True, plus the snake in Genesis is just a talking snake, there’s no connection between it and Satan until Revelation is written hundreds of years later.
RedDawn
And that narrative mostly comes from various, non-Biblical iterations of Christian mythology like Milton’s Paradise Lost rather than directly from the bible. The one time the (Latin vulgate) bible says “lucifer” it was in referring to a human person, a king of Babylon, not to Satan. The bible does make some vague references to fallen angels.
You are actually not alone in this, it’s totally normal to not perceive the difference in sounds which are not phonemic in your native language. This can be overcome by training with minimal pairs. There’s a great bit about this in a book called Fluent Forever.
Edit: I just got out of a doctor’s appt and have time now so I’ll just paraphrase as I remember it. When we are babies our brains learn to ignore the difference in sounds that don’t cause a change in meaning. So a child growing up in an English speaking environment has no trouble differentiating the English language “R” and “L” sounds from each other. Japanese doesn’t distinguish these sounds, and has its own sound which is somewhere in between. So when Japanese speakers hear either sound, their brain just puts both into the same bucket.
If you play an audio recording for a Japanese listener and then ask them whether that said “rug” or “lug”, they literally can’t hear the difference. This is normal. But if you play audio recordings like this- “Rug” and “Lug” are minimal pairs, words that differ only by one phoneme - ask the listener which word they heard AND immediately give them feedback on whether their response was correct or incorrect, they learn to differentiate the sounds rather quickly.
Hindi has a lot of retroflex consonants that likely don’t exist phonemically in your language. It’s only natural that you cannot distinguish them. But by training your ear with minimal pairs, you will learn to hear the difference. You could try searching “Hindi minimal pairs training” or check out the book I mentioned, the author actually has compiled resources for various specific languages.
I’m already fluent in English and Spanish, and mildly proficient in German and Mandarin.
The next languages on my list, after improving my fluency in German and Mandarin, are:
Latin, French, Portuguese
Ancient and Modern Greek
Sanskrit and Hindi
Irish (language of many of my recent ancestors and endangered language)
Guaraní (I plan to live in Paraguay would actually use this regularly living there).
Russian
Arabic
I know that’s more than 5, but these are all languages I have begun to dabble in at various points, and I feel like if I learned all of them to fluency or near fluency, my language learning obsession would finally be satisfied and I could retire from it, so to speak.
I just read Proto recently also. I second the recommendation, great book.
Thank you very much, this is the sort of thing I was hoping existed.
I’m sure if you get the bonus its either paid out over the course of a 5 year contract or if its paid up front and you serve less than some minutes time (like 5 years) you have to pay it back.
Thank you for the information! Very much appreciated!
If I pay an application fee and my application isn’t accepted, I’m just charging it back on the credit card.
So you knew what you said was incorrect but said it anyway. You shouldn’t do that, it’s just going to cause confusion.
There are a lot of things I took for granted that were taught to me by my parents and others, that I only realized once I started reading through the bible as an adult aren’t in there at all, they were interpolated or extrapolated and embellished over the many intervening years, turns out Christian mythology and folklore changes and evolves over time just like any other, but its surprising to find out just how much of it isn’t in the official scripture.