Terminología Médica
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Sarita08
March 14, 2013, 08:51 PM
Quiero aprender más vocabulario de terminología médica. ¿Alguien me puede sugerir unos métodos de aprender listas extensas de palabras?
Perikles
March 15, 2013, 12:56 AM
Try 'flash cards'. Write each word on a small card with a translation on the back. Each day, take half a dozen cards and keep testing yourself until you know them. Tedious, but for specific vocabulary it can be effective. It works for some.
Premium
March 15, 2013, 01:35 AM
Try 'flash cards'. Write each word on a small card with a translation on the back. Each day, take half a dozen cards and keep testing yourself until you know them. Tedious, but for specific vocabulary it can be effective. It works for some.
I've been doing this with English and Spanish. I used a text data instead of flash cards, it's just a matter of preference.
It worked for me. :)
Sarita08
March 15, 2013, 06:43 AM
Try 'flash cards'. Write each word on a small card with a translation on the back. Each day, take half a dozen cards and keep testing yourself until you know them. Tedious, but for specific vocabulary it can be effective. It works for some.
Ah man, that's what I was hoping to avoid. I guess there isn't much of a choice when it comes to this stuff. Fortunately, a great number of medical terms are cognates. :)
chileno
March 15, 2013, 08:25 AM
Get to medical web sites in both of the languages you are planning in translating from/to and compare terms in order to avoid false cognates, or at least to get as acquainted with the terms as you can.
Sarita08
March 15, 2013, 09:46 AM
Get to medical web sites in both of the languages you are planning in translating from/to and compare terms in order to avoid false cognates, or at least to get as acquainted with the terms as you can.
Hah! It seems pretty simple to do that, right? I didn't really think of using just plain old medical websites. I actually took a course in medical Spanish, but I didn't learn much more than I already knew. I begged a Puerto Rican friend of mine to send me some of his nursing books, but he said they're all in English. Ugh. I already have three medical Spanish books, but they're kind of weak because they are designed mostly for people who just want a basic understanding of how to talk to a patient and name basic conditions and body parts. I just ordered a more advanced book that has real medical terminology. I'm hoping that will work out better than the others.
chileno
March 15, 2013, 12:43 PM
Hah! It seems pretty simple to do that, right? I didn't really think of using just plain old medical websites. I actually took a course in medical Spanish, but I didn't learn much more than I already knew. I begged a Puerto Rican friend of mine to send me some of his nursing books, but he said they're all in English. Ugh. I already have three medical Spanish books, but they're kind of weak because they are designed mostly for people who just want a basic understanding of how to talk to a patient and name basic conditions and body parts. I just ordered a more advanced book that has real medical terminology. I'm hoping that will work out better than the others.
For sure it will, especially if you are already familiar with them in another language.
AngelicaDeAlquezar
March 15, 2013, 03:05 PM
A mí sólo me funciona leer, leer y leer... cuanto me quede cerca sobre el tema del que necesito vocabulario. Es más fácil aprender en contexto que haciendo listas para memorizar.
Hay varios artículos sobre temas médicos en línea. Sugiero que elijas un tema/procedimiento/padecimiento/tratamiento y leas el material que está publicado sobre él. :)
Jorgese
March 18, 2013, 02:54 AM
Hay una aplicación buena de flash card para Android. Se llama Ankidroid
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