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日本
Россия
I can speak Spanish. I also can speak Japanese and Russian
日本
Россия
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Japanese is not very difficult. Russian is comparatively difficult
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They are both Chinese
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Now they study in Italy
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They live in Verona
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They cannot speak Italian well. They are studying Italian now
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They consider Italian very difficult
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Do you think that MediaGlyphs are difficult?
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I feel that reading MediaGlyphs is not difficult, it's relatively easy
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Which other foreign languages can you speak?
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Where did you study your French?
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I studied it in Rome
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Your teachers are French, I guess?
No. Some are French, some are Italian
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Where are the French teachers from?
Some came from Paris, some came from Bordeaux
This adverb means "most, to the largest degree" and can be used with adjectives to form superlatives. The second example it means "is not too difficult". The third example means "I can speak, but not extremely well", with the adverb this time modifying a verb ("to can"), not an adjective.
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This construction with the verb "to be" and the adjective/participle form of a verb is often used (in Chinese and in MediaGlyphic) to emphasize what happened when or where. Literally, the first sentence: "Your french is at where studied?"; the second: "You are from France came".
They both mean "also", but the first one is used to mean "the same as the previous statement". Hence the relationship between the statement introduced by it and the previous one is a parallel relationship. The second adverb, on the other hand, introduces an additional element to the previous statement. Therefore we can translate the first one with "too, either" and the second one with "additionally, as well".
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"from-France-came teacher", "the teacher who came from France". This construction is similar to English relative clause. In English relative clauses are attached after (to the right of) a noun, in MediaGlyphic they appear before: they have the form of an adjective and they appear in an adjective position with respect to the noun they clarify.