Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: May 2003
Posts: 18,044
shareholder in the making
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shareholder in the making
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 18,044 |
I think he's trying to avoid counteracting them.
I am the Doctor, and THIS... is my SPOON!
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Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 6,379 Likes: 7
axiomite
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axiomite
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 6,379 Likes: 7 |
Sort of counter-counter-acting them, I guess.
Sorry warriorwolf, normally it takes longer for a thread to go off the rails. I was working in Korea with a large company on the design of a PC workstation they were building for us... a typical meeting would consist of 4 hours discussion in Korean, a couple of hours in Japanese, an hour or so in Chinese (Korean was phonetically similar to Mandarin but all the suppliers involved spoke Cantonese), many faxes to Japan (the phonetics were different but Koreans and Japanese shared a common-ish script), then someone would turn to me and say "No Problem" in English.
Think of this thread as something in a similar vein. "No Problem".
M60ti, VP180, QS8, M2ti, EP500, PC-Plus 20-39 M5HP, M40ti, Sierra-1 LFR1100 active, ADA1500-4 and -8
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Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 602
aficionado
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aficionado
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 602 |
Actually Bridgman, Koran and Japanese have absolutely nothing in common. Although Korean (root words) have commonality with Chinese, about 600 years ago, a Korean king said "screw this...Chinese is too hard!" So he created a new language for Koreans (thank goodness for Koreans, the language is phonetic and easy to learn).
Hope you enjoyed your trip!
-- Denon 4520, EPIC80/500/VP180 Speakers
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Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 6,928
axiomite
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axiomite
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 6,928 |
I find Korean and Chinese to sound similar. They are both like Greek to me
Half of communication is listening. You can't listen with your mouth.
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Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 6,379 Likes: 7
axiomite
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axiomite
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 6,379 Likes: 7 |
Actually Bridgman, Koran and Japanese have absolutely nothing in common. Although Korean (root words) have commonality with Chinese, about 600 years ago, a Korean king said "screw this...Chinese is too hard!" So he created a new language for Koreans (thank goodness for Koreans, the language is phonetic and easy to learn). Agreed. I found the phonetic language a life-saver... made it much easier to get around with my relatively poor language skills. The fact that some travel-related words were borrowed from English and translated directly to phonetics didn't hurt either, eg Da-Xi (taxi) and Tsa-U-Na (sauna). My name didn't translate so well to phonetics though, ended up something like Bu-Li-Gi-Man That said, my understanding was that the phonetics were used to represent the Mandarin pronounciation and that Chinese characters were still mixed in for cases where multiple words had the same pronunciation. All of the newspapers, for example, contained mostly Korean phonetic text but perhaps 10-15% of the words were represented by Chinese characters (for the cases where phonetics were not sufficient to uniquely identify a word). The connection with Japanese is indirect, in the sense that it only exists as a consequence of some common characters used between Chinese and one of the Japanese writing variants. There is no direct connection between Korean and Japanese, just the fact that since Korean writing "escapes" to Chinese characters and that the same characters are used in one of the Japanese variants (with the same meanings, I'm told), that opens a possible communication path between "Koreans who know a lot of Chinese characters" and "Japanese who know the script variant that uses the same Chinese characters" and that path was heavily used by engineering folks at the time (mid-80s). Or something like that I really loved my time in Korea.
Last edited by bridgman; 09/27/10 03:10 PM.
M60ti, VP180, QS8, M2ti, EP500, PC-Plus 20-39 M5HP, M40ti, Sierra-1 LFR1100 active, ADA1500-4 and -8
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Re: Diffusers, Absorbers and other wall treatments
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Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 602
aficionado
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aficionado
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 602 |
Glad you enjoyed my motherland! Boy, haven't been there in 15+ years! You are right about Chinese being used as "proper noun" or for formal occasions. Most "older" Koreans know enough characters to probably get by in China (by writing the characters). Now, if I could only get fast speed Internet connection like in Korea!
-- Denon 4520, EPIC80/500/VP180 Speakers
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