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American swimmer Michael Phelps gestures
at a press conference during a promotional event at the end of the Olympic
swimming competition in Beijing, China, on August 18, 2008. The
23-year-old Phelps achieved historic feat of eight golds in Beijing
Olympics. (Xinhua/Qi Heng) Photo
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BEIJING,
Aug. 20 (Xinhua) -- The American superfish Michael Phelps who took eight golds
at the Olympics has said it is harder for him to learn the Chinese language than
to win gold medals, the English newspaper China Daily said on Wednesday.
"Learning Mandarin is even harder than winning eight
gold medals in the pool," the 23-year-old American was quoted by the daily as
saying. "It is the hardest thing I've ever tried in my life."
Phelps took French and German courses when he was in
primary school, but the swimming ace said Chinese is much harder to learn.
"The language is so tough," he said. "I started
taking some Chinese lessons after learning French and German. After a while I
could speak a little and understand a little. But all the words, characters and
pronunciations in Mandarin are so different. All of them are hard to
manage."
Asked to speak some Mandarin during the interview,
Phelps laughed and said: "My accent is not good. I don't want to embarrass
myself."
Phelps will be back for the 2012 London Games, where
he says he wants to train for some new events to try to vary his repertoire. His
next major competition will be the World Championships in Rome in 2009.
But right now, he says, the thing he needs most after
his record medal haul is a nice long break.
"I will take a vacation of my own next," he said. "I
have been longing for it for a very long time."
Phelps overtook compatriot Mark Spitz, whose seven
swimming golds at Munich in 1972, to become the Olympian who won the most gold
medals at a single Games.