Does it use Flash? I thought that had been stopped now as very insecure?
I am a retired children’s play therapist. I like riding my bike, reading sci fi and fantasy, and I’m learning German because I have family living in Germany. I used to speak French but I’m no longer fluent.
Does it use Flash? I thought that had been stopped now as very insecure?
I think it must be at least 60 years now since I first started crocheting. I’ve had long periods when I didn’t crochet but once I found Ravelry I was hooked again.
I was interested in a lot of stuff when I was a kid, including sewing, drawing, spirograph, and crochet. Crochet seems to have stuck around. I was taught by a book, my Mum, my Nan, and an old lady my Mum knew. It took a while for it to stick.
I make great shawls, and much less good jackets, so I mostly make shawls. Also some hats and fingerless gloves.
The one thing I’d really like to be better at is seaming; mostly for knitting but for crochet too.
That looks a bit like using Netlix with Language Reactor. Language Reactor is free, but of course you do need Netflix.
I liked Clozemaster for a while, but now it’s only worth it if you get the paid version, otherwise you can only do 30 sentences a day. I did find it helped to see vocabulary in context.
The DW videos are OK but I’d rather watch real input if I’m going to work with speech. I really enjoyed a Netflix film “Offline - das Leben ist kein Bonuslevel”, and a DVD of “Frau Muller muss Weg”. The Netflix Criminal Series were good too.
I’m giving italki a miss for now, because talking to Heidi is much more fun. (She the friend of Angelika Bohn that I mentioned earlier.)
Thank you so much for starting this community! I don’t think you need to be a German ace to moderate it, and being a learner amongst learners is a good thing - you know what we are going through!
I too am a refugee from another place ;-) and I’m trying to find communities to replace the one I’ve mostly lost. This is one of the most important ones to me.
I used Duolingo, then took face to face small group lessons before the pandemic. We were working on A2 material when covid struck, and the new online teacher was … well it wasn’t working for me.
Since then it’s been a rather undisciplined mixture. I do have the book Grammatik Aktiv A1 - B1 and it is helpful, when I open it and use it! I’ve watched various Youtube and Netflix programs with the help of Language Reactor which lets you see both German and English subtitles at the same time.
I’ve used Clozemaster, and tried the Deutsche Welle website. Their Nicos Weg is good, but I find it very demanding to listen to normally spoken German conversation, instead of a newsreader’s clear articulation!
I really liked the story books by Angelika Bohn - they are at all levels from A1 up to B2, and you can get audio of her reading them too. I wrote a fan letter to her and one thing led to another and now I am having more-or-less weekly Tandem chats via Skype with a friend of hers, an absolutely delightful German woman.
I’ve tried italki, and some teachers were more suited to me than others. Currently I’m reading fantasy books in German on my Kindle, because then I can quickly get a translation of all the many words and sentences that I don’t understand.
I think I made the most progress with the face to face group, but I’m very covid vulnerable so I’m not sure when or if I can pick that up again.
This looks really good. The spoken German is really helpful - my reading level is well above my listening level and I’m trying to get some practice in listening.
I’ve always felt that the sense of smell was underrated. But then I do have the best sense of smell of anyone in my family. It’s just as well because my other senses aren’t all as good: I need glasses and hearing aids. I wonder if there will ever be some sort of aid for smelling.
That’s really great! I think a native speaker who can say, “that doesn’t sound right, we say it like this” can be a huge help!