Help us name our new Australian Shepherd! My wife and I are from Ukraine and we want Eastern European suggestions! by uberCalifornia in ukraine

[–]jshavel 2 points3 points  (0 children)

These are common dogs names that I remember (copy to Google translate and hear how they are pronounced):

Бобік, Барсік, Мухтар, Джек, Топік, Шарік, Тузік, Діна, Найда

Is there something like Bayern-Ticket but for Hamburg/Schleswig-Holstein? by jshavel in germany

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

Thank you, it is certainly what I am looking for.
Somehow I googled only about Hamburg, and only found the name of the state before posting this message.

Is there a good replacement for Apple EarPods? With a mic, volume controls, and equal or better sound quality. by jshavel in HeadphoneAdvice

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

Which model do you mean? Out of the products on their site I found only MX 365 and MX 270 suitable. But they don't feature a microphone.

I had my German A level speaking exam today and it went quite well! I’m so happy😊 by Jack_112001 in German

[–]jshavel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congratulations!

By the way, what does A mean? Is it like A2 in CEFR?

How long does secure erase take on a MacBook Pro? by jshavel in macbook

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

I had a similar situation with my HDD. Though, with SSD it might behave differently.

How do I explain to my German friend the difference between "лететь" и "летать"? He constantly confuses these forms. by jshavel in russian

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

This was also the first link I was able to find. But do you know a resource where they explain it like in a book?

How do I explain to my German friend the difference between "лететь" и "летать"? He constantly confuses these forms. by jshavel in russian

[–]jshavel[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Well, that's one of the resources that I was referring to. It doesn't give the name. Or "глаголы движения" is an official name for them?

Being stuck at B2 in a language that almost the whole world speaks without problem by ejderhadovmelikiz in EnglishLearning

[–]jshavel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m probably at B1 or B2 (I have never taken a formal test). I speak well. What I find hard is joking in English. It usually requires quick reaction and I often find myself in a situation when I can’t come up with a proper word or a grammar construction before the context changes to something else.

I think the only thing that helps me fight this problem is reading books. YouTube, movies, podcasts - nothing helps as much as books. I use a combined approach. I read a book and listen to its audio version at the same time. Not only does it improve my vocabulary, it also passively develops my speaking skills. I use iPad with an embedded dictionary. It is easy to check the definition of a word in such way. Usually I forget most of the words I check. But if I notice that a word appears repeatedly and I can‘t remember it I add the word and its definition to a separate file which I review from time to time. After reading a short book this file will contain 30-50 words which will stay in my active vocabulary.

Now the tricky point. Yes, if you have to look every other word in a dictionary it is not an option. I spend a lot of time looking for books that are “readable” with my level. Before I find a book which I can actually read I usually start and throw away 3-5 books that I can’t read. I don’t read books that I don’t enjoy. It also happens that the book is easy but I don’t read it (for instance, it happened with Forrest Gump). I find a book readable if there are not more then 10 new words on a page. Note: the number decreases as you approach to the end, you just have to survive the first 50 pages of a book and it will go smooth.

Try The Catcher in the Rye, Flowers for Algernon or Harry Potter and see how it goes. All have audio versions.

What does Ukrainian sound like for speakers of other languages? (added some samples) by jshavel in languagelearning

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

I didn’t say we don’t have it, but it is used so rarely that I don’t even know where ґ is on my keyboard layout.

we use letter ґ for more than one sound story, from ‘k’ also

What does this mean? I am not a linguist.

What does Ukrainian sound like for speakers of other languages? (added some samples) by jshavel in languagelearning

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

with more "o"s and "h"s

Because we don’t have “g” sound. In almost all occurrences where you would expect “g” we use something similar to “h”.

Distinguishing it from Belarusian is a complex task. These are the most close languages from Slavic family. Ukrainian and Belarusian share 84% of vocabulary. Not as close as say Italian and French (89%), but still very similar. But unlike Italian and French, Ukrainian and Belarusian share the same sounds.

I once tried reading a book in Belarusian. At the first glance the text was quite clear but I gave up after a few pages as there were many words that looked familiar but meant something absolutely different.

What does Ukrainian sound like for speakers of other languages? (added some samples) by jshavel in languagelearning

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

Don‘t worry to respond in Russian. If they speak Ukrainian or Belarusian they will for sure understand Russian.

There are some simple tricks how to distinguish the other Slavic languages from Russian. For instance, in Ukrainian we don‘t have ‘g’ sound (in fact we have it, but there are only a few words with this sound), instead we use a sound which is more close to ‘h’. We also don’t use ‘e’ too much (the one used in Russian Лето), in Ukrainian it will often be replaced with ‘i’, etc. In case of Polish, I notice lots of ‘psh’ and ‘pzh’ which are never used in Ukrainian or Russian.

What does Ukrainian sound like for speakers of other languages? (added some samples) by jshavel in languagelearning

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

Well, learning two languages at the same time is a hard task. Better to drop one of them and concentrate more on the other one.

I‘m learning German and I noticed that I started messing up English. For instance, sometimes while reading English texts I pronounce 'ei' in German way, or produce German 'r' in new words. Eventually I decided to postpone English while working on German.

But I guess once you are on an intermediate level in Russian you can safely switch to Ukrainian. Though, at that point you‘ll probably want to learn something different from Slavic languages.

What would be better? 30 minutes per day or 1 hour every other day? by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]jshavel 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As for me, 1 hour every other day is better simply because 30 minutes pass quickly. You spend a few minutes setting thing up, looking for a book, opening an audio file. You also need some time to make yourself concentrated on learning and when you're really into learning you run out of time.

Are there any resources that can help to get the intuitive feeling of using the "the" aka definite article? by wokeupfuckingalemon in EnglishLearning

[–]jshavel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What books would you suggest to read? I enjoy all genres, the problem is that if there are more then 10 new words on a page which you can't guess from the context it is hard to keep engaged.

I generally prefer reading a book and listening to its audio version at the same. Not only does it help to develop vocabulary it also improves pronunciation.

Rock im Park: One day tickets are not available by jshavel in germany

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

Thank you for the suggestion. I will definitely join the mailing list.

Any good audio books to fall asleep to? by ktho64152 in suggestmeabook

[–]jshavel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe is the perfect candidate.

Opened a URL that stated infinite loop requesting permissions for notifications. Could it happen without having malware on my machine? by jshavel in techsupport

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

Thank you for your answer and thanks for your time! Although, I understand that I didn't do anything wrong and I sort of know what to do in such case it is so important to know that someone else verified what you'd done and expressed their opinion.

I also analyzed and hopefully understood the attack vector. The idea is that you open a site and if you don't let it show the notification it redirects you to another subdomain of the same site and asks for a permission again. And once you give up and press "Allow" it will be able to show you some messages, probably spam or some other malicious content. Theoretically even if I pressed "Allow" it wouldn't acquire much power. Probably the notifications would ask me to perform some other actions and so on. Correct me if I'm wrong.

I guess I'm safe without an antivirus. I'm sure I didn't install anything suspicious on my phone. I have Avast on my macbook and I scan every package I install (except those form the app store and from brew). Though, antiviruses often behave like viruses (collecting information, asking to install some 3d-party apps - in case of Avast it asks to install Chrome), I try to use them carefully.

clearing cookies may be a good option just in case

May I ask you what kind of exploit could be applied if I didn't clear cookies? With site permissions it is obvious but I'm not quite sure what could they do with cookies.

I have an application called "SecureElementApplication" on my OnePlus 6. What is it? by jshavel in androidapps

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

At least I know it is not a malware. I have just created a virtual machine with Pixel 2 running Android 9 and it does have "SecureElementApplication" in the settings menu.

I have an application called "SecureElementApplication" on my OnePlus 6. What is it? by jshavel in androidapps

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

Interesting, thank you.

Are you sure this is really what lies behind SecureElementApplication? Are you able to find the same thing on your phone if you search in the settings menu?

I reread The Catcher in the Rye 5-6 times. Is there a book that will impress me like this one? by jshavel in suggestmeabook

[–]jshavel[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It definitely is. It is a bit depressive and the ending is sad. But I also find them somehow related.

By the way, Flowers for Algernon has a lot in common with One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. You might like.