DuoLingo Challenge
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DuoLingo can be sad at times.
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I did it, I completed Spanish on DuoLingo!
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@scottalanmiller said in DuoLingo Challenge:
I did it, I completed Spanish on DuoLingo!
That's it? 36% & 37% and your done? I've been at 44% and can't even maintain.
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@NerdyDad said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller said in DuoLingo Challenge:
I did it, I completed Spanish on DuoLingo!
That's it? 36% & 37% and your done? I've been at 44% and can't even maintain.
Fluency has nothing to do with completion
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@NerdyDad said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller said in DuoLingo Challenge:
I did it, I completed Spanish on DuoLingo!
That's it? 36% & 37% and your done? I've been at 44% and can't even maintain.
What I want to know is how you get to 44%. I've put in some crazy time on it and I have no idea how I will get past 38%.
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Japanese is released
But not supported on the web yet apparently.
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Weird, every language I've seen does web then mobile, not the other way around.
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Boogie woogie woogie
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Spanish
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@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
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@momurda said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
They do cover that, actually. But they don't make it very clear.
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@JaredBusch said in DuoLingo Challenge:
Japanese is released
Always fancied learning Japanese. Also Klingon lol (that I know is coming lol)
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@momurda said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
There are things in the Japanese that have multiple means that are horribly not clear which one they want sometimes. I report those everytime.
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@scottalanmiller said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@momurda said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
They do cover that, actually. But they don't make it very clear.
Tocar always means to play when the object is an instrument.
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@RojoLoco said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@momurda said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
They do cover that, actually. But they don't make it very clear.
Tocar always means to play when the object is an instrument.
How would you say to touch the flute, then?
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@JaredBusch said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@momurda said in DuoLingo Challenge:
@scottalanmiller tocar also means 'to play' as well as 'to touch'
There are things in the Japanese that have multiple means that are horribly not clear which one they want sometimes. I report those everytime.
Me too, often they accept either, which seems fine. But often they don't and expect you to do the less likely one.