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Archive for March, 2010

Na’vi language from Avatar: Lessons for language learners

March 31st, 2010 1 comment

Those of you who have seen James Cameron’s 2009 film Avatar will know that Na’vi is the constructed language spoken by the fictional indigenous race (the Na’vi) on Pandora. Slates calls Na’vi the new Klingon. Aspiring Pandorans are flocking to learn Na’vi in droves.

The Na’vi language was created by Paul Frommer, a professor at USC with a doctorate in linguistics. Frommer has now launched a website to share the Na’vi language with everyone.

Paul Frommer- creator of the Avatar language

Frommer spent years working on the Na’vi language, eventually teaching it to all of the principal actors who have to speak it, and making recordings for them to listen to on their iPods.

Later, he worked on the set during shooting, coaching actors on pronunciation between takes, and even writing the occasional extra line when Cameron decided a scene needed tweaking.

Frommer recalls a moment during the filming of Avatar: “Jim Cameron and Sam Worthington came up to me and said, ‘We’ve decided that the character Jake is going to be recounting an incident he had where he was bitten in his big blue butt — so how do you say ‘big blue butt?’ … I had ‘big’ and I had ‘blue,’ but I didn’t have ‘butt.’ ”

At last count, there were 165,000 posts by 4,400 people on Frommer’s Learn Na’vi site —passionate Pandorans who spend time translating and discussing Na’vi words, encouraging novices who have never even studied a foreign language.

Whilst we do not wish to discourage the many aspiring Pandorans; instead of spending hours learning the invented language spoken on a fictional alien planet, why not sign up for some Spanish classes at your local language school? It’s a lot easier to get to Chile than to Pandora.

Classes in FrenchGermanItalianPortugueseSpanishChinese (Mandarin)Japanese and Korean start 26 April. Fasttrack intensive courses start after Easter. Euroasia is taking enrolments now for courses in Auckland and Christchurch.

How you can benefit from learning a second language

March 29th, 2010 No comments

Most of us at some point or another have wanted to learn a second language. Some of us have learnt French or Japanese at high school. But most of us are still surprisingly monolingual (around 80% of Kiwis).

Some New Zealanders still think English is the lingua franca of the global village, only to be surprised when they visit faraway towns in Europe, South America or Asia. However, learning another language is useful not only because it opens up great travel possibilities. Learning a foreign language also helps give us an understanding of and appreciation for people that are different from us. Your understanding of the world will be enriched by gaining access to resources not available in English.

And as far as careers go, you don’t have to be an aspiring United Nations diplomat to learn a second language. In our global village today there is almost no career that you could enter where second language skills wouldn’t come in handy at some time.  Even the big metropolitan cities – New York, London, Paris, Sydney etc. – which were once homogenous – now have sizeable populations of people who speak English as a second language. Being able to say on your CV that you have attempted to learn a second language would certainly make you come across as someone who is adventurous and serious about understanding people from other cultures. If you’re already doing business with people who speak a foreign language, you should at least be able to say a few words in the language of your business counterparts. You will no doubt win their respect, and in time this will translate into business deals.

Before you book your air ticket for that trip to Europe or Asia this year, consider learning the local language to enrich your holiday experience.

Euroasia Language Academy offers programmes in French, Spanish, German, Italian, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Call Cedric now on 0800 387627 or visit www.euroasia.co.nz for information on courses starting 26 April in Auckland and Christchurch.

For those of you super-busy people, there are two additional options:

  • if you are keen to learn as much as you can within a short timeframe, consider the 2-week Fasttrack 2 programme, starting 13 April,
  • if you can’t make it for class every week at one of our centres, you can still sign up for the online language course – delivered live by a language teacher from our centre in Auckland.

Posted via email from Euroasia

Kiwis learning Italian?

March 25th, 2010 No comments

We have observed over the years that there are a number of reasons Kiwis learn Italian. Apart from the vogue, the peculiarity, the mental exercise and the culture it’s always useful to speak the language of those with whom we have been bewitched.

Italy is a perpetual fascination from which there is no escape, a country of colour and aromas, of inducements ideal and cultural that can’t be denied. The country “condemned” to manage and conserve about 80% of all the world’s archaeological and artistic beauty which, as much as it seems a clichè, renders it a prisoner.

It’s precisely the Italian language, seemingly unimportant in a commercial world, that contributes in a very significant way to enchantment. With its richness of inflections and nuances, it’s a language that is applicable to declarations of love as much as tragedy, to complicity as much as humour. Popular culture, including everything from Roberto Benigni’s filmmaking talent to Eros Ramazotti’s and Andrea Boccelli’s music to the best recipes for pizza margherita, is made even more enjoyable when you know a little of the lingua franca!

Italian classes (as well as French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese and Korean) start 26 April at Euroasia Language Academy in Auckland and Christchurch. Check out our course timetable or call 0800 387627 for more information.

Posted via email from Euroasia

Euroasia at Parnell Summer in the Park

March 23rd, 2010 No comments

Euroasia will be at @SummerInThePark today at lunch time (if it doesn’t rain). Otherwise look out for us on Friday if you’re in the area.

Parnell Summer in the Park: Relax on a deckchair, use free Parnell Wireless. Every fine weekday, 11.30am–2pm from Mar 15 – Apr 9 at Heard Park, 190 Parnell Rd.

Euroasia will be giving away a free course valued at $360. All you have to do is take part in the Euroasia Language Challenge, answer the questions correctly, and you will go into the lucky draw.

Posted via web from Euroasia

Experimenting with posterous

March 11th, 2010 No comments
Seeing #posterous allows us to post to multiple platforms in one hit, figured we should give this a try. 

Posted via email from Euroasia

Categories: General observations Tags:

Alternative Asian OE -Teach English in Kuala Lumpur

March 3rd, 2010 No comments

If you’re keen to experience Asia, but not sure you want to live in a stressful, smoggy megacity, Malaysia offers a refreshing alternative! Euroasia is working with a client looking for teachers of EFL to teach foreign students (mainly adults from China, the Middle East, Russia etc.) who choose Malaysia for their English language studies. Some are required asap, but others may join the team at a later date.

Malaysia offers:

  • Unique cultural background, see all of Asia in one country
  • Year-round tropical climate
  • Lively city life and unspoilt nature both within easy reach
  • Modest cost of living, much cheaper than Tokyo, Seoul, Singapore, Shanghai
  • Cheap flights to other Asian destinations (45mins to Singapore, 2hrs to Bangkok, 3hrs to Bali, 4hrs to Hong Kong)

Applicants have to meet minimum criteria as detailed below.

  • Degree
  • CELTA or equivalent
  • Min. one year’s teaching experience (TEFL or other subject)
  • Native English speaker
  • Good general health
  • Preferably aged 25 and up (for Malaysian visa purposes)
  • Citizen of NZ, Aus, EU, USA, Canada (for visa purposes)
  • Customer service oriented
  • Willingness to contribute to the life of the school

More details and online application available via the following sites:

Do tell your friends about this opportunity (but we can only proceed with applicants who meet the minimum criteria).