natus92 t1_j6d9tff wrote
It might just be me but dont be disappointed if you dont get the same pleasure from reading in a foreign language. I've read several hundred books in english and pretty much exclusively watch english tv shows and I still vastly prefer reading in my mother tongue.
7mariam OP t1_j6dbqeu wrote
I guess it's because doing stuff in your mother tongue feels like 'home' :)
natus92 t1_j6ddeq3 wrote
Thats probably it. I just love my mother tongue and the growing dominance of english makes me a bit sad, tbh.
CraftyRole4567 t1_j6dvdza wrote
I hope you don’t mind me saying that I have the opposite experience. Reading in my second language, French, which I learned in high school, remains really satisfying to me – I know that it’s a chance to read something that would never be the same in translation, and I also am a little bit proud of myself for reading in another language 😏 It’s definitely a different experience than reading in my native language— but different, not worse. For me.
natus92 t1_j6ea532 wrote
Not at all :) I've read two books in french so far, have a little knowledge about multiple languages and a linguistics degree but for me personally nothing beats reading in german.
edit: and at this point I doubt its due to lack of english skills
CraftyRole4567 t1_j6eg8a6 wrote
You know a lot more than I do, obviously, but I have the impression that in German writers actually can create words on a pretty regular basis, which I would think would make reading in it an incredibly interesting experience that isn’t comparable to English.
natus92 t1_j6ejzx8 wrote
English does have compound nouns like grasshopper too! And I honestly dont really see the big difference between the constructs Wohnzimmer and its literal translation living room. Sure, you can create long new(ish) words like Kreuzworträtselleitfaden (crossword puzzle guide) but I guess thats not as exciting for a native speaker any longer. Sorry to disappoint
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