Sunday, 7 June 2009

Idioms Ahoy! Why's he talking about Donkeys?

Always on the lookout for those puzzling - but useful - idioms! It's a never ending task!

Here are three idiomatic expressions which mention 'donkey'.
  • Donkey work
  • For donkey's years
  • To talk the hind leg off a donkey

Have you ever heard any of these? If not, see if you can work out what they mean by reading the text below.

If you want to know the Wisma Bahasa gossip, talk to Mas Sugeng because he's been here for donkey's years. In fact he's been here so long he can remember when the Wisma Bahasa was still in Jalan Cenrawasih. If you ask him to tell you stories he'll talk and talk and talk. In fact no one can talk the hind legs off a donkey as well as he can! The teachers think they're so great but it's Mas Sugeng who does the donkey work that makes everything run smoothly at the Wisma Bahasa in the evenings: preparing the classrooms, answering the phone, greeting the students, finding the teachers, and generally keeping an eye on things.

Can you figure out what the expressions mean?

Here are the definitions:

Donkey work - necessary but boring routine work
For donkey's years - for a long time
To talk the hind leg off a donkey - to talk too much

Disappearing Languages - follow up

Here is an article from a Japanese newspaper (Asahi Shimbun) about endangered languages in Japan.

With only 15 speakers left, the Ainu language is “critically endangered” while seven other languages in Japan are also at risk of disappearing, according to a UNESCO report.

These eight languages in Japan are among about 2,500 around the world that have become or could become extinct, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s report said.

UNESCO’s Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger listed eight languages in Japan, such as the Ainu language, as independent tongues under international standards rather than indigenous dialects, an official with Paris-based UNESCO said.

In addition to Hokkaido, the Ainu language used to be widely spoken in Russia’s Sakhalin as well as the Chishima island chain off the coast of Hokkaido, including the Northern Territories. But the speakers there have died out.

“Few people speak Ainu in everyday life,” said the Sapporo-based Foundation for Research and Promotion of Ainu Culture.

The seven other endangered languages in Japan are Yaeyama, Yonaguni, Okinawa, Kunigami, Miyako in Okinawa Prefecture, Amami in Kagoshima Prefecture, and Hachijo in Tokyo. The first six languages are spoken on the Nansei island chain, which stretches from north of Taiwan and south of Kyushu, and Hachijo in Tokyo’s Hachijojima island and nearby islets.

UNESCO described the Yaeyama and Yonaguni languages as “severely endangered,” while the other five were “definitely endangered.”

Osamu Sakiyama, professor emeritus of linguistics at the National Museum of Ethnology, welcomed UNESCO’s approach, saying a dialect should be treated as an independent language if its speakers have a distinct culture.

“Coupled with the myth that Japan is ethnically homogenous, people tend to think that one language is spoken in Japan. But I want people to know there is quite a diversity,” Sakiyama said.

The Atlas of the World Languages in Danger released Thursday is the third. It conducted similar research in 1996 and 2001.

More than 30 linguists covered about 6,000 languages around the world, making the survey one of unprecedented scale.

The 2,500 endangered languages were put into five different categories: unsafe; definitely endangered; severely endangered; critically endangered; and extinct.

The number of “critically endangered” languages stood at 538, including 199 with 10 or fewer speakers. There were 502 “severely endangered” languages, 632 “definitely endangered,” and 607 were deemed “unsafe.”

Many of these languages are spoken in sub-Saharan Africa, South America and Melanesia.

Since 1950, 219 languages have become extinct, according to the report. The latest language to disappear is Eyak in Alaska, with the death of the remaining speaker, the report said.

Ryoji Kikuchi, an official with the Hachijo board of education, welcomed UNESCO’s citation as a good opportunity to keep record of the disappearing language.

“We have wanted to do something about the language because the number of people who speak it is decreasing due to the aging of society,” Kikuchi said.

Kikuchi said local officials are considering uploading a recording of the Hachijo language, taped several decades ago, on the town’s website.

Feel free to COMMENT on this post below.

Cartoon - Irritating Boss

Thousands of languages are disappearing


NEWS FLASH!




The United Nations cultural agency, UNESCO, says more than a third of the world's six thousand languages are in danger of extinction. Of those two thousand, it says, about two hundred are spoken by only a handful of people.

Download and listen to this news story here.

Here is the text:
When a language dies, UNESCO says the world loses valuable cultural heritage - a great deal of the legends, poems and the knowledge gathered by generations is simply lost. In 2008, Alaska's last native speaker of Eyak died, taking the language with her.

Chief Marie Smith Jones, praying here for the survival of the Eyaks. She died at the age of eighty-nine, campaigning to save her people's heritage.

UNESCO says government action is needed if the world is to preserve its linguistic diversity. People must be proud to speak their language to ensure it survives.

In the last five years, the governments of Mexico, New Zealand and the United States managed to reverse the trend locally. But UNESCO says the phenomenon of dying languages appears in every region and in very diverse economic conditions.

Here are some of the words and idioms used in the news report:
  • UNESCO - short for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
  • valuable cultural heritage - features belonging to a particular society, such as traditions, languages, buildings or works of art, which still exist from the past, are unique and therefore have a historical importance
  • a great deal of - many, a lot of
  • legends - old stories presented as history but unlikely to be true
  • native speaker of... - someone whose first language, or mother tongue, is...
  • campaigning - taking action aimed at achieving a goal
  • to preserve its linguistic diversity - to save the great number of languages currently spoken
  • to reverse the trend - to make sure people are encouraged to speak rare languages, so those languages can survive


Any thoughts on this?

There are many problems in this world. Is 'disappearing languages' something for us to worry about?

Do you speak a language that is disappearing?

How many of you will not teach your children the mother tongue your parents spoke and used with you?

Is English your second language? Third language? Fourth language?


Comments, thoughts, opinions in the COMMENTS below please.

Moral Dilemma #2 Irritating Workmate

You have a very annoying colleague at work. Let's call her Prima... no not the Wisma Bahasa's Prima. A different one! Anyway, this Prima isn't very good at her job. You are always correcting her mistakes and always covering up for her when her mistakes cause trouble for everyone in your department. On top of it all, she has very irritating personal habits like eating smelly fried beans (pete goreng) in the office and listening to D'Massive on her computer. One day she applies for a transfer to another department. The department's boss asks you for a reference. In other words, do you recommend her to the boss? What do you do next?

Your answers and thoughts please in the COMMENTS below.

We apologize on behalf of Bahasa Inggris, part 1

There are no less than NINE phrasal verbs that use the verb "ask" + a preposition.

How many of them do you know already?


A. What does 'Ask after' mean?
  1. Enquire about someone's health, how life is going
  2. Give assistance
  3. Die
B. What does 'Ask in' mean?
  1. To invite somebody into your house
  2. Move at the same rate
  3. Drive a vehicle as fast as possible
C. What does 'Ask for' mean?
  1. Request to have or be given
  2. Mean
  3. Experience different times
D. What does 'Ask over' mean?
  1. Arrive in large numbers, for military vehicles
  2. Invite
  3. Lose hair
E. What does 'Ask for' mean?
  1. Attack
  2. To provoke a negative reaction
  3. Hit and injure someone
F. What does 'Ask round' mean?
  1. Invite someone
  2. Explode
  3. Emit pollution or something else unpleasant
G. What does 'Ask out' mean?
  1. To invite someone for a date
  2. When trouble starts
  3. Visit
H. What does 'Ask around' mean?
  1. Stop holding (but withdraw support gently)
  2. Invite someone
  3. Understand fully
I. What does 'Ask around' mean?
  1. Use money earned
  2. Ask a number of people for information of help
  3. Make someone feel more positive
Your suggested answers or any other discussion in the COMMENTS below please. Do the test on your own before you check the answers below.

Saturday, 6 June 2009

C.S.I. Yogya - Special Grammar Police Unit #1

Call in the Grammar Crime Scene Unit. There are EIGHT errors in the following text. Can you find them?
I've listened to you're story. And there isn't any reason for me to believe you. Its unbelievable! Who's idea was it to tell Ani? Their are times when you should keep a secret and times when you should open your mouth. Well, your in trouble now! Whose going to tell the university? And how on Earth can we give there bicycle back? And what about it's wheel? It's completely broken! Whose fault is it? Well it's not mine! Who's going to pay for the damage? You're crazy if you think I can pay for their bicycle! I can't even afford to replace its wheel!

To make it more interesting the EIGHT incorrectly used words in text are also used correctly, once each. Give your answers in the COMMENTS below.

Spot The Error #1




Can you see the mistake in the text on the memorial plaque above?

Answer in the COMMENTS below!

Grammar Book - PDF with hyperlinks



Here is a very useful grammar book It is in PDF format but it has hyperlinks which means that if you click on certain text you are able to jump from page to page in order to find what you are looking for. There are 224 pages. The file is zipped to 800KB. Highly recommended.

Download it by clicking on the picture of "Grammar Crackers" below:

Electronic Dictionary for your computer




The IndoDic E-kamus is a downloadable, Windows-based electronic dictionary and translating tool which lets you access the TruAlfa Indonesian and English translation dictionaries without an internet connection.
The IndoDic E-kamus is free for personal use.

DOWNLOAD it here.

Click on this graphic for a screenshot:

Cartoon - Saving Face

Moral Dilemma #1 Lunch partner

One of your friends invites you to have lunch with him. Let's call him Anton. You tell Anton that you are sorry but you can't accept because you are too busy with your work. A short while later a different friend, called Jack, invites you to lunch. You now feel tired and decide that your work can wait till after lunch and so you accept Jack's invitation. When you get to the cafe you see that Anton is inside, eating lunch alone. What do you do next?

Answers, thoughts, suggestions in the COMMENTS below please!