So I think I was studying it at least 12 hours per week for maybe 1 to 2 months
But I would still forget at first
But now I can go for months without studying and still remember
After you relearn it enough times it stays in your memory
So after you learn the alphabet well enough then simply translating sentences forces you to use the alphabet every time you read or write
Maybe you should go through the whole alphabet course then delete it three times then next do the parts where you translate it back and forth from Korean to English
But you shoud do at least one lesson of Korean to English translation every day for at least a month to avoid forgetting the alphabet after you complete the alphabet
If you are not using the Alphabet every day you might forget it
Verb is at the end of simple sentences
Watch let's play then I see how game is actually played & decide if I want to try it
For point in click I do not try it, I just watch the let's play because trying it would just be clicking at a bunch of random stuff until I get the result they show in the let's play
Puzzles for games like Gabriel Knight 3 do not make any sense but the story is interesting so you can just watch someone solve the nonsense puzzles & see the story
Gabriel Knight 1 is very educational & it has a remake
Try these
Kyrandia 1, 2 and 3 ( if the first one is too hard do not let it discourage you from trying the other ones which are easier, although the plot for the third one is based on the first one )
Lands of Lore the Throne of Chaos
Dune 2 the battle for Arakis
Daggerfall
Ancient Domains of Mystery
Hyper Rogue
Sonic the hedgehog
The first Dark Sun in the trilogy
Commander Keen
Wolfenstein 3D
Doom 2
Obsidian ( the one that had such a high budget the corporation went broke )
You can buy old games on gog but I am not sure they have the license to sell them so I do not see how it would provide any more legal protection than downloading them for free from a website without viruses or malware
But you can play a lot of them in a browser on websites without doenloading them at all, and I am wondering if that is safer legally
So the last unit I remember doing in Korean looks the same as the description in the title I see on duolingo but I probably made a lot more progress than you because I have been studying Korean for more than three years before learning duolingo
I still can not understand Korean in real life context and can only maybe understand workbook type questions for studying it
Maybe they only changed the early lessons
I stll have not tried it, I have been focusing on Haitian Kreyol lately
Recently I found out that it's illegal in almost all states to defend yourself from an illegal arrests.
What this actually means is that YOU HAVE NO RIGHTS WHAT SO EVER!
Rights are things the government isn't allowed to do to you and the justification for escalating violence.
Essentially the government is stating that you have to let them violate your right. It's a contradiction in terms.
Tagging #tfmonkey because he mentions right being a line in the sand where you kill them.
So apparently some power lifters try to get obese so that they do not have to lift the bar as far from their body to the required location for competition when doing bench press and this obesity can make it easier to count a bench press without getting stronger
Competition tends to ruin the actual original goal that existed before the competition system was created
So they used to talk about forcing everybody into tall buildings in compact cities because it would be allegedly better for the environment than having a lot of small population density zones with people spread far apart
And I was thinking if you made everybody of every race and every language live in one really tall building tall enough to fit the entire population of the world that would be like the tower of Babel from Genesis in the Bible
In allignment with the Kike Mystety Babylon