Goodreads helps you follow your favorite authors. Be the first to learn about new releases!
Start by following Kató Lomb.
Showing 1-30 of 65
“Language is the only thing worth knowing even poorly.”
―
―
“Solely in the world of languages is the amateur of value. Well-intentioned sentences full of mistakes can still build bridges between people.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“A book can be pocketed and discarded, scrawled and torn into pages, lost and bought again. It can be dragged out from a suitcase, opened in front of you when having a snack, revived at the moment of waking, and skimmed through once again before falling asleep. It needs no notice by phone if you can’t attend the appointment fixed in the timetable. It won’t get mad if awakened from its slumber during your sleepless nights. Its message can be swallowed whole or chewed into tiny pieces. Its content lures you for intellectual Why and What adventures and it satisfies your spirit of adventure. You can get bored of it—but it won’t ever get bored of you.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“Whenever I read statistical reports, I try to imagine my unfortunate contemporary, the Average Person, who, according to these reports, has 0.66 children, 0.032 cars, and 0.046 TVs.”
―
―
“We should learn languages because language is the only thing worth knowing even poorly.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“My view is that knowing languages is part of the process of becoming a cultured person.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“Aside from mastery in the fine arts, success in learning anything is the result of genuine interest and amount of energy dedicated to it.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“He who knows other languages feels even closer to his own language.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“Knowledge—like a nail—is made load-bearing by being driven in. If it's not driven deep enough, it will break when any weight is put upon it.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“I feel such a difference between a philologist/linguist and a linguaphile as, say, a choreographer and a ballerina.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“One should connect language learning with either work or leisure. And not at the expense of them but to supplement them.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“... I never looked for or found national differences in the various places of the world, only common features—eternal human nature.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“I heard from a swimming coach that how soon children learn to swim depends on how much they trust themselves and the surrounding world. I am convinced that this (self) confidence is the precondition of success in all intellectual activity. It may even have a greater role than believed in the least understood human talent: creativity, that is, artistic creation and scientific discovery.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“[S]tudy has never been a burden for me but always an inexhaustible source of joy.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“[S]elf-assurance, motivation, and a good method play a much more important role in language learning than the vague concept of innate ability, and that dealing with languages is not only an effective and joyful means of developing human relationships, but also of preserving one's mental capacity and spiritual balance.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“[T]he time spent on language learning is lost unless it reaches a certain—daily and weekly—concentration.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“The spread of languages shouldn't imply the decay of national languages. There are so many literary and historical memories, so many joys and sorrows of the past linked to them that it is an obligation for all of us to guard their present and future.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“[R]epetition is as an essential element of language learning as a knife is to a lathe or fuel is to an internal combustion engine.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“[B]ooks, which can be consulted at any time, questioned again and again, and read into scraps, cannot be rivaled as a language-learning tool.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“To speak a foreign language is a matter of practice, and mistakes will be made. Unfortunately, it is difficult for intellectually confident people to accept making mistakes. Therefore they may refrain from speaking.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“My motivation for learning Japanese was to translate a chemical patent, a job that I had heroically (i.e., rashly) taken on.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“At first, we should read with a blitheness practically bordering on superficiality; later on, with a conscientiousness close to distrust.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“Language is present in a piece of writing like the sea in a single drop.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“In classes, the more lively and uninhibited ones will “suck away the air” from those with a more passive nature, despite all the efforts of the teacher. It is also a special danger in large groups that you will hear your fellow students’ bad pronunciation more than the teacher’s perfected speech.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“A complicated structure? Undoubtedly. But after all, the cathedral of Milan is complicated too, and you still look at it with awe.”
―
―
“I mention the library only as a last resort. I recommend buying your own books... They can be spiced with underlines, question marks, and exclamation points; they can be thumbed and dog-eared, plucked to their essential core, and annotated so that they become a mirror of yourself.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“To look it at another way, surely there are many unfortunate people who have needed to undergo multiple stomach surgeries. Yet no one would hand a scalpel over to them and ask them to perform the same surgery they received on another person, simply because they themselves had undergone it so often.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“From a pedagogical perspective, the most valuable mistake is the one you make yourself. If I discover an error I’ve made or if I am taken to task for a mistake, the emotional sphere tapped will conjure wonder, annoyance, or offense. They are all excellent means of fixation.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“The beauty of a language is, generally judged by its soft or rigid, melodious or harsh, ring. Other aspects, such as the flexibility of derivation, play hardly any role in grading. Were it the case, Russian would certainly be placed on the winner’s stand. It would rank first in plasticity.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
“Könnyű neki, rá csakúgy ragadnak a nyelvek!”
Senkire se ragad „úgy” semmi, legfeljebb a bojtorján, ha túl közel megyünk hozzá az árokparton.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages
Senkire se ragad „úgy” semmi, legfeljebb a bojtorján, ha túl közel megyünk hozzá az árokparton.”
― Polyglot: How I Learn Languages




