Monday 10 March 2008

MandarinTube: Learn Chinese From the Comfort of Your Own Home

So I was poking around on the Chinese Embassy's website and saw this link to ShowChina.org. It's actually a pretty interesting website that has all kinds of information about China. On there I came across a link to MandarinTube.com, a site where you can sign up for free and watch all kinds of videos to help you learn Mandarin. At first I thought it was just a bunch of videos of people in everyday situations speaking in Mandarin with English subtitles. Not very helpful. BUT then I looked around some more and it's actually a really good resource. In addition to the video they have a link to another video called "Understanding Video" where they go through the dialogue step by step showing you the written words, the English translation and slowly going through the pronunciation.

We'll see how actually learning this language goes. I took Japanese in college, but this is much harder. Spoken Japanese is pretty easy as the romanji (the way of writing Japanese in western letters) actually looks like what you are saying. Their language is made of fairly simple phonetics such as ka, sa, ro, ni, etc. Mandarin, on the other hand, is a whole different bag. Even though you can write it in western letters it still doesn't sound anything like what it looks like. Then there is the trouble that you can have the same word but depending on your inflection it can mean several different things. I can only hope I don't tell someone their mother looks like a monkey's butt.

Thursday 6 March 2008

Windsor Castle: Some Castle in England with an AWESOME dollhouse

OK, OK so Windsor Castle is more than "some castle in England" being that it's housed monarchs for centuries but seriously the best thing about Windsor Castle, for little girls *cough* and moms *cough*, is Queen Mary's Dolls House.

This thing is ridiculous. It was originally planned as a gift for Queen Mary (of the 20th century) by one of her neices but it quickly turned into a major project to promote the craftsmen and historical traditions of England. It is filled with custom made miniatures by some of the world's most well known artists. Cartier, Faberge, Daulton China, Rolls Royce, even writers such as Rudyard Kipling and A.A. Milne. You name it, it's in there. It has working elevators, electrical lighting, even working plumbing. There are miniature exact replicas of everything you would find in a "normal" upscale home at the time. It's just amazing. I could have spent hours looking at it. In fact, Maya and I went to see it twice because we loved it so much. If you're ever at Windsor Castle be sure to go to see the dollhouse and for 4.50 GBP you can also pick up a book about it in one of the gift shops which tells it's history and has some great close up shots. Since you aren't allowed to take photos when you're in there that's really the only way to get a lasting view.

You can also go online and find some illegally taken images that other people have done. I like the book, though, because it's quite complete and gives you information that you would never get from someone else's grainy blurry illegally taken photo. However, since you guys can't see the book, here are some of the said illegal images I found of it to give you an idea of it's wonderful display :
http://www.nsrider.com/gallerymain/England/dollhouse.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sangster/237745019/

Tuesday 4 March 2008

The Man Behind the Curtain

It's been unbelievably busy since my last post. Tallinn wasn't necessarily my FAVORITE place but overall it was a really nice, relatively relaxing trip.

The best part of the trip by far was getting to meet a gentleman named Mark Rybak. He is the cousin of one of Josh's friends from college and he actually grew up in Tallinn during the Nazi and Soviet occupations. He was very gracious in letting us ask him all kinds of questions about what life was like "behind the iron curtain." I am a huge history buff so it was fascinating to hear his views and often surprising. He said that, for the most part, life in Estonia was fairly normal for him. He knew that there were things he was missing out on but I didnt get the sense that he had bad memories of that time. That's not to say things overall were roses and candies, but it wasn't necessarily the life of a USSR citizen that I had envisioned. he now lives in Tel Aviv, Israel but is working in Tallinn to help them document the history of the small Jewish population of Estonia. Unfortunately, the majority of Mark's family, as well as the majority of the Jewish community in Estonia, were killed by the Nazi's and there is very little remaining of the Jewish cultural history there. Mark is working to help create a museum dedicated to those who were lost so they won't be forgotten. I say, good luck to him and I hope to go back to Estonia one day to see it.