Like Frog

Intense few days of classes and studying.  Although, last night I went out to eat with Mr. Cheng and Mari.  That was fun.  I’ve been tutoring Mr. Cheng in English, but for table conversation he’s still a little slow.  So, there was plenty of Chinese as well as English.  We were a little mystified by one of the dishes — “like frog” according to Mr. Cheng, but not toad or eel — but not in our dictionaries and now the Chinese has escaped me.  It was definitely heavy on the vertebrae and was very fatty.  I thought it tasted like fish, but most of it was inedible as far as I was concerned, just bones and fat.  Ah well.  The sour fish was excellent and we had those itty bitty shrimps that are stir fried with hot red peppers.  Yum!

Exploring online today, I found a number of interesting sites:

  • Sinosplice – a top-notch site for Chinese language and culture from an academic American perspective.  In fact, I found most of these links on John’s site.  He seems to be pretty tech savvy and has a hand in developing some of these websites.  On Sinosplice, I like his discussion of language and this is fun: a popular Chinese song as a language learning tool
  • Adopt a Blog – help circumvent the Chinese censorship of blogs.
  • NewsinChinese – a stream of news articles written in Chinese with pinyin pronunciation and English translation available when you mouse over the text.
  • Serge Melnyk – this guy offers free Mandarin lessons, both streaming and downloadable.  I think it has too much English, and I’m a little doubtful of some of his interpretations.  But, hey, what do I know?  Anyway, it’s another resource.
  • ChinesePod - this is a kind of big budget version of Melnyk’s site.  New podcasts DAILY, which is very cool.  And they broadcast from Shanghai.  I’ve been listening for a while.  Lots of different levels to help you get started and keep building your vocabulary.  Conversational.  Recommended.
  • AdsoTrans – a kind of wiki-style Chinese-English translation tool.
  • AdsoVocab – same folks as adsotrans.  Promises a little more than it can deliver, but still pretty awesome.  Lets you build vocab lists and create flashcards.  I couldn’t get it to work completely, but I think I’ll keep fooling with it.

Look how well I procrastinate from the actual task at hand: studying Chinese.  So easy to waste hours in front of the computer!

Hope everyone had a happy 4th of July.  Curiously enough, I didn’t see any fireworks here.  Could have been arranged, I’m sure, but somehow I’m not feel very patriotic.

2 comments ↓

#1 the sister on 07.06.06 at 6:49 pm

hey, bitchin new site design! heh.

yeah fourth of july here was pretty much a bust.. It was my second-to-last-day of work and i came home exhausted, fell asleep before 9 – Matthew said there were some fireworks going off around 10 that were pretty spectacular.

so there must be some americans in chesham..

i love you!

#2 Jeremy on 07.07.06 at 9:07 pm

I saw some firework show over the Arch on the 2nd. It was very pretty because I watched it from a hill in mid-city about 5 miles from the actual site. The fireworks shoot up and noislessly pop into designs with the Arch illuminated behind them. I’d never seen fireworks from a distance where I couldn’t hear them before.

Studying for silly bar exams makes crowds a nightmare anyway, seeing and analyzing tort liability of everyone around. It makes even shopping hard, afraid to open doors for people lest they fall down etc. seeing who looks extra sensitive and prone to damage… blah blah blah

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