A nice online course

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juronjaure
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Postby juronjaure » 2007-11-14, 17:13

Interesse hab ich immer, wenns um Sprachenlernen geht, das weißt du ja, nur hab ich seit Monaten kein Samisch mehr gelernt, von daher bin ich glaub ich noch nicht in der Lage, Kinderbücher zu lesen :(
Ich werde, soweit ich Zeit dazu habe, mich erstmal an die ebooks machn um mein bescheidenes Wissen wieder aufzufrischen :)
Ronja

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nighean-neonach
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Postby nighean-neonach » 2007-11-14, 19:07

Ich habe ein ganz süßes Buch, das zweisprachig norwegisch / samisch ist... ich schreibe demnächst mal eine Seite davon ab, so zum Gucken :)
Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

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juronjaure
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Postby juronjaure » 2007-11-14, 21:56

Oh das wäre super, Norwegisch kann ich ja immerhin :)
Seltsamerweise hab ich immer Probleme damit, mir die samischen Vokabeln zu merken, normalerweise hab ich da keine Probleme mit, auch nicht in Finnisch, nur die samischen krieg ich einfach nicht in meinen Kopf...

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nighean-neonach
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Postby nighean-neonach » 2007-11-15, 15:27

Vielleicht, weil du sie zu wenig wiederholst bzw. anwendest? Das ist ja meistens der ganze Trick... wenn man in einer Sprache viel liest und hört, merkt man sich auch die Vokabeln besser. Wenn man nun aber in einer Sprache wenig Material zur Verfügung hat und die Sprache auch im Alltag gar nicht um sich hat, dann hat man ja automatisch weniger Möglichkeiten, die Wörter zu wiederholen, in anderen Zusammenhängen zu sehen und anzuwenden usw.
Ich arbeite mich momentan durch die Texte auf http://skuvla.info - das ist zwar recht anstrengend, weil ich ständig alles nachschlagen muss, aber da man die norwegischen Versionen parallel lesen kann, bekommt man einen ganz guten Einstieg, und ich lerne unheimlich viel Vokabular dabei. Mit jedem Text geht es etwas besser :)
Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

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nighean-neonach
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Another nice link (children's site)

Postby nighean-neonach » 2007-11-15, 22:24

Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

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Steisi
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Postby Steisi » 2007-11-16, 13:31

nighean-neonach wrote:Super :D

Mot manná? Oahpat go don sámegiela? Logat go girjjiid? Mus leat cábbát mánáid-girjit sámegillii, háliidat go don daid lohkat? ;)


Bures dat manná! Gal mun oahpan sámegiela, muhto mus ii leat girjjiid. :( Mus lea Davvin 1 ja 2, muhto mus ii leat áiggi danin go mus leat golbma bargubaihkki ja váccán juohke beaivve skuvlla :(

I didn't quite understand your last sentence, could you translate for me? Oh, and if you see any mistakes, correct me please!
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Aleco
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Sami TV

Postby Aleco » 2007-11-17, 13:24

I just figured out I'd post a link to several Sami programmes who run here daily and weekly :) They are with Norwegian subtitles as well ;) )

Árdna (Sami Culture Programme)
Mánáid-TV (Children's Programme
Ođđasat (The News)
Native (no) Fluent (en-us)
Conversational (sv) Understands (dk) Minored in and lived in (ja) Actively studying (hu)
Exposed to (fo) Study now and then (et) Curious about (cs)

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nighean-neonach
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Postby nighean-neonach » 2007-11-17, 13:55

Yes, the children's programmes are just lovely :D
Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

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Steisi
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Postby Steisi » 2007-11-17, 14:29

I love Ođđasat - they always seem to feature incredibly stereotypical Sámi things. The first time I watched it dealt with the reindeer industry :D
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nighean-neonach
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Postby nighean-neonach » 2007-11-17, 14:42

Yeah well, I suppose that's what regional news programmes do all around the world. They give a voice to the topics that happen at people's doorstep, because especially with minority cultures those things are often ignored in the national media. The average Norwegian won't care about reindeer, but to many of the Sámi it is still an essential economic topic.

Same in Gaelic, see, do you remember ever seeing the Western Isles on the British national news? Sometimes they are not even on the weather map :P
Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

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Steisi
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Postby Steisi » 2007-11-17, 14:53

nighean-neonach wrote:Same in Gaelic, see, do you remember ever seeing the Western Isles on the British national news? Sometimes they are not even on the weather map :P


They are! See Meridian news www.meridiantv.co.uk - although of course it's area specific so Meridian Southeast won't focus for too long on the Western Isles ;) But they are there! There's usually an arrow that points to Shetland too :D
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Postby Loiks » 2007-12-02, 20:38

What a difference in issues inside one country (and one TV) - if you compare the Saami Oddasat and urban Uudenmaan Uutiset at YLE :). I think the contrast is even bigger in Sweden and Norway.

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Nice clip

Postby Makrasiroutioun » 2007-12-06, 4:46


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Sean of the Dead
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Re: Sammallahti's intro to Saami languages

Postby Sean of the Dead » 2009-05-18, 5:00

Steisi wrote:But the book is great, contains lots of grammar, tons of phonology and a good vocab at the back of the book. Worth a look :yep:

Wtf is the name of the book? :?
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nighean-neonach
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Re: Sammallahti's intro to Saami languages

Postby nighean-neonach » 2009-05-18, 10:19

Sean of the Dead wrote:
Steisi wrote:But the book is great, contains lots of grammar, tons of phonology and a good vocab at the back of the book. Worth a look :yep:

Wtf is the name of the book? :?


As it said in the title of her post: Sammallahti's intro to Saami languages :roll:
Writing poetry in: Scottish Gaelic, German, English.
Reading poetry in: Latin, Old Irish, French, Ancient Greek, Old Norse.
Talking to people in the shop in: Lithuanian, Norwegian, Irish Gaelic, Saami.
Listening to people talking in the shop in: Icelandic, Greenlandic, Finnish.

Alfgrimur
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Re: A nice online course

Postby Alfgrimur » 2011-03-24, 14:27

I live no where near any native Saami speakers and only speak English. I can read Latin but I doubt there are any useful Saami grammars and dictionaries in Latin. What are the best English options I can access online?


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