often tell a story, whether that story is about what happened to you today or what you once did when you went to Beirut. Learning the past tense also gives you some idea of what the verb conjugation rules are. When you factor in that Be and Have are usually irregular verbs for most languages, you get introduced to at least one form of irregular verbs. So, you're picking up grammar without really realizing it. At least this is how I learn.
I'd be very keen to get feedback on the list. What words would you put on your first 100 list? Which ones do you think I got completely wrong?