yea thats more than enough. Here in NZ you get 5% Maoris that cling to their maoriness just so they can claim special benefits, it doesn't seem to bother them that their disowning the other 95% of their heritage.
Oh, and if someone was "part X" and actually spoke the language of X or had a certain knowledge/actual connection to the culture of X then it might make more sense to mention it, but otherwise, it doesn't really serve much of a purpose. Feels more like a "look at how cool I am" sort of thing to mention. :wacko:
I'd only ever feel comfortable claiming the nationality of a country I had spent significant time in and spoke the language of fluently. Maaaaybe a country my parents were born in at a stretch, though even then it's a tenuous link for me. But whatever, nationality is a personal thing, and different people feel different ways.
Though a note to American tourists who come over here claiming to be Scottish: participating in all the tourist crap that most people who were born and raised here sneer at doesn't really help your case. :wacko:
For some it's hard to ignore people. I've had special training though since I have a little sister. Who was only 16 months younger. She annoyed me all throughout my adolescent years. I learned how to ignore on a much higher level. :wacko:
You can just give mine to Cookie Monster. I'm trying not to eat sweets much. :revwacko:
This, basically. There are lots of different ways to learn kanji, but it's going to take a fairly long time no matter what you do. Kana are simple enough, though. Write them a bunch of times to learn them, read them a bunch of times to reinforce them, and you're basically done.
Katakana/Hiragana: Look up the tables on Wikipeia or something. Start writing them down a million times in a row. Drill them into your mind until you can write and read them without any effort needed. And I mean it. Be able to read hiragana instantly by just looking at it, it'll help you out in the long run.
Kanji is a different animal. Different methods work for different people. I started with the easier ones that were in my beginner textbook and worked my way up. I think it helps to learn kanji compounds that are made up of kanji that you already know from earlier, it's easier on the brain, especially for a beginner.