Parents and friends must understand that after several years of studying English, they still can't understand the original English grammar textbook, which means that there is a serious problem with the learning method.
If you have not learned German, you can play this simple game with us.
In this series, I try to avoid words that have nothing to do with English or French.
The main purpose is to help Chinese children easily read the original English grammar textbook and memorize German and French words by the way.
This is a screenshot from the grammar textbook for the third grade in the original German version. According to common sense: German children can read such content. It's like Chinese elementary school students can read their own textbooks.
Very easy to understand: "personalpronomen" in German corresponds to "personal pronoun" in English and "pronom personnel" in French.
As you can already see, the long German word personalpronomen is actually personal and pronomen directly connected, without spaces.
Personal[ˈpəːsənl]adj.1. Personal, private persona
Disassembly: person+al.
Personnel[pɛrsɔnɛl]a. private, personal; [linguistic] personal; selfish
拆解:person+n+el。
The German adjective for the separate table "personal" is persönlich.
【German】persönlich(PƐʁˈzøːnlɪç/, [phɛɐ̯ˈzøːnlɪç]) adj. adv. proper motion. Personal. personal. subjective. unique. Personality. clandestine.
Disassembly: person+lich.
Whether you like it or not, English, French and German learners are actually learning Latin personalities.
Key Memories: The English,French,German,Italian,Italian," and "al" are all derived from the Latin —alis.
At least 3544 words in English end in -al, the vast majority of which are derived from Latin.
【Latin】personalis (classical pronunciation/per.so ːˈnaː.lis/, [pɛɾs̠oːˈnäːljɪs̠], ecclesiastical pronunciation/per.so ˈna.lis/, [pɛrsɔˈnɑːlis]):p ersonalis, personalis, personale adj. personal; of/relating to an individual;
Consists of persōna ("person") + -ālis.
The word "noun" in the English table is derived from the anglo-norman French (the official language of England during the Middle English period) and from the Latin nomen.
In Latin and its descendants, French, Italian, and Spanish, the table "noun" and "name" are the same word, and the table "verb" and "word" are also the same word. English is basically derived from words in French, Latin, and Greek in formal settings.
It is highly recommended that you have your child put person (person) and perfect (perfect), perform (performance), perfume (perfume), percent (percentage) together to compare memories.
In both English and Latin per is a preposition.
English: per[pə(r)]prep.1. (Quantity, price, etc.) per
One apple per child one apple per child
The fruit costs 30 pence per kilo.
2. (Time) each
40 words per minute 40 words per minute
how much do you earn per week? How much money do you earn per week?
My rent is $8000 per annum.
3. Follow
The work has been done as per instructions.
【拉丁语】per(国际音标/per/, [pɛɾ])prep. through (space); during (time); by, by means of;
Derived from Proto-Italian*per, from PIA (Proto-Indo-European) *peri and Ancient Greek περί (perí), Sanskrit परि (pári), Lithuanian per, Albanian për, English for homologous.
If you read my articles a lot, you will now understand for sure: the English pre- is the Latin prefix prae - a variation in French, corresponding to prä- in German.
Children who know the English word position can easily master English preposition, French préposition, German präposition.
Earlier, we reminded you again and again: -ation, -ition, -tion, -sion, -ion are all French noun suffixes, and removing n is the corresponding suffix for Latin.
Memory posit (placement), position (position), positional (position) as long as the focus on memory pos- can be.
【Latin】positio (classical pronunciation/poˈsi.ti.oː/, [pɔˈs̠ɪt̪ioː], ecclesiastical pronunciation/poˈsi.t͡si.o/, [pɔˈs̬iːt̪͡s̪iɔ]):p ositio, positionis n. f. position, place; framing (law); method of presenting (theme); downbeat;
Consists of the verb stem + -tiō of the verb pōnō ("put, place").
It is highly recommended that you are probably familiar with the Latin verb pono.
【Latin】pono (classical pronunciation /ˈpoː.noː/, [ˈpoːnoː], ecclesiastical pronunciation/ˈ po.no/, [ˈpɔːnɔ]) :p ono, ponere, posui, positus v. put/place/set; station/post (troops); pitch (camp); situate; set up; erect;
Disassembly: pon+o.
-o is the table "first-person singular" suffix.
So, the Latin pono is equivalent to the English i put.
It is recommended to familiarize yourself with the English word composite (part, synthetic) by the way. com- is the prefix for the table "together", used before b, p, m, and -ent is the French adjective suffix.
As long as you know the Latin root, such words do not have to be "memorized".
Position[pəˈzɪʃ(ə)n]n. azimuth; position
Disassembly: pos+ition.
Position[pozisjɔ~]f. Position, orientation; position; situation; posture; status; status; status, identity; position
【German】position (poziˈt͡si̯oːn/) [die] part. status. positioning. standpoint. identity. bit. location. posts. posture.
Just add the respective prefixes in front of them.
【English】preposition[ˌprepəˈziʃən]n.1. 【Language】Preposition; Preposition 2. Front position vt. handful... Placed in front, pre-set
Disassembly: pre+pos+ition.
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【French】préposition [prepozisjɔ~]f. preposition, preposition
【German】präposition (International Phonetic Alphabet/pʁɛpoziˈt͡si̯oːn/) [die] pl.praepositionen preposition. preposition
Dismantling: prä+pos+ition.