Strange Language, English!

I, too, had a look Janice, for an antonym to nonplussed
and the reply is that nonplussed is the antonym.

There is no word, plussed as far as is known.

Mike.
 
My o/h, who is Scottish-Canadian, is learning Mandarin. It's funny to hear him at the end of his Zoom classes (he's an ESL instructor) as he reciprocates their Mandarin goodbye's.
I wish that I had a "live" person to talk to, in Chinese. Seeing how a person's face and lips interplay with pronunciation is a valuable part of learning a language, at least for me. I used to attend Qigong and Kungfu classes at the Shaolin Temple Kungfu Center, there were plenty of people there I could interact with that spoke Chinese. But, I no longer attend, the 80 mile round trip just got to be too much. 😞
 
I wish someone could translate localisms into normal English.. or the other way around.
I have more of a language barrier here than I ever had with non-English speakers.
As one nutty example: recently, a grocery store manager could not understand what I meant when I said I was looking for roast beef at his store. :rolleyes::cautious: Is there some other word for it?!?
 
I wish that I had a "live" person to talk to, in Chinese. Seeing how a person's face and lips interplay with pronunciation is a valuable part of learning a language, at least for me. I used to attend Qigong and Kungfu classes at the Shaolin Temple Kungfu Center, there were plenty of people there I could interact with that spoke Chinese. But, I no longer attend, the 80 mile round trip just got to be too much. 😞
That is a long way to drive - it must have been enjoyable and interesting. You may be able to find basic Mandarin classes on YouTube.
 
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You need to look at Spanish verbs, they are different for each person
or groups of people, depending on if they are family or strangers, I
have a book of 501 Spanish verbs and each one is broken down, lots
of people just learn the main name of one and use it for all, variations!

Mike.
 
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