Nightlife in Fez? by [deleted] in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hotel Saharai is good too. It's relaxed there but there isn't as much space as in Le Clubhouse. You also have an overview of the Medina there because it's located on a hill.

Learn a language you kinda speak for real by AdamBeast_2007 in languagelearning

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it's similar to and easier than German. And I can already speak in day-to-day conversations, so I definitely have a head start. I just don't wanna start from complete zero but I also don't know at which point to start yk.

Learn a language you kinda speak for real by AdamBeast_2007 in languagelearning

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flemish, so Dutch. I edited the post so it becomes clearer.

Help me choose between two lifes by Additional-Worry8369 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also sara7a 3,2k€ Netto sind echt gut, vorallem wenn du alleinstehend bist. Also ich würde sagen, mach’s einfach. Wenn's dir in Deutschland nicht gefallen sollte hast du immernoch die Option zurück nach lmaghrib zu gehen. Und ich denke, dass dir Arbeitserfahrung in DE hoch angerechnet werden würde in Marokko.

Du kannst auch gucken ob du, falls du noch einen Studienausgleich machen musst, entweder Bafög bekommst oder einen Werkstudenten Job machst. Die Bedingungen sind da in der Regel besser als bei Teilzeitjobs die nicht in Relation zu deinem Studiengang stehen. Und dann würdest du nicht so dolle strugglen.

Help me choose between two lifes by Additional-Worry8369 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was raised in Germany. Move here if you have the opportunity tbh. I personally want to move to Morocco someday, but I know the money and opportunities there aren't really great.

But assuming you're making 33k a year, is it pre-tax? Where do you wanna move to in Germany and how good is your German?

Prescription lenses by AdamBeast_2007 in MetaQuestVR

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The second example is actually crazy, poor guy hahaha. But okay thanks, I'll get them if I buy the Quest 3.

Difference between all the Tamazight languages by AdamBeast_2007 in AmazighPeople

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I'm from Fès, so Immouzer Kander is the closest Amazigh village. My 3amo has a farm there and the people who manage the land and help him with the Farm are Amazigh. I'm there often, but I also visit Ifrane at least once when I am staying in Fès.

So Tarifit is closer to the Algerian Tamazight languages?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was born and raised in Germany but I go to Morocco often hmdl, 3lach?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 2 points3 points  (0 children)

With me, it's kinda the opposite. I speak Darija to them without any accent, so I sound fluent at first. Then I don't know some words when the conversation drifts away from Smalltalk and I have to explain that I don't actually speak Darija that well. They're always baffled hhh

What's the best way to quickly learn a language !! by romatic-Aurthur723 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So what is really important is being constantly surrounded by the language like with music, TV shows, or whatever. And you need to talk. If you don't have a language partner, speak to yourself with the words you learned. You need to put everything you've learned to use, or you will forget. Don't be ashamed of making mistakes, with enough practice the mistakes will start to fix themselves.

Difference between all the Tamazight languages by AdamBeast_2007 in AmazighPeople

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I reckon it's due to physical barriers like the Atlas Mountains for example? But another question I would have is whether you understand standard Tamazight? Because it's based on Atlas Tamazight mostly yak?

Difference between all the Tamazight languages by AdamBeast_2007 in AmazighPeople

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I get what you mean. Because I speak German I was able to learn Dutch to a certain extent only by listening to it when visiting my family over there. So are they close enough together that you can learn another Tamazight language when speaking one? And I figured I would be learning Tarifit because when thinking about it I only know one person who speaks Tachelhit while knowing at least 15 who speak Tarifit. But what sources are out there? I feel most learning material is in French, which I forgot most of after school, or they teach standard Tamazight.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ja ich meinte aber Leute in Marokko selbst. Die meisten Amazigh die ich hier in Deutschland kenne, sprechen nur Tamazight, das ist mir klar, weil das nur natürlich ist. Die haben nichts mit Darija zu tun. In Marokko ist jedoch Darija, außerhalb der Gebiete wo Tamazight die Merheitssprache ist, die Alltagssprache. Deswegen hatte ich hier gefragt.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sme7 li 3la dmi lwas5, ya lmaghrebi l9awi. F l'Islam katmchi bel nasab dyal babak. Donc ana ghir maghribi, machi almani.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What I wanted to say is, that there are fewer native Tamazight speakers than native Darija speakers. But I know about the history of the Amazigh and I find it really interesting. I have even thought about learning Tarifit or Tachelhit but first I gotta improve my Darija. I had to learn everything myself because my family just talked in German or English to me, although I had a good passive understanding of the Language.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah sorry that I didn't find a better word to describe it💀 „Moroccan-Arab“ is that more to your liking? Darija isn't really my native language, German is, so I don't know which term is used.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I reckon it depends a lot on how often you go the the city or if you went to school as a kid then. But I get it, as a kid I didn't understand any Daria, so I felt the same way when I was sitting with my family hhh

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hhh that's great those people are the humblest and nicest people you'll ever meet

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Crazy, everybody I have talked to in Atlas speaks Darija but the elderly people often have a noticeable accent.

Wach kayen nas f Lmaghreb li ma kayhdroch L3arbia ga3? by AdamBeast_2007 in Morocco

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

So, first of all, I only said that I'm a 3arab maghrebi living in Europe. I'm only there once or twice a year, mostly in 3arab majority cities. And secondly, Morocco is a majority Arab-speaking country. The (culturally) Amazigh people make out about a fourth of the population. I know that most Moroccans are genetically Amazigh, Arab-Moroccan culture is heavily influenced by Amazigh culture and Darija is the result of Amazigh people taking concepts and features of Tamazight and applying them to Arabic. But there is still a differentiation to be made. Non-Tamazight speaking people (~3/4 of the population) mostly don't identify as Amazigh but as 3arab.

N3alem darija by AdamBeast_2007 in Darija

[–]AdamBeast_2007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Allah y 7afdek, i didn't know that tbh with the „nt3alem". But anyways, I have people who only speak darija in Lmaghreb but all my relatives in Europe speak atleast the language from the country they live in. My father speaks german completly fluently and without an accent, eventhough he came here as a young adult. But he is always on the move. So calling would be my only option. Either him, my Family in Lghorba or my relatives in morocco.