The Fastest Way to Learn a New Language: The Video Game Map Theory

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
  • How video games helped me rethink language learning.
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @davidchidester5463
    @davidchidester5463 Před 2 lety +7827

    The way language is taught in schools is like if you were taught to play guitar by learning how to play every chord, but never played a song.

    • @misterscottintheway
      @misterscottintheway Před 2 lety +649

      Good analogy. I think it's more like if you were taught all of the theory behind the different scales and modes and all of the chords but never picked up a guitar.

    • @waikard267
      @waikard267 Před 2 lety +162

      It's the same with everything in schools. Why do you think university graduates are driving buses and cleaning toilets?

    • @Zarafin
      @Zarafin Před 2 lety +119

      @@misterscottintheway Agree, in my country English is a mendatory language to learn (as a second language). As someone who has never paid any attention in school but still learned English, I can say the way schools teach us is very inaffective. It took me just 3 years to learn English on the internet by having conversations with people and making friends in videos games who mostly only spoke English.

    • @geoni.n78
      @geoni.n78 Před 2 lety +22

      at my school we do get taught how to say sentences, its just sentences that we'd use maybe twice in our whole life? such as where we went on vacation, what the weather was like, where we live, what we live next to etc and i find it dumb

    • @evoluxman9935
      @evoluxman9935 Před 2 lety +25

      In my school, we had like 60% of each trimester being about grammar, conjugaison, vocabulary, the boring stuff. The remaining 40% however, and those represented 100% in exams sessions, were: oral expression, written expression, listening comprehension, reading comprehension. Where you actually had to work around actual, written/spoken english. Sure, you get penalties if you made grammar mistakes, but the most important part was about being confident and make a sensible text/speech (in expression), or understand the core ideas being the text/audio (in comprehension). It is also the same in universities. So my English is not perfect, once again, often do I make grammar or conjugaison mistakes, but I know how to communicate with people.
      It's also why many people say "I learned more about English online than in classes" because you learn how to communicate, even if it's poor. At first, only a few words for people to understand a direct order/info, then as time goes on you make more complicated sentences, and people will instinctively correct the most important mistakes you make, and as time goes on you can speak the language.

  • @naylinnoo
    @naylinnoo Před 3 lety +4022

    Son : "Two plus two equals 22"
    Johny : "No son, that's wrong"
    Son : "No dad, I'm speaking in JavaScript"

  • @JamesJohnson-od6kd
    @JamesJohnson-od6kd Před rokem +2252

    One of my college English professors started her class by telling us "I am here to teach you academic English. This is not the English you speak, it is not the English you read in a novel or a newspaper. It is the English used in an academic environment to write academic papers and nothing more." That line was a lightbulb moment for me that I have always carried with me since.

    • @hummingbird1375
      @hummingbird1375 Před rokem +84

      I really wonder why this is the approach. I guess in college it makes more sense to focus on the academic aspect of a language, but in general it's not where you should start when you're a complete beginner trying to learn a new language.

    • @rody2k6
      @rody2k6 Před rokem +36

      This is so true. I'm an English as a foreign language teacher and I tell my students that grammar is important but it's not all that people make it be. I try to make learning natural and fun and without pressure. Now I also have students that study with me to pass TOEFL or Cambridge and I tell them that since what I teach them is academic and to pass the exam and not exactly everyday English so that they clearly know that the exams are not a picture of real language used by common folk

    • @pcom9209
      @pcom9209 Před rokem

      @@rody2k6 LEGENDS DEFEATED JOHNNY HARRIS TO COMPLETELY WATCH THIS LOOONNNG VIDEO 😁

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@hummingbird1375simple more complex studying material = more understanding and boosted learning

    • @Nathan-ut7wt
      @Nathan-ut7wt Před 9 měsíci

      Oriel Lindsey. I still remember the name of the professor who told me that. She told us what we needed to know for our exam; then we proceeded to learn English. As a matter of fact her approach made us feel like she was on our side.
      Sorry I'm rambling a bit lmao
      Best teacher I've ever had, and one of the best human being I met.

  • @f1reflam3
    @f1reflam3 Před rokem +975

    As an Italian, I am actually impressed of how good you can speak Italian in so little time, I had zero problems understanding even the clip of six weeks in

    • @enriquegabriel7708
      @enriquegabriel7708 Před rokem +2

      Do you want to practice Spanish?

    • @pcom9209
      @pcom9209 Před rokem

      LEGENDS DEFEATED JOHNNY HARRIS TO COMPLETELY WATCH THIS LOOONNNG VIDEO 😁

    • @rogersjung3612
      @rogersjung3612 Před rokem +1

      As a Brazilian I understand his Italian!! I think Italian is hardest than English...

    • @gabrielesalvatori6804
      @gabrielesalvatori6804 Před rokem +2

      @@enriquegabriel7708 in most schools half the students study spanish alongside with english, the other half studies french

    • @UrsusGrett
      @UrsusGrett Před rokem

      If you believe this crap... these videos are meant to make money

  • @stegotron
    @stegotron Před 2 lety +3605

    My Dad always used to say he was "fluid", not fluent when speaking German. The more beer he drank, the better the German sounded and the easier the conversation was. Being too worried about making errors when speaking means you're less likely to try.

    • @nxone9903
      @nxone9903 Před 2 lety +67

      Everything in life is like that every challenge and skill. Actually. Errors aren't the end.

    • @JohnDoe-kh3rc
      @JohnDoe-kh3rc Před 2 lety +36

      An error ist just a failure if it makes you stop trying. If it doesn't, it's just an opportunity to improve.

    • @damnjessieh_
      @damnjessieh_ Před 2 lety +50

      And most Germans know, that our language is an extreme pain in the ass.

    • @tanekrune5873
      @tanekrune5873 Před 2 lety +30

      I refer to my German as BarDeutsch, because I learned most of it in high school while not in the best state, often hungover, and when I took a summer exchange, I became fluent by going to the bar and speaking exclusively in German. I made people play pictionary with me to figure out what I was trying to say sometimes, all the while ordering in German. Listening to German radio and music, etc. I can see how this works with programming a game. You just need to start, throw yourself into the world.

    • @PhillipAmthor
      @PhillipAmthor Před 2 lety +3

      This is exactly the reason why bavarian and saxon works and its also how they sound like!

  • @abdulsayed2281
    @abdulsayed2281 Před 3 lety +4259

    This makes so much sense when you realise that this is exactly how people learn their mother tongue. You don't begin with the rules, you begin by learning how to communicate

    • @topspot4834
      @topspot4834 Před 3 lety +232

      Yup. You want food. You point to your mouth. You want to say hi, you smile and wave. Simple words like yes, no, want, more, up, down. Lettering one word just to get the message across. Then you learn a couple words at a time, like I want (or me want when you're first learning). Then words like please and thanks you. Before you know it, you're building sentences like "I want more" and "pick me up." Like you said, it's just communicating everyday things, not about detailed nuances.

    • @ImKevan
      @ImKevan Před 3 lety +68

      yeah, to be fair though, on top of that, kids have been shown to basically be language sponges at a really young age, they can learn something like 3-4 languages or more simultaneously in the right environment, its basically just a case of bringing them up and using 2 or more languages interchangeably throughout their life and they just pick it up because the brain is so active and rewiring itself to understand everything at that point, where as an adult would probably have a fair amount of difficulty learning any more than 2 at a time, especially if they were pretty unrelated languages to each other.

    • @petitesayo4542
      @petitesayo4542 Před 3 lety +81

      @@ImKevan Actually, kids aren't that good at learning multiple languages. They are if you do it correctly.
      Speaking multiple languages simultaneously in the same environnement is going to confuse them and instead of knowing one language perfectly like other kids, they'll end up speaking multiple languages in a mediocre way.
      This situation happens if by "speaking multiple language simultaneously", you mean, for example, one parent switching from a language to another.
      For example : "My petite fille ? Can you take me le bol ? Merci darling."
      Another example "Ma petite fille ? Tu peux m'apporter le bol ? Merci, ma chérie" (I just repeated what I said before) and then the same parent says "Oh and btw, the cereals are there".
      In this situation, the child always has to make the effort to adapt to whatever language the parent will choose. It takes a lot of effort out of the brain and completely confuses it.
      Of course, the child is going to understand what I said before. However, they will understand it perfectly in the context of their family. When they will have to speak obky one language with their peers, it will be different.
      Children that come from multilingual family that do it that way actually have a harder time learning the language. Multilingual children are eventually going to have to communicate with other children that aren't. If the child cannot communicate without switching from one language to another, then s/he is going to be at a lesser level of communication than the other children.
      It doesn't matter that you can say a mediocre sentence in three languages if the other children can say the same sentence and do it more correctly and even do more complicated sentences in the language.
      If you mean one parent speaking in one language and the other parent speaking and ALWAYS speaking in another language, then yes, this can work. But that also means that parents will have to choose one language to speak with each other and not changing in front of the kids.
      The child NEEDS to be adressed in the SAME language by the SAME parent or in the SAME situation.
      Children need a strict environnment. One language for one environment. It's either "Daddy speaks Corean and Mommy speaks English" or "Daddy and Mommy speak Corean but we all speak English when we eat" or "Daddy and mommy speak Corean to each other but speak english to us".
      If you mix everything and switch languages on a daily basis, you're only going to confuse your child.
      So basically, you should focus on teaching your child how to communicate in the language of their peers first and not teach them multiple languages just for the sake of it.

    • @ImKevan
      @ImKevan Před 3 lety +5

      @@petitesayo4542 Yeah I'm not saying it JUST happens, there's definitely a whole lot too it and its most certainly not as simple as I probably made it sound, and as far as I'm aware, its only been properly done and studied a few times, but the results do seem to show that kids have a far greater ability than we do at older ages to pickup languages.

    • @ImKevan
      @ImKevan Před 3 lety +4

      @@suwapete9761 yeah that makes sense too I guess, and probably really should make more sense to me when I think about it, since I play guitar, I'm pretty good at it, better than most in fact, but a lot of that really just comes down to me really enjoying playing guitar and spending far grater amounts of my spare time practicing than most other people do, I did also have the benefit of starting really young too, but even now I still spend far more time just playing guitar than most people who consider playing guitar a hobby.

  • @eirianjames2711
    @eirianjames2711 Před rokem +755

    I teach English as a foreign language, and have studied Spanish, Catalan, French and Italian to varying levels ranging from full degree at university to functional holiday level, and here are some observations (apologies in advance for this self-indulgent essay):
    One of the misunderstood concepts in language learning is "being fluent" - some people think it means speaking "like a native"; for others (myself included) it means "being able to express what you want / need". I’ve taught people who are very fluent but make a load of small mistakes, and on the other hand I’ve taught people who can write an incredible essay and understand a complex text but struggle to express themselves in more spontaneous situations.
    I’m often asked "How long does it take to learn a language?", to which I answer: “What do you mean by LEARN?” "How long are you willing to study every day? How are you going to study? What are your aims? Do you want to go on holiday to an English-speaking country every summer or do you want to work in an English-speaking environment?”
    Speaking to yourself is a great way to get better, as that’s when you notice all the things you don’t actually know. You practice forming ideas in your head and expressing them out loud, which is what you need to be good at when speaking to an actual person.
    Never neglect listening skills - you can memorise all the phrases you want, if you can’t understand what someone says, it’s not worth that much. And always remember that not all speakers of a language are as good at grading their language as the Italki teacher in the video. Anyone who has ever asked for a train ticket in another language can vouch for that.
    Don’t pay too much attention to the internet polyglot community - they often pride themselves on being insanely good at languages above anything else. I’m ok at playing the guitar, but I don’t need John Frusciante or John Meyer to tell me I’m not as good as them - I just don’t need to be.
    Learning a language is a long and arduous journey, but the beautiful thing about it is you’re constantly learning, and being able to communicate with someone in another language is the best thing ever.
    It’s also like everything else in life, you get out of it what you put in.
    Once again, apologies for this rambling, I’ve just never felt the urge to post anything sensible on a CZcams video until now.

    • @kayrat1610
      @kayrat1610 Před rokem +15

      thank you for commenting this!!

    • @eirianjames2711
      @eirianjames2711 Před rokem +6

      @@kayrat1610 I'm glad you liked, thanks for commenting!

    • @isabellysabath1541
      @isabellysabath1541 Před rokem +18

      I love your commentary. English is not my first language and I feel really insecure to write without the translator. Makes me happy to understand everything :)

    • @HolahkuTaigiTWFormosanDiplomat
    • @kiwiy5802
      @kiwiy5802 Před rokem +5

      Your comment is better than this video.

  • @clayhamilton3551
    @clayhamilton3551 Před rokem +449

    Just came here to recommend setting Animal Crossing New Horizons to your target language and starting a new file. There are so many random objects and various every day conversations. I learned so much Japanese vocabulary from that game alone.

    • @infamoussphere7228
      @infamoussphere7228 Před rokem +54

      oh yeah I did this with Stardew Valley and I think it's similar - basic simple conversations about day to day life and lots of words for groceries and everyday items. Some games are a bit more focussed on sci fi or fantasy objects/scenarios which is less useful

    • @LendriMujina
      @LendriMujina Před rokem +9

      I wanted to try that, but I don't want to have to bulldoze my island for it. :(

    • @kaiaros
      @kaiaros Před rokem +14

      @@infamoussphere7228 As soon as I read the original comment say they changed their Animal Crossing language, I was like huh, maybe I should try changing my Stardew Valley language since I'm playing it a lot lately, so I'm glad to see your comment! Looks like I'll be changing my Stardew to Japanese next time I play :)

    • @namae6637
      @namae6637 Před rokem +5

      @@LendriMujina idk about AC but some games don't keep saves across accounts on the switch so if you add a second profile you might be able to have two islands on the go

    • @LendriMujina
      @LendriMujina Před rokem +9

      @@namae6637 No, that just opens a second house on the same island. AC:NH is one of the few Switch games that shares data between profiles.

  • @jamietate3526
    @jamietate3526 Před 3 lety +7808

    I spent 14 years learning French at school. Forgot most of it at uni. Decided to switch my PS4 to French for fun. I learnt more usable French in 3 months of gaming than 14 years in class

    • @nickmonks9563
      @nickmonks9563 Před 3 lety +479

      I learned more hanging around old online chat rooms, even when their numerous colloquialisms and abbreviations, then I did in four years of school...actually using a language is what really makes it stick.

    • @geraldfjord2383
      @geraldfjord2383 Před 3 lety +289

      Same here. I have Chinese relatives who tried teaching me Chinese. Switching my game to Chinese and watching some Chinese videos taught me a ton more than I ever learned from a decade of relatives trying to teach me Chinese formally.

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki Před 3 lety +183

      You acquired French instead of learning it. That's the secret.
      Check out Stephen Krashen regarding this topic and throw away your old ideas of how languages get into brains :D

    • @voltgaming2213
      @voltgaming2213 Před 3 lety +41

      But you need books , I learn from games like I learnt English,and I sounded like a video game character

    • @Pyrogully
      @Pyrogully Před 3 lety +76

      I learned all the curses in Italian in Highschool playing assassins creed with the language in Italian with just English subtitles and referred too my Italian friends on my accuracy.

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před 3 lety +3113

    “Lasagna Bolognese”
    Ah yes, everyday Italian words.

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před 3 lety +807

      one of my main reasons for learning italian is to better understand the cuisine. so I integrated loads of niche culinary terms into my practice because that's the version of the language I want to learn

    • @Randomsauce19702
      @Randomsauce19702 Před 3 lety +185

      @@johnnyharris thats a solid reason if ive ever heard one. Im currently learning japanese so im hoping this goes well!

    • @Marco.massa91
      @Marco.massa91 Před 3 lety +73

      Lasagne alla bolognese.

    • @benas_st
      @benas_st Před 3 lety +22

      goodness when I heard him say that I died 😆

    • @rohitnavlani6613
      @rohitnavlani6613 Před 3 lety +8

      I think jhonny wants to be limitless' bradly Cooper and wants to impress Iz in italian restaurants😂

  • @igorporfiirio4915
    @igorporfiirio4915 Před rokem +367

    I would agree that what you have is not fluency but the thing is, it's enough, and also, it can be a base for learning more, it's way easier to learn more of the language when you can understand it well, so you can watch movies, youtube, talk with people, etc. In my opnion, this isn't "the new way to learn languages" it's the "new first step to learn languages".

    • @hummingbird1375
      @hummingbird1375 Před rokem +17

      I totally agree. When you think about, learning a language firstly with the focus of just being able to communicate without worrying about making grammar mistakes is the most natural approach. This is how babies learn, and to me, it seems also to be the most intuitive and effective approach. You first want to have a general knowledge of the language, that means, knowing a significant amount of vocabulary and having just a brief general idea about how grammar works. You might make a lot of mistakes, but at least you understand most conversations and are already able to communicate. And it's there then, after having reached a certain amount of general understanding of the language, that you start focusing on the details and strive for "perfect" grammar, spelling and all that stuff. It's so unnecessary, in the first stages of learning, to focus so heavily on knowing a random grammar topic perfectly like conditionals when your overall understanding of the language doesn't depend on that.

    • @axileus9327
      @axileus9327 Před rokem +6

      @@hummingbird1375 vocabulary + immersion is the key. You will pick up on the grammar when as you use the vocabulary (and esp. making mistakes). I skimmed your comment and agree. When you spend too much time perfecting grammar you’re not using time effectively. Grammar is important but it’s easier to get right when you speak and listen to the language than abstractly. That’s how kids (and adults) learn.

    • @PSNDonutDude
      @PSNDonutDude Před 8 měsíci +1

      I learned English first and grammar second. English is my only language. Learning a language first and grammar from being corrected or reading, or listening or watching is normal. It's like playing a sport. You learn to play the sport before you learn all the skills, rules, and stuff because sitting and learning the rules and skills from a book would fucking suck.
      I play soccer in a beer league and we all have to remind each other of the rules because we all haven't played in 10 years

  • @hannahrothwell890
    @hannahrothwell890 Před rokem +149

    I’m an ESL teacher with experience teaching learners in Uzbekistan and Jordan and a masters degree in Educatuon and innovation. What he’s talking about is called “communicative language learning” where your main goal is just communicating your ideas in the target language. Nowadays, communicative language teaching is becoming much more popular in the academic literature, but educational innovations are generally lagged by about a generation because the you need to wait until the university students who are learning these methods become teachers and start using them before you see results.

  • @TheBaronVSP
    @TheBaronVSP Před 3 lety +1380

    A few years ago my company started hiring seasonal workers from Mexico. They didn't speak English, and my coworkers didn't speak Spanish. Management wanted everyone to use translation apps, but I found it to be inefficient and both parties were unsure if the app actually used the correct words for the context. So I took the most important words used in my department, and turned it into a game of repetition with my crewmate. He would say the word in Spanish, I would say it in English, and the rest of the day I would say it in Spanish and he would say it in English. After the 2nd week of work, we could clearly and neatly convey what needed to be done for each job, and we were able to get to know each other and work comfortably. The biggest hurdle is overcoming the fear of sounding awkward.

    • @primary_magic1227
      @primary_magic1227 Před 3 lety +94

      Your last sentence hits so close to home. Except for me it isn't really a hurdle more like a colossal mountain. I'm awkward around people as it is, I don't think I can ever bring myself to speak to a native speaker.

    • @TheBaronVSP
      @TheBaronVSP Před 3 lety +63

      @@primary_magic1227 That's understandable, I still get self conscious from time to time, especially when I need to talk to groups of native-Spanish speakers. I just figured that trying to communicate and sounding like an idiot would go a long way toward earning their respect, as opposed to just shoving a translated app message in their faces. Every mistake is an opportunity to learn and get better, it helps to see it as empowering instead of embarrassing.

    • @primary_magic1227
      @primary_magic1227 Před 3 lety +21

      ​@@TheBaronVSP Yeah I guess that's true. Such an obvious realization but still something I tend to forget a lot.
      Thank you for the reply!
      Ooh and I like the way you handled the situation at your company. Efficient and by far a better way to create a good relationship with a coworker. Props to you for that!

    • @nataliejansen2371
      @nataliejansen2371 Před 3 lety +14

      @@primary_magic1227 what helped me get over this fear was realizing that every time I spoke to someone for whom english wasn't their first language, I was expecting them to do this and maybe sound awkward to communicate with me, while not being willing to do that myself. I realized how much I appreciate it and am impressed when a non-native speaker says something as simple as like hello/goodbye/thank you

    • @daedalusb9548
      @daedalusb9548 Před 3 lety +2

      I think thats what pidgin languages are. 2 different groups share only the most important words and learn a combination that everyone involved can understand well enough to do whatever they needed to get done

  • @texaspoontappa2088
    @texaspoontappa2088 Před 3 lety +2905

    "I just like maps, okay?" why would we judge you for that? We're here for the maps too

  • @clinton5623
    @clinton5623 Před rokem +181

    Well let's be honest. He said he speaks Spanish fluently due to his mission in Mexico. I learned Spanish over the last 10 or so years and am very fluent as well. Switching over to Italian was almost as if I had like 60 percent of this new language under my belt. Both being Latin languages gave me a massive head start in my Italian journey.

    • @json7598
      @json7598 Před rokem +16

      Versus learning Japanese from English

    • @yeahboyz9314
      @yeahboyz9314 Před rokem +10

      @@json7598 me learning japanese from english after i learn english from vietnamese

    • @json7598
      @json7598 Před rokem +2

      @@yeahboyz9314 ?? Are you flexing, good sir?

    • @yeahboyz9314
      @yeahboyz9314 Před rokem +4

      @@json7598 not really since i suck at japanese and learing from english doesn't work cuz some of the terminology i still don't know

    • @jgphantom6
      @jgphantom6 Před 10 měsíci +1

      was thinking this exact thing. I'm trying to learn Japanese from English. Never learnt another language before, and i feel so unbelievably overwhelmed. Having fluency in a language that is similar in some ways would make the process so much smoother and easier.

  • @JayFolipurba
    @JayFolipurba Před rokem +54

    I love how Duolingo saw this video and made an update that completely goes in the opposite direction. They actually used to do it the way you propose and then changed it into the variant you describe as bad

    • @neosharkey7401
      @neosharkey7401 Před rokem +3

      Lmfaoo duolingo is more like duo garbo.

    • @klodno6164
      @klodno6164 Před 11 měsíci

      What was the update?

    • @JayFolipurba
      @JayFolipurba Před 11 měsíci +14

      @@klodno6164 Before, the units were more freely structured. If you wanted to learn something in the category travel next, but not necessarily food yet, you were able to choose between the two, or even more. This is like the free choice of topic on diverging paths, described in the video. Now duolingo is completely linear. Each piece of a unit has to be done before you can start the next one and the order of topics is rigid. Wanna do travel next? too bad, you don't even see that travel would be next because you have to do food, now!

    • @klodno6164
      @klodno6164 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@JayFolipurba damn I really gotta learn what the owl wants me to learn now 😭

    • @JayFolipurba
      @JayFolipurba Před 11 měsíci

      @@klodno6164 so it would seem

  • @Stonehawk
    @Stonehawk Před 3 lety +1747

    At the end of the day, "i no speek gud" is just as useful as "Pardon me, my friend; I am not terribly skilled at the language of English yet."

    • @ffc1a28c7
      @ffc1a28c7 Před 3 lety +83

      It can become an issue if you don't have enough words to talk about things, but honestly, there is too much stake put on grammar in the first few weeks of learning.

    •  Před 3 lety +4

      *the language of Chaucer

    • @prajvalj
      @prajvalj Před 3 lety +111

      Why waste time say lot word when few word do trick

    • @jacobdiller8140
      @jacobdiller8140 Před 3 lety +23

      Ironically...saying "not terribly skilled' means "skilled" - a poorly timed double negative for this example.
      I'm sure this makes more sense if you speak the Queen's English.

    • @what-lj4cf
      @what-lj4cf Před 3 lety +11

      i really don't care if someone isn't completely fluent in english, because most people that speak to me and english isn't their first language at least know the basics, which i respect. i'm currently learning german, and i hope that when i attempt to speak to them, they understand what i mean, even it's the most basic of phrases

  • @johnjecko2530
    @johnjecko2530 Před 3 lety +1963

    When a baby is learning it’s mother’s tongue it’s not worrying about grammar and conjugation

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 3 lety +81

      Then over time you just rearrange the order of the words. But first, you need to know what to call something.

    • @EvilTaco
      @EvilTaco Před 3 lety +128

      Yes, and the best part is most native speakers don't know the rules anymore. I've seen this with French and English people, they don't know the rules, they just apply them without even thinking about it at all

    • @konchaku
      @konchaku Před 3 lety +56

      Not fully related to what you said, but did you know that babies and adults learn languages at different rates? When I first started researching language learning methods, I was sure that babies were better and faster at learning languages than adults, but apparently that’s not the case. Having knowledge about general language usage, the ability to use translations and more complex studying techniques actually allows adults to learn languages much faster than babies. Despite that, adults can also use the same method that babies use to learn languages to fluency, but it can be quite frustrating of a process if you don’t know how to do it right. I think it’s called the naturalistic method of language learning, and some polyglots swear by it.
      Within my own language studies, I’ve found that it’s easier to learn grammar by studying it than by simply trying to learn it from context, but you can definitely learn a lot of it through context if you know enough words. The thing is, it’s kind of useless to learn grammar that you don’t have an active use case for. It’s frustrating, confusing, and you’ll forget how to use it because you aren’t using it. I’ve found it’s better to study only the grammar that’s relevant to what you want to express at that point in your journey. I’ve found that it makes you less critical of your own mistakes and more likely to not care if you are saying things correctly because the point is you don’t bother with something until it actively limits your ability to communicate, and you are forced to learn how to be the most expressive with what you already know.

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 3 lety +3

      @@konchaku It is that point of trying to make links, till it just clicks.
      Like that great English to German video, by the end of it, you can understand what is said and know the answers. But ask them 30mins after most draw a blank.

    • @jana7475
      @jana7475 Před 3 lety +16

      But a baby will speak their first words after one or two years of all day exposure to the language. We cant learn like that as adults, firstly because we are not learning our native language rather a language we DON'T hear every day, or even at all. I agree grammar is not the most important in the beginning but if you wanna be fluent you have memorize the grammar. Its useless to learn vocabulary if you don't know the verbs to be and to have at least. And that means memorizing it.

  • @betoturelli5479
    @betoturelli5479 Před rokem +59

    Completely true. While my friends loved to play videogames in Spanish, our native language, I did it in English. I also watched movies/series in English until I started to do it without subtitles. And I only did it that way because I like it. It was subconscious. I was having fun and learning at the same time. I make mistakes, sure. Lots of them. But I am more or less fluent. Now I even read novels in English. And people around me were surprised. I never talked regularly with an English speaker, so I lack a lot of practice in that painful area, but I agree with your video.

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 Před 9 měsíci

      You still have to study... studying boosts your learning and makes you much better at that goal language

  • @praetoriancorps
    @praetoriancorps Před rokem +208

    When I was learning a language a long time ago, I used a mix of yours and the conventional method. I bought a textbook that explained all the basic grammar rules and I used that as a base to practise the non-conventional way mostly by talking to as many natives as I could. Thinking of trying to learn a new language again, but I'm not sure yet which one i'd want to learn.

    • @michaelhunt9717
      @michaelhunt9717 Před rokem +4

      I'd just start with one of the "main" languages, like Spanish or French or maybe even some others like German or polish. If you want a challenge, go for Japanese.

    • @rainedrop14
      @rainedrop14 Před rokem +2

      @@michaelhunt9717 are you saying japanese isnt recomended as a first second language? even if i have the ability to talk with a native speaker daily through work? genuine question lol

    • @michaelhunt9717
      @michaelhunt9717 Před rokem +3

      @@rainedrop14 Yeah I don't recommend Japanese as your first second language. Not saying there's anything wrong with doing so, it's your life. If you have an easy time with it, then by all means, go ahead.

    • @user-mz7bh1eh9v
      @user-mz7bh1eh9v Před rokem +3

      @@michaelhunt9717 Interesting how to you Spanish and French are "main" languages but not Mandarin and Hindi which are both higher on the list of most spoken languages.
      Or do you just use "main" synonymously with "European"?

    • @thesupernile6728
      @thesupernile6728 Před rokem +12

      @@user-mz7bh1eh9v I think by main they mean that English speakers often learn these ones first as there is a smaller jump between English and Spanish than English and Hindi or Mandarin

  • @RaskalinoH4tesHoomans4425
    @RaskalinoH4tesHoomans4425 Před 3 lety +1914

    As an Italian, I find him fluent and can understand everything he's saying. He sounds like a spanish guy speaking italian.

    • @user-qk3zs3tv1c
      @user-qk3zs3tv1c Před 3 lety +93

      For me absence of typical italian gestures was more noticeable than his accent (although his accent is pretty hard). )

    • @RaniaMich
      @RaniaMich Před 3 lety +66

      I don't speak italian but i speak a bit of spanish and that was what i also thought. A spanish speaking italian. :)

    • @JG-yk6ny
      @JG-yk6ny Před 3 lety +71

      Makes sense, he does know spanish, so he is likely relating what he knows about one romance language to another.

    • @colatf2
      @colatf2 Před 3 lety +11

      I speak a bit of English and nothing else and I too found that he spoke Italian funky

    • @RaniaMich
      @RaniaMich Před 3 lety +2

      @@colatf2 when you say "and nothing else"... I mean you must have a mother tongue, right? :p

  • @j.j.3759
    @j.j.3759 Před 3 lety +896

    Something worth keeping in mind is that, in some places, if you can't speak the language "properly", the locals will just switch to English (Germany, Austria, Sweden, Norway, etc.) or pretend they don't understand you (France).

    • @Weebslayer13
      @Weebslayer13 Před 3 lety +286

      Pretend they don't understand you (France) took me into orbit lmfaoob

    • @richardblackhound1246
      @richardblackhound1246 Před 3 lety +86

      Native speakers of English are at a disadvantage here because people all over the world learn the language and many speak it amazingly well. Also most native English speakers have an immediately recognizable accent. If someone comes from a different country and claims not to know English, the natives of the countries you mentioned would have no choice but to speak to you in their language. I would claim to be from a different country but sadly my accent always gives me away.

    • @1ajs
      @1ajs Před 3 lety +43

      or refuse cause they wana pactice english

    • @Dachusblot
      @Dachusblot Před 3 lety +75

      That was what happened to me in Italy. I was there for a summer and really tried to learn some Italian, but every time I went into a shop and started to order something, the person I was talking to would always be like, "You know, I speak English, lol." And I was too shy to explain that I wanted to learn, so I just gave up and switched back to English.

    • @RichardHernandez-pz7bt
      @RichardHernandez-pz7bt Před 3 lety +25

      @@Dachusblot I have to deal with this every fucking time in Los Angeles with everyone using me as their guinea pig 😩 it's soooo annoying!!! aaah lol I speak three languages and I want to practice more but this assholes won't let me haha

  • @ToryIsCooliest
    @ToryIsCooliest Před rokem +2

    I had a similar experience when I traveled to France. Since then, I have studied on my own even more, but I haven't made the progress with communication like many other language learners. I think I'm so anxious about getting everything right that I overwhelm myself.
    I will try your approach. Thanks so much for explaining it in such an interesting way!

  • @RideWithRen
    @RideWithRen Před rokem +42

    I currently live in Korea and have used your alternate method to speak Korean, and it works well. I can make basic conversation, buy food and drink, fond shelter, buy clothing, get transportation, etc. My Korean is very basic but I get by very well. I can even tell different Korean accents apart. I feel that no matter where in Korea I am I'll be okay. I have used this same method while living in Germany, I learned the very basic words, some rudimentary grammar, and went about my way speaking dirty German. After three years living there my German was fairly good.

    • @tinymeatbean
      @tinymeatbean Před rokem

      i was wondering about korean specifically while watching this! i took a few years in college, but could never speak it to anyone bc i think my brain had a wall up (maybe i’m just lazy)… was it hard to implement this with the different characters or was it just an extra first step?

    • @RideWithRen
      @RideWithRen Před rokem +3

      @@tinymeatbean you mean the Korean alphabet? I think it is the easiest thing to learn in Korean, and didn't slow down learning at all. I think the grammar, which seems backwards to an English speaker, is the hardest aspect of learning Korean, plus the huge vocabulary.

  • @Marianojoey
    @Marianojoey Před 2 lety +2766

    He didn't realize it, but that's actually the method everyone learns their language as kids. You first memorize words you hear your parents speaking, then you start trying to emulate them saying them yourself, and then you go to school and learn how it really works. :D
    As adults, we can do all that in less than 4-5 years, and that's why his method should work for anyone and everyone. :)

    • @markmarku8169
      @markmarku8169 Před 2 lety +41

      Nailed it, this is the best comment on this video, thank you

    • @claudia-uy5gk
      @claudia-uy5gk Před rokem

      :)

    • @buenvidanadz1969
      @buenvidanadz1969 Před rokem +36

      True. Immersion is key. That's why people that go to places where they don't speak the language would be able to naturally acquire the language even if they barely put in the effort in learning compared to someone that will meticulously study the language in their own place.

    • @M69392
      @M69392 Před rokem +11

      And this is exactly why native English speakers sometimes ask foreigners how to spell some words in their own language. Very surprising at first but actually makes sense. Granted, it's also because English spelling is a horrible mess: how do you pronounce "-ough"? (The Great Vowel Shift)

    • @malaineeward5249
      @malaineeward5249 Před rokem

      @@M69392 SEVEN DIFFERENT F******* WAYS
      I HATE ENGLISH SO FREAKING MUCH!!!

  • @Urasawa92
    @Urasawa92 Před 3 lety +4451

    The level of Italian he achieved in 4 months is impressive. However, I think he's underestimating just how much being fluent in Spanish helped him. Italian and Spanish are almost mutually understandable...

    • @chiuwong4057
      @chiuwong4057 Před 3 lety +499

      i think he's still pronouncing some words the spanish way instead of the italian way.

    • @97Corvi
      @97Corvi Před 3 lety +411

      I'm italian and i can confirm that he has a bit of a mix accent for what i can hear
      Very inglish, but some words have a bit of a spanish vibe

    • @elireyna9464
      @elireyna9464 Před 3 lety +629

      "I may be fluent in one romance language while spending 4-7 years intensely studying another, but somehow learning a third over 6 months wasn't that hard!"

    • @blakefusilier3038
      @blakefusilier3038 Před 3 lety +214

      I was thinking that about his French minor... Italian is just French / Spanish triangulation

    • @Misack8
      @Misack8 Před 3 lety +32

      @@joaoassumpcao3347 Can confirm that.

  • @mememan5466
    @mememan5466 Před rokem +6

    This video makes me even more happy that I had a good German teacher in school, who cared that we could speak the language just as much as passing the exams at the end of the year

  • @Skyblue-vs7sw
    @Skyblue-vs7sw Před rokem +3

    21:45 what he said about learning the grammar AFTERWARDS is so important in my feeling, learning grammar is so much easier once it fits into a context you recognize, rather than trying to memorize rules you can't associate to anything real.

  • @tovsteh
    @tovsteh Před 3 lety +1203

    A man once said: "Over the next 2 years, I'm going to learn a new language."
    "That is a very long time.." his friend responded, to which he replied:
    "2 years are going to pass, whether I learn the language or not."

    • @readisgooddewaterkant7890
      @readisgooddewaterkant7890 Před 3 lety +20

      i like it

    • @kitfrias3469
      @kitfrias3469 Před 3 lety +7

      A beautiful thought. Thank you for sharing. :)

    • @suinjapan
      @suinjapan Před 3 lety

      I love that. Thank you!

    • @whatever6223
      @whatever6223 Před 3 lety

      2 years is most likely not going to be enough though

    • @tovsteh
      @tovsteh Před 3 lety +23

      @@whatever6223 Its enough to learn a language, you can do it in even less. Depends on how much time you put into it. Speaking it fluently will only happen if you live in X country and surround yourself with it for years (and want to learn it).

  • @mephisto4618
    @mephisto4618 Před 3 lety +500

    “If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his language, that goes to his heart.” - Nelson Mandela

    • @vektim
      @vektim Před 3 lety +6

      Absolutely

    • @felicee
      @felicee Před 3 lety +4

      I have always loved this quote..

    • @mephisto4618
      @mephisto4618 Před 3 lety +2

      @@felicee me too

    • @whatever6223
      @whatever6223 Před 3 lety +18

      ...and if you butcher his language, that gets on his nerves

    • @mephisto4618
      @mephisto4618 Před 3 lety +2

      @@whatever6223 😂😂

  • @chapswick
    @chapswick Před rokem +44

    As an Italian I'll just say this: You're doing GREAT, and your videogame map theory is truly inspiring :) Thanks for posting this! Speriamo di averti presto in Italia :)

  • @doqstudios3397
    @doqstudios3397 Před rokem +4

    This video is amazing! As someone who is trying to learn new languages, this really helps.
    You should really create an app for this. I am so sick of all the other language apps that are essentially the same. If I had this way of learning easily avaliable in the for of a learning plan, it would change the game completely.

  • @TheG54
    @TheG54 Před 3 lety +1285

    Hearing you speak Italian made me realize that I can understand Italian 50% because I speak Spanish

    • @micamarayvos
      @micamarayvos Před 3 lety +28

      You should watch the ecolenguist video: czcams.com/video/VCtg1upDmWs/video.html&ab_channel=Ecolinguist I had entire conversations with italians in spanish back in Italy.

    • @cirohugo
      @cirohugo Před 3 lety +63

      As a Portuguese speaker, I understood pretty much of his Italian too

    • @KOrbiid
      @KOrbiid Před 3 lety +34

      Yes that makes the whole video a bit useless... Speaking two romance languages is making it so much easier to learn a third... Ofc it took less time if you more or less know the grammar and the vocabulary

    • @davidegandolfi3474
      @davidegandolfi3474 Před 3 lety +31

      It works also the way around, when I went to Spain I could ask in italian and get answers in spanish and understand all without problems :)

    • @kingclan007
      @kingclan007 Před 3 lety +10

      I am really thinking of learning Spanish, and Italian at the same time. But I am not sure if I learned Spanish would I be able to understand Italian too. And now I know that u understand 50% so I am glad I will start with Spanish.

  • @carljohnson4473
    @carljohnson4473 Před 3 lety +1786

    John is like the most professional unprofessional Journalist I’ve ever seen

    • @triangulator01
      @triangulator01 Před 3 lety +64

      that's why we love him :)

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před 3 lety +505

      the only compliment I need. Thank you!

    • @bassman87
      @bassman87 Před 3 lety +8

      id argue that he still gets paid to be a journalist so he is still a professional. lol.

    • @fourthright
      @fourthright Před 3 lety +6

      Hey cj how u doing.

    • @bhavesh_4848
      @bhavesh_4848 Před 3 lety +2

      All we had to do was follow the damn train CJ

  • @gayluigi4122
    @gayluigi4122 Před rokem +8

    I have taken a few years of Japanese while I was in highschool, and something my teacher said stuck with me. She said that the most important thing is learning how to communicate, even if somewhat poorly, not how many kanji you know, or how precise your pronunciation is, but just being able to communicate. Getting this kind of advice in a class that is very structured toward a specific curriculum can be sort of confusing, but I think it worked out. I can't confidently speak the language yet, but I can understand most of what is being said when I hear it spoken, which I would say is a success

    • @marikothecheetah9342
      @marikothecheetah9342 Před 3 měsíci

      Was your teacher a Japanese? Because I can promise you - pronunciation in Japanese is pretty important.

  • @melantakwarrior8423
    @melantakwarrior8423 Před rokem +4

    agreed!! i never learned Korean but I watched a lot of Korean dramas and Korean Variety shows. i never knew or learned the grammar and other standard stuffs but when I speak with Koreans they told me that my Korean is natural and the wording usage is native sounding to them. I may not know a lot of formal stuffs but conversation is the only thing that matter!

  • @nathanieldrew
    @nathanieldrew Před 3 lety +5722

    You are an incredible human being and it has been a real honor to get to work with you man. I love this analogy.

  • @vytispelke
    @vytispelke Před 3 lety +574

    A great man once said: "why waste time say lot word when few word do trick
    "

  • @dereckbrajevich6474
    @dereckbrajevich6474 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The funny thing about you mentioning Legend of Zelda and languages is the concept that "Link" would have to learn the alphabet, letter form and sentence structure of the languages in every Kingdom, you have to interact with. Just to get directions or to communicate with the shops in order to continue the quests. Deku would grow from seed and expand into branches from bottom up. Goron would be like digging tunnels from top-down, and Zora would be like swimming, pushing the words in one direction as the sentence flows in the other direction.

  • @TheKindredCollection
    @TheKindredCollection Před rokem +4

    I think the idea of the video game map method is to set language goals for yourself and to not be afraid to let the goals change. You may set out to defeat the fluency boss, but along the way there may be an interesting excursion. When that shows up on your radar, you can ignore it or you can explore it. Exploring that may lead you to explore something else, and by the time it is done, the most impactful thing was not the main storyline, but the terrific and difficult sidequests along the way.

  • @WoFDarkNewton
    @WoFDarkNewton Před 3 lety +582

    "I learned this in school but I don't actually know anything" could be said of MANY fields of study taught in school.

    • @yournamehereyournamehere907
      @yournamehereyournamehere907 Před 3 lety +20

      School is not for teaching. It is for learning obedience.

    • @oopsioded
      @oopsioded Před 3 lety +2

      @@yournamehereyournamehere907 true as hell, I was gonna say, school's role is almost to pretend to be learning skills while all the while it suppresses them.

    • @nathanlevesque7812
      @nathanlevesque7812 Před 3 lety

      @@yournamehereyournamehere907 dogmatic

    • @SukSukulent
      @SukSukulent Před 3 lety

      This is very sad truth.

  • @kumar01234
    @kumar01234 Před 3 lety +259

    it took me a minute to realize that when Johnny said he was playing with his boys he meant his actual boys like his sons and not his buddies lol

    • @didiermejia7049
      @didiermejia7049 Před 3 lety +5

      In my mind I was like “but Zelda is a single player game”

    • @rubensneto9049
      @rubensneto9049 Před 3 lety +7

      i realized because of your comment to be honest

  • @JoakimBertil
    @JoakimBertil Před rokem +1

    I agree with you. I realized some time ago that fluency means being able to communicate and it removed a ton of pressure and mental blockage from progressing, when the goal isn't to know everything perfectly but for the language to be USABLE!

  • @the_lyrical_woodsman
    @the_lyrical_woodsman Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thank you for identifying and clarifying why I've had such an aversion to language learning! I was brought up in a perfectionist schooling environment. I WAS corrected on small grammar mistakes as a kid like you demonstrated, and small singular mistakes meant full letter grade deductions from my scores. Same with spelling. Thank you for sharing and helping me find a way to heal from yet another angle on the trauma that perfectionism caused in my life.

  • @Phyrozz
    @Phyrozz Před 3 lety +916

    Maps: "exist"
    Johnny: "I can milk you"

    • @reyluna0
      @reyluna0 Před 3 lety +6

      Funny that Linus is your profile pic cuz he recently used this meme on a video

    • @scaredyfish
      @scaredyfish Před 3 lety +5

      You can milk anything with nipples

    • @beb6c2a
      @beb6c2a Před 3 lety

      So funny 😂

    • @umbraetlux
      @umbraetlux Před 3 lety +1

      Linus sex tips

  • @jimmytimmy3680
    @jimmytimmy3680 Před 3 lety +441

    1. Learn the most common 1000 words
    2. Start speaking asap
    3. Make it fun
    4. Learn Grammar

    • @s3rg1o.3x3
      @s3rg1o.3x3 Před 3 lety +7

      I would add input as step 2 and move everything down. Basically Refold.la

    • @brepazil
      @brepazil Před 3 lety +1

      How can i talk with someone in other language *google searching*

    • @estebanquintero
      @estebanquintero Před 3 lety +2

      @@brepazil You can use iTalki or other apps

    • @alexanderadlhart1820
      @alexanderadlhart1820 Před 3 lety

      @@brepazil Tandem is a really good app to use

    • @mark-angelofamularcano237
      @mark-angelofamularcano237 Před 3 lety +7

      So basically how kids learn the language around them during the first years of their lives.
      Then gradually adjust for grammar and better structure

  • @laiyenju
    @laiyenju Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for the great experience sharing! Love the concept to show the gaming map as a language learning journey.

  • @rebootedperson3821
    @rebootedperson3821 Před 2 lety +612

    By watching your videos, I am learning English. Thanks.
    Summary:
    0. Select the language you want to learn
    1. Create a database of the most common and useful words of about 1000
    2. Start talking early, preferably with native speakers
    3. Make it fun, read books, listen to audio, watch movies in this language
    4. Eventually you will have to learn the rules, but it will be much easier than if you first learned the rules and then started to learn the language

    • @marcosmouta7732
      @marcosmouta7732 Před rokem +9

      + play zelda

    • @JesseHelton
      @JesseHelton Před rokem +1

      The Achilles Heel of all language learning instruction is that a native speaker never “learns the rules.” As a native speaker, you learn all of the details. The expression any rule is someone’s attempt (language teacher?) to quantify in a simple way the sum of all of the details that everyone already knows. Put simply, if you ever try to learn the rules of a language, you are doing it backwards.

  • @vojacked305
    @vojacked305 Před 2 lety +553

    Wait wait wait. So you're saying, the most efficient way to learn new language is not through books but through how we learn language as a toddler? That's actually good. I'll do this soon.

    • @CristianDominguezReloaded
      @CristianDominguezReloaded Před 2 lety +17

      you choose the way it works well for you . some people need books , others cards , others videogames and some others even miniatures, etc . we do not feel or think in the same way . if you feel like asking someone to teach you is fine too , there is no invalid way to teach or learn a language , only the elitist educational systems dictates what is wrong or right when it comes down to learning and teaching and they make people believe this .

    • @olavsantiago
      @olavsantiago Před 2 lety +5

      @VoJacked learning a language like a toddler is effective, that's how I'm learning 2 language's.

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 2 lety +11

      @@CristianDominguezReloaded Immersion is basically almost every resource you mentioned lol

    • @ankyfire
      @ankyfire Před 2 lety +6

      Well, not exactly... it takes us years to acquire a language as kids. What he presented was scientifically broken down process of how kids learn a language. First they learn the most basic words and use them very, very incorrectly. But they can convey ideas. Then kids learn grammar by seeing patterns in everyday speech.
      What was done here was taken the most popular words (so a shortcut to what happens with kids), and then learning grammar through rules which is more efficient than learning it from patterns over thousands of examples.
      This is a brilliant strategy (and I mean from linguistic point of view - it was my major), although in his case it is necessary to mention that knowing a language as closely related as Spanish is to Italian was a tremendous help. Trust me, that would not have happened with a language from a different language group, like Finnish or Chinese.

    • @rotua98
      @rotua98 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ankyfire IT IS the toddler way as far you can able to do, of course its not perfect and not as pure like toddler
      If you want the toddler way, simply jump to that new place and learn directly with the native, not only you picking lot of word quickly but you also learn the structure and grammar by experience it directly
      Here in Indonesia (2nd most multilanguages, over 600 language) we in different region speak with slightly different dialect to completly different language, and i see lot of people moving around and settle, and after few month they can speak just like the locals

  • @maxencerobichon8810
    @maxencerobichon8810 Před rokem +5

    Great video ! Thank you so much for sharing your ideas

  • @arielrosado4087
    @arielrosado4087 Před rokem

    Now this is the most impactful video i’ve seen in years. Thanks for that. I am a Spanish speaker learning english, and my wife is learning too. The “Language is not math” is an amazing comparison! Thank you again for the video and sharing your experience.

  • @GGysar
    @GGysar Před 3 lety +1061

    Fluency:
    "Hello, good sir, excuse me, Would you perhaps be so kind as to tell me, where I could find the nearest grocery store, if it is not too much of a bother."
    communication:
    "food store, where?"

    • @nyankers
      @nyankers Před 3 lety +58

      except Japanese where this is reversed haha

    • @GGysar
      @GGysar Před 3 lety +27

      @@nyankers Very true. I think no japanese person would say something like that:"ごめんなさい、 ごはんやさん は どこ に ありますか。" but it should be grammatically correct. But I don't understand japanese politeness levels at all, so I could be completely wrong about that xD

    • @wiandryadiwasistio2062
      @wiandryadiwasistio2062 Před 3 lety +10

      @@GGysar i saw 'arimasuka' (ありますか) so i assume it's polite enough

    • @ranggakd
      @ranggakd Před 2 lety +13

      Me being an oblivion NPC:

    • @runningriot7963
      @runningriot7963 Před 2 lety +11

      @@GGysar ごめんなさい is more of an apology than an interjection. I would say
      すみません…スーパーはどこですか? The most common word for store would be sūpā which is short for supermarket, or if you wanted to be specific you could say 食料品店 (しょくりょうひんてん) which means food store. And yes there are many levels of polite speach in Japanese, but most people only need to learn Casaul and simple polite form, "Desu/masu".

  • @LimeGreenTeknii
    @LimeGreenTeknii Před 3 lety +660

    "I minored in French and I couldn't order a baguette."
    Pardon my French, but is "baguette, s'il vou pleit" not enough?

    • @elireyna9464
      @elireyna9464 Před 3 lety +91

      lmao no it's completely fine which makes his comparison even more absurd

    • @joaoassumpcao3347
      @joaoassumpcao3347 Před 3 lety +277

      I think his point wasn't that he literally couldn't order a baguette. After all, literally going and saying "baguette" would probably be enough. I think the point was to say that even with a minor in French, the simple task of ordering food was daunting and something he was not comfortable with

    • @TorreFernand
      @TorreFernand Před 3 lety +167

      It's more that feeling of "the first time you walk into the store". Try to remember what it was like being 6 years old and trying to buy a candy bar: Should you say "hey mister" or "Excuse me" or just stand in front of the register and hope to be noticed?

    • @lacdirk
      @lacdirk Před 3 lety +68

      Not if your threshold is set by academic fluency, in which case you would not accept a grammatically incorrect and poorly pronounced sentence.
      I think the main takeaway is that you need to accept you will never pass for a native speaker (not unless you move there or otherwise live and breathe the language), so it's fine to make mistakes. Then the question becomes: what's an acceptable level of mistakes, and there the answer can vary, but his threshold is that people can understand what he is trying to say.
      He also addresses the other big question, i.e. what you are intending to express. If you are a tourist, you can literally make do with a few dozen phrases and a small booklet with perhaps 100 more, and get around easily and safely. Here he chose to set a very high threshold in trying to be conversational. No specialised fields, no legalese, no political subtlety but still, an expansive field.
      People may object that being conversational is still not enough, and that you need to be able to read and understand the standard-bearing newspapers and newscasts, or even the main literary works. I would argue that by that standard, most people aren't fluent in their native tongue.

    • @TheSam1902
      @TheSam1902 Před 3 lety +34

      Just say "Bonjour ! Un tradition pas trop cuite, s'il vous plaît" if you like your baguette not too cooked/brown; or
      "Bonjour ! Un tradition bien cuite, s'il vous plaît" if you like it quite browned up.
      Then, 100% of the time, you'll be asked "Et avec ceci ?", to which you answer "Ce sera tout, merci". And then you pay.
      I swear the number of times my whole verbal exchange at a bakery happened like that, regardless of which bakery in France, is truly impressive.
      This exchange is so stereotypical it should be French 101.

  • @_ashenwolf_
    @_ashenwolf_ Před rokem +1

    I love this video, this subject is something I've thought about often. I majored in German in university and spent years analyzing the language inside and out. I agree with you there are different ways of learning languages; this is a very tangible, practical way of doing it. Love your content. :)

  • @captainobvious9188
    @captainobvious9188 Před rokem +3

    I’m not a language learner, but I’ve taught myself a whole range of entirely different subjects. I try to imagine a dependency graph of concepts, inclusive of *everything*, and then turn it into a list of most to least relevant, and start as early with those concepts and growing, making sure to study everyday and expanding, putting in sleep cycles. So what you say makes perfect sense to me - you are studying the most essential words, and how to put them together and say them, with repetition and sleep cycles.

  • @123Perillo
    @123Perillo Před 3 lety +212

    Better title for the video: "Leaning a new language: any% vs 100%"

    • @NickRaven
      @NickRaven Před 3 lety +1

      Even better: Rubber Band the Video, because this was a streeeeeeeeeeeeeetch.

  • @HannsSchmelzer
    @HannsSchmelzer Před 3 lety +1028

    I literally learned a lot of English when I was a kid, playing A Link To The Past, with a dictionary next to me, what a journey. Thanks for this video!

    • @nakenmil
      @nakenmil Před 3 lety +15

      I was exactly the same. There were so many contextual clues in the interactivity that is sorta works out naturally.

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 3 lety +12

      That's probably quite a lot of people like that. I definitely learned English on the computer, doing whatever, including gaming.

    • @klukhaus6169
      @klukhaus6169 Před 3 lety +6

      Resident evil on ps1. :-D

    • @ers-br
      @ers-br Před 3 lety +4

      Me too! With a dictionary! Zelda and FF4 (Cecil & Co.)

    • @supertraco
      @supertraco Před 3 lety +2

      my adult life has benefit so much of all the JRPG i played as a kid using a dictionary.

  • @leecalliste2273
    @leecalliste2273 Před rokem

    This analogy was so inspiring that I confirmed my way and some priorities to learn English. Like I wanna travel around the world, like order a cup of coffee and to have a randomly talk to natives, but I still too much struggled with grammar and vocabulary. It changed after I watched this video, the best and most efficient way is to talk. Thank you, and thank you for the great analogy.

  • @declan_youtube
    @declan_youtube Před rokem +2

    I am learning German with the app Memrise, and it incorporates lots of these. I recently decided to try something else as well as the app and when I memorised some basic words, I realised I knew most of the words to do with school or resturants, and it is helpful also using flashcards to learn some other common words too!

  • @TheJmlaliberte
    @TheJmlaliberte Před 3 lety +182

    When you travels, locals LOVES when a foreigner tries to speak the language even if it is bad. That's how you get invited to places or get recommended nice spots.

    • @FrancescaDePaolis
      @FrancescaDePaolis Před 3 lety +8

      I totally agree with you! I love it when a foreigner tries to speak my own language and I try continue the conversation in that language that way he/she can practice.
      Same holds when I travel, I love it when I meet locals speaking to me in their language and not switching directly to English.

    • @branthebrave
      @branthebrave Před 3 lety +20

      Not in France for some.

    • @FrancescaDePaolis
      @FrancescaDePaolis Před 3 lety +3

      @@branthebrave True haha that happened to me in France aswell

    • @daMacadamBlob
      @daMacadamBlob Před 3 lety +9

      in france they will look at you annoyed

    • @happyswedme
      @happyswedme Před 3 lety +1

      Keep yo blanket statement, I didn't take french for four years just so Saisons Margaruite could waltz up to my reception and expect me to handle a check in on a "take, huur mar du" alone. If she wants a dinner recommendation she can take her independent ass and grab a map cuz shes not getting one from me with that attitude.

  • @YEIYO1
    @YEIYO1 Před 3 lety +3149

    I learning english when i was like 12 by playing The legend of zelda: link to the past.

    • @garofp
      @garofp Před 3 lety +74

      Yessss, Wind Waker is the rock in which my english was built on. This video hit just right in the memories.

    • @certifieddumbass1231
      @certifieddumbass1231 Před 3 lety +161

      I leaned english purely through watching minecraft videos

    • @edlaralara
      @edlaralara Před 3 lety +20

      Me pasó lo mismo xd , now i can express myself without thinking in Spanish

    • @xKuukkelix
      @xKuukkelix Před 3 lety +35

      I only started learning english properly after I found youtube about 12 years ago.

    • @fretkoe
      @fretkoe Před 3 lety +9

      I learned english through FIFA videos haha

  • @RedRage2697
    @RedRage2697 Před rokem +11

    A bit late to this but I think that this is an important lesson to be had about learning various topics, not just languages. My friend went to college LOVING music. But once he started going through the classes he realized that the music they were teaching him wasn't what he wanted to learn. They were solely focused on music theory and none of it was just about making good music. So he may not understand the most complicated music theory lessons or rules you should 'absolutely follow no matter what', but he doesn't care because he's making music he enjoys that sounds good to him and others. I think it's important to have context on what you're learning, but it seems like the actual objective of what you're actually learning about is lost. In many different disciplines it's all about the little details and never the big picture. I hate that and it can make learning things really enjoyable.

  • @ocaminhodoingles
    @ocaminhodoingles Před 8 měsíci

    you got me in your definition of fluency, nice job man!

  • @DoctorDex
    @DoctorDex Před 3 lety +807

    I learned English through videogames and tv as a kid. Meanwhile I did not retain any of the foreign languages that were taught to me in school..
    Did a test when I was 18 and my score was literally flawless. University level English in all categories. Mostly thanks to Pokémon and Friends lol

    • @blackshadow-_-c9441
      @blackshadow-_-c9441 Před 3 lety +23

      Sure, thing is though, your using english alot, and interact alot more to people with it. So ofc youll retain it easier

    • @alfredharrison597
      @alfredharrison597 Před 2 lety +32

      This is why college (IN ITS CURRENT FORM!!!!) is not only a scam, its a waste of time.

    • @Himmyjewett
      @Himmyjewett Před 2 lety +11

      @@alfredharrison597 ok buddy

    • @J777F
      @J777F Před 2 lety +1

      Same
      And I ended up being a private tutor lol

    • @zilvinaszilinskas1524
      @zilvinaszilinskas1524 Před 2 lety +7

      Same except i have no idea where i actually learned it, and now im struglibg to remember so i can learn other languages in the same way

  • @LaLuneEstJolie
    @LaLuneEstJolie Před 3 lety +303

    High School French Teacher here. Fluency is not memorizing grammar rules, it is internalizing them and having the ability to retrieve them when you need to. What you did is an excellent demonstration of why no one remembers the language they studied in high school. I majored in French but when I moved to France I didn’t know how to call the fire department!

    • @JohnKruse
      @JohnKruse Před 3 lety +14

      It is tough for Americans because we live in a sea of English. My wife grew up in Italy and spent a month every year in France, so she speaks French well. Then she went to live in London, so she speaks English well. I took a year of high school Spanish, and then I started learning Italian at 40. I use my Italian daily but still suck. I can't imagine putting in huge effort for a a vacation. BTW, even when I'm in Italy, the Italians all want to speak English with me. ;)

    • @JonathanBondu
      @JonathanBondu Před 3 lety +5

      I'm french and I don't always know how to call the fire departement... is it 15, 17, or 18 ?...

    • @JohnKruse
      @JohnKruse Před 3 lety +5

      @@JonathanBondu Ha. In Italy they changed the emergency numbers and recently my kid was berating his Nonna because she had it all wrong.

    • @ethanrichter272
      @ethanrichter272 Před 3 lety +10

      The problem is that you *need* a reason to know the language. Chances are, if you’re just picking up a language for fun (or school) and not using it in real life on a regular basis. This is why so few Americans don’t know a second language. We don’t need to. Since 1815, an English speaking country has been the dominant world power. This makes everyone else learn English, so no matter where Americans go, people know English.

    • @demoscassi8055
      @demoscassi8055 Před 3 lety +2

      You still need to know some basic for that language, or else it is like you start the game naked,no money, no ability to walk, no ability to crawl. That's painful.
      People oftenly forget that we just have spent a painfully amont of time in our Childhood to say the first few words in our mother tongue(The pain is not yours but most likely who ever raised you).
      So Studying grammar help you take shortcut years of your life.
      But I wholeheartly agree that living in a Native speaking community will accelerate the learning curve.
      And most importantly, sometime it easier if you already know and have familarity with the concepts used in that language, which could be much harder if the language come from a very different language groups

  • @odaneolaki688
    @odaneolaki688 Před rokem +1

    This video is like an article with an incredibly good summary. In such articles everything is laid out in a very interesting way in the summary, but when you read the rest of the article, nothing new has been written.

  • @janbuyukcelen3778
    @janbuyukcelen3778 Před 9 měsíci

    Your Italian is easily understandable, great results and congrats

  • @ewwitsantonio
    @ewwitsantonio Před 2 lety +2189

    I am literally dedicating my life to developing language learning video games. So happy to see this video and conversations happening in the comments!

    • @MrMegaMetroid
      @MrMegaMetroid Před rokem +147

      My man, would you care to share your work on your youtube channel or somewhere else? Im extremely interested, both in the results of your work, as well as your progress and resources. Video games are an incredibly valuable tool and im shocked they are not utilized more for learning purposes

    • @dat_fast_boi
      @dat_fast_boi Před rokem +40

      @@MrMegaMetroid don't know about you, but I'm so interested in this that I'm subscribing to ewwitsantonio preemptively
      Very curious to see how they go about it

    • @roger6010
      @roger6010 Před rokem +3

      Why make a video game for language learning if you can learn a language just by playing a normal actual fun game and learn tons of vocab and words and ultimately learn the language through listening and reading a lot?

    • @roger6010
      @roger6010 Před rokem

      And also there is already a game for pc and android devices that has this purpose.

    • @yuta5026
      @yuta5026 Před rokem +10

      Would you ever be looking for programmers? I actually thought that would be something Id like to do.

  • @lucienskinner-savallisch5399

    This new way seems like how children learn. Kids talk way before "learning how to" in school. Then once the foundation is set the palace of language may be built.

    • @mbrendoblair8100
      @mbrendoblair8100 Před 3 lety +49

      Exactly, lol. People saying “but you need to know past conditional tense!!!!!! U can’t be fluent!!” Are big fat liars. As someone of mixed race, bilingual, learning to speak first was INCREDIBLE for my growth in learning everything ese.

    • @oliversissonphone6143
      @oliversissonphone6143 Před 2 lety +2

      Kids don't learn lists of vocab

    • @oliversissonphone6143
      @oliversissonphone6143 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mbrendoblair8100 absolutely no one has ever said this in the history of the world

    • @lucienskinner-savallisch5399
      @lucienskinner-savallisch5399 Před 2 lety +12

      @@oliversissonphone6143 you don't remember doing vocab tests? I had one every week until like 4th grade.

    • @oliversissonphone6143
      @oliversissonphone6143 Před 2 lety

      @@lucienskinner-savallisch5399 nope 😂

  • @qantuum7567
    @qantuum7567 Před rokem +1

    this is a fascinating video.
    I'm into constructed languages and I spend a lot of time wondering how to actually build a new language's grammar from scratch. the 'basic english" method might just help in this goal.

  • @buttercuup02
    @buttercuup02 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This makes sense! I think we need to look at foreign language learning the same way we look at native language learning. We learned our native languages by speaking words as we grew from infancy, fully immersing ourselves in it as children. Then, in grade school, we learn the logistics of sentence structure and participles and all that fancy stuff. But we don't learn those more complicated "rules" until we're already expressing ourselves in the language. In fact, plenty of people never get that education in school, but still speak their native language fluently just by growing up in it and speaking it their whole lives.

  • @vicenterodriguez2177
    @vicenterodriguez2177 Před rokem +1381

    Something really important that he didn't mention (or rather he just skimmed over it) is that you NEED to immerse yourself in the language you're learning. This makes the process of learning grammar and pronunciation so much more intuitive. Watch YT videos in french, watch german movies, listen to italian music, play your games in spanish. After hearing and reading so much of your language of choice, the right way to say and write things will just become intuition. Me and many friends that know how to speak english properly, have never studied a single grammar rule in our lives, and yet we can write and talk perfectly fine because "it sounds right". Immerse yourself in the language, then everything becomes a learning opportunity

    • @Sophie1763
      @Sophie1763 Před rokem +76

      I agree and at the same time disagree with you (a little, but still). I agree that you need to immerse yourself- watch movies/YT, read articles/books, play games in the "chosen" language, but most importantly "try it" - speak, write, especially if you don't feel confident at it and are afraid of using it. However I think that you need a little knowledge of grammar- not saying that knowing all the rules, tenses etc. will be the only condition to speak, (and for sure all of them are not needed in everyday communication) , but in some situation can be helpful. And unfortunately, in some languages without knowing basic (main) rules, it will be extremally difficult to progress and speak "fluent".

    • @yarriddevogelaere2005
      @yarriddevogelaere2005 Před rokem +63

      Indeed. There's a reason English is the most spoken second language. That's just simply because of our pop culture. Most people grow up watching American movies and listening to American music.

    • @federicoantonietti7851
      @federicoantonietti7851 Před rokem +32

      As an Italian, I highly suggest you don't listen to italian music, it sucks

    • @1queijocas
      @1queijocas Před rokem +6

      @@Sophie1763 yeah, learning a little grammar at an intermediate level is extremely helpful in progressing the language faster. Of course, one could do without but it does save time in figuring out the whys in the language

    • @thelad9434
      @thelad9434 Před rokem +6

      @@federicoantonietti7851Sorry you feel that way, 😂

  • @danielvijil7722
    @danielvijil7722 Před 2 lety +1333

    What he's saying is actually pretty funny, because that's exactly the way how I learned French, and believe me, it works faster than other methods, I would only recommend listening to a lot of the language before starting to learn the most basic words, this way your brain is gonna be a little bit more adapted to the sounds, and your pronunciation will come out naturally

    • @h.ar.2937
      @h.ar.2937 Před 2 lety +31

      Interesting! I didn’t think about listening to the language first before learning the words

    • @MLCommy
      @MLCommy Před 2 lety +6

      Any recommendations?

    • @atahirince
      @atahirince Před 2 lety +8

      well until now, I have been living french-speaking city for around 8 months without any french background and surviving with English (my native is Uralic lang). I am gonna test if help or not for the future learning journey

    • @Saifyrooma2nd
      @Saifyrooma2nd Před 2 lety +14

      @@h.ar.2937 I really really don't wanna be the "those people" which Harris mentions in the video but... He forgot to mention another one of the major language learning views which has especially been growing in popularity online in these last several years, and which has existed for much longer:
      The Input Method. It's based off of the hypothesis that humans (for instance, as babies) learn language best through exposure in context, (which has been proven time and time again to be true, I myself can evidence it) because our brains are insanely good at recognizing patterns, and the ways to stimulate that progress are often quite unintuitive.
      The main activities we do are:
      1. SRS systems for basic vocab (just like Harris and Nathan's method)
      2. Massive amounts of audio immersion followed by focusing more on meaning (Absolutely the crux of it)
      3. Exercising outputting abilities using intuition developed from immersion.
      (NOTE: Immersion doesn't really have anything to do with "moving to the country" or "talking to natives". With the power of the internet, there's written, audio, and video content of all forms available, and in more widely-spoken language, in all topics!)
      The main difference from the method outlined in the vid is emphasis on **not** speaking early (though whether "early ouput is a "sin" or not depends on who you ask; I disagree, personally).
      f you want a lot more depth "Day of French n' Swedish" and "Matt v Japan" should be your **first stops**. I promise it's worth it. ^^ Whether or not you're specifically interested in Japanese, "Cure Dolly's Organic Japanese" is also a great source)
      (and the site Matt worked on refold.la/ is a god-send, it can basically serve as an input learner's Bible lol)
      I hope these sources can help some comment-scrollers on their journey with languages, and I apologize if it was way too long, hehe...

    • @Saifyrooma2nd
      @Saifyrooma2nd Před 2 lety +7

      @@atahirince I can assure it's a great idea. Start with some basic vocab like in the vid above, and then start consuming content of any form you like! At first you won't catch a lot, but if you keep building vocab, and recognizing it in context, your brain begins to pick apart patterns.

  • @maryanne1367
    @maryanne1367 Před rokem +2

    Look at how kids learn language- I had never studied English verb conjugation when I was 8…people brought up in poly households just naturally know what the languages are supposed to sound like. This is what we have to figure out how to replicate and I think you are very much on the right track.

  • @ByronWatts
    @ByronWatts Před 8 měsíci

    This month I started [finally] learning the local language and it is really cool. 'All' training is in the target language with no cross references to English...except the ones I inject, which is a small problem. Just passed 500 words in my potential vocabulary. Very cool process.

  • @Reformatt
    @Reformatt Před 3 lety +2604

    Difference is between beating the game and completing the game!

    • @tb.7788
      @tb.7788 Před 3 lety +63

      i give this language my completionist rating of: finish it

    • @kamo7293
      @kamo7293 Před 3 lety +9

      @@tb.7788 I was going to comment something similar. hahaha

    • @kaedesakura9274
      @kaedesakura9274 Před 3 lety +58

      You can't 100% a language. Not even your Native one

    • @naturallyflorida9052
      @naturallyflorida9052 Před 3 lety +16

      @@kaedesakura9274 exactly. There's a ridiculous amount of words and rules and, depending on your source, they may differ

    • @beanerb822
      @beanerb822 Před 3 lety +1

      We're always learning

  • @metamorphosis_77
    @metamorphosis_77 Před 3 lety +220

    What you said about the accuracy of language, and that language is not math, is very important. I am fluent in German and I make many mistakes, but, if I speak in a confident way, no one cares about the mistakes I make. I think the most important step to learning a foreign language is getting over the pressure that everything you say has to sound perfect in the beginning.

    • @estebanquintero
      @estebanquintero Před 3 lety

      Yes!!!

    • @hafann
      @hafann Před 3 lety

      Exactly

    • @Monkerey
      @Monkerey Před 3 lety

      sehr gut

    • @Selestrielle
      @Selestrielle Před 3 lety +5

      I actually remember watching a TED talk about exactly that! The presenter was talking about how the people who do best at learning new languages are the people who don't care about making mistakes and engage in conversation even at low levels of understanding.

    • @Korilian13
      @Korilian13 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, I know so many people who are scared to talk. But in my experience people just want to communicate and are generally just happy you're putting in the effort.

  • @ellencristini3936
    @ellencristini3936 Před 10 měsíci

    i love this game analogy, it's so true, like, I'm learning japanese and it feels like grammar is the main story but sometimes i take side quests such as fruit vocabulary, animal names, colors, etc, but always coming back to the main grammar path

  • @aldolopez9564
    @aldolopez9564 Před rokem

    You already had the best language learning training of the world. You served a mission in a different language. It doesn't get better that that. I had a 1000 days strike on duolingo on german and I've learned a lot. Good luck with Italian. Cheers.

  • @switzerlandch4986
    @switzerlandch4986 Před 3 lety +177

    I- I just searched "How to learn a new language" and then looked at my subscriptions and boom. Johny you read my mind or what?

  • @SR-nm2xu
    @SR-nm2xu Před 3 lety +353

    The thing is... this is how we all learn our first language. We learn the key words, we start communicating early, and only after those basic building blocks are set do we start to really refine grammar. It's the way the brain makes sense of language in general.

    • @MuttFitness
      @MuttFitness Před 3 lety +9

      Up! Down! Mama! Beer!
      Wait, most toddlers don't say Mama?

    • @RandomCommenter955
      @RandomCommenter955 Před 3 lety +4

      That's a really good point. It's really common sense but a ton gawk at it and thus confuse a lot of people who then don't know how to approach it. This is a really good point that we gotta remember.

    • @ulti-mantis
      @ulti-mantis Před 3 lety +15

      Most people don't even "learn" the grammar really, in the sense that school teaches it, they just get the intuitive sense of how it works, because that's all one needs to communicate

    • @R3DCODE
      @R3DCODE Před 3 lety +4

      @@ulti-mantis this is really common in languages with complex grammar. As an Italian (our language has a lot of rules, expecially with verbal forms) a lot of native peoples do make mistakes daily when speaking or writing.

    • @Doofens
      @Doofens Před 3 lety

      But it also took us what 15 years or so to actually be able to speak the language like an adult. Plus we all had our first language for at least 10 years in school.

  • @RockYourTeeth
    @RockYourTeeth Před rokem +1

    After years of flashcards and textbooks, I used Pimsleur. It does exactly what you're talking about. It starts making you have conversations without ever telling you to go learn grammar or vocabulary. You kind of just think about the language as a series of phrases rather than trying to have a perfect understanding of how it functions... which I think is more similar to how we understand our own native language.

  • @myfilthybean511
    @myfilthybean511 Před rokem +3

    Finally something in language learning that I can relate to. I've been studying english for more than 10 years now and I feel like the majority I've learnt was when I was playing Minecraft. Same case as here, it had a ton of common words, commands and names that I have memorised without noticing it, really. I've literally started to learn the grammar at the start of the 5th grade and I could already communicate really well. In 9th grade I started to learn german (which is a language that has LOADS of grammar compared to english) and it isn't really going well in terms of communicating. Until this point I didn't even now how exactly my english was going as well as it is now, but this video really shed some light on that learning path I took long ago without even noticing it. And you've said it well, learning in a way like this is both quicker and more fun than diving head first into the grammar stuff. Guess it's time to play some vanilla Minecraft and set the language to german I guess.

  • @dennise6276
    @dennise6276 Před 3 lety +175

    I am a translator and I think that as long as people understand you, YOU ARE FLUENT! The concept of language is to transmit ideas. You don't have to cite poems or whatsoever. Even though I can't take that easier approach for my profession (for obvious reasons) I think there's no right way to learn languages and that's what's beautiful about it.

    • @merienda4958
      @merienda4958 Před 3 lety +2

      I'm interested in translating, do you think it's a good idea?

    • @jonnyguydenton
      @jonnyguydenton Před 3 lety +1

      Translator and interpreter do have additional duty of conveying the accurate meaning and tone.
      Deep understanding of culture is immensely important, when ambiguous meaning, colloquialism get involved.
      Accurate pronunciation (can be hard depending on your first language).
      I guess all locals appreciate learners who won't corrupt their language, also in real-life we don't have luxury of training to full proficiency before using the language. Just keep improving. :-)

  • @ChrisD__
    @ChrisD__ Před 3 lety +209

    "Get on one of these services and start communicating with a native speaker"
    _Logs into VRChat at 4 AM_

    • @TorreFernand
      @TorreFernand Před 3 lety +13

      But it's fine because it's a decent time for the other guy

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 3 lety +14

      I see, you're a man of culture as well. And the world where you will have the most luck is the Japan shrine. During CET nights it tends to be full of Russians, and you will likely find Soviet Pingu parades.

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 2 lety

      @@fungo6631 Wtf

    • @fungo6631
      @fungo6631 Před 2 lety

      @@Acro_LangLearn I even have screenshots.

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 2 lety

      @@fungo6631 wtf

  • @2iz2
    @2iz2 Před 8 měsíci

    I can’t agree to your concept of learning a language...thanks to you I have more confidence now to go forward...thanks a lot

  • @mbb720
    @mbb720 Před rokem

    I really enjoyed this video! Very cool idea and it makes so much sense. Thanks for uploading!

  • @FloydTaylor
    @FloydTaylor Před 3 lety +293

    Taught myself German with Sim City 2000 when I was 12. It is real.

  • @repker
    @repker Před 3 lety +375

    broskie, being fluent in another language, especially SPANISH, when learning ITALIAN (i mean come on lol) is a pretty big gain over someone who only speaks, say, english

    • @caracaes
      @caracaes Před 3 lety +54

      I'm native Portuguese speaker and never studied Italian. I understood everything he was talking in Italian.

    • @buonandirosario1774
      @buonandirosario1774 Před 3 lety +22

      @@caracaes they're very similar, as of almost every neolatin language! When I went to Spain in 2017, I just used to talk in a mixture of italian, neapolitan and hand-gesture (hey, I'm still italian, can't speak without using my hands!) and it went perfectly

    • @lacdirk
      @lacdirk Před 3 lety +6

      @@caracaes
      Passively, fully agreed. Actively ... could you describe what you do for a living in Italian, or why you broke up with your first girllfriend?

    • @amicaaranearum
      @amicaaranearum Před 3 lety +10

      @@lacdirk It is possible to understand a language without being able to produce it.

    • @nathanlopes1327
      @nathanlopes1327 Před 3 lety +9

      @@amicaaranearum yes, it's easier if the languages are related in the way all neolatin ones are(Portuguese, Spanish, Italian) or germanic ones (English, German, Dutch).

  • @leornendeealdenglisc
    @leornendeealdenglisc Před 8 měsíci

    Never knew about "Basic English" before. Thank you for this.

  • @ryebread7224
    @ryebread7224 Před 10 měsíci

    I love this concept. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @muskyoxes
    @muskyoxes Před 3 lety +241

    "Here's the map." So here we have vocabulary, and then over here we have vocabulary, and over here we have vocabulary.

    • @Sk0lzky
      @Sk0lzky Před 3 lety +21

      Don't forget about the vocabulary

    • @danielmarero334
      @danielmarero334 Před 3 lety +17

      What an exaggeration, there's also some vocabulary to be learned

    • @PierreLucSex
      @PierreLucSex Před 3 lety +3

      I could agree but I'm not sure about my vocabulary

    • @umazajacker8182
      @umazajacker8182 Před 3 lety +1

      Damn you’re a drama queen. Stop it. It’s not just full of vocabulary, it’s also full of past-tense vocabulary

  • @BlancoMD
    @BlancoMD Před 3 lety +29

    I'm italian and his italian without being in italy and learning that in 4 months, is very good. Americans just chill out, grammar is not important to talk to people. The point of communication is communicating, not to know everything. Good for you for learning italian. Dovresti visitare il lago di garda, non sarai deluso.

  • @inevitable_eventuality
    @inevitable_eventuality Před 7 měsíci

    Trying to learn French. Thank you. Your method is the most rational. I have been playing Perrier’s adventures in French, using Duo Lingo, and changing all of my video game dialogue languages to French. Though, I had no definitive strategies apart from emersion.

  • @shirobuta_
    @shirobuta_ Před 3 lety +149

    In traditional school, you forget literally everything after the test

    • @86samsky
      @86samsky Před 3 lety +14

      Its forced upon you like most school so you just learn what you need to survive

    • @RedHair651
      @RedHair651 Před 3 lety +2

      I learnt Spanish at school and seven years later I can still speak it.
      Speak for yourself.

    • @86samsky
      @86samsky Před 3 lety +4

      @@RedHair651 i admit it was a bit of an overstatement but the principles of it apply to school in general. Most people totally forget how algebra works after they finish school (or pick whichever subject you like) l.
      Unless it is applicable to your adult life then generally my point stands.

    • @s1os2s3
      @s1os2s3 Před 3 lety +2

      @@86samsky We put aside in the back of our mind everything we dont need in our life but we have learned. Did you like math then algebra wont be forgotten and certainly language if you use it. I was taught french and english from 5th to 12th grade. English I started learning on my own and French was taught by school. I still remember the pronunciation rules in french. I still remember that eau and au is pronounced as "o" , ou as "u" and so on but I dont use it is just something that I remember from school. If I were to pick french and learn how to fluently speak it it would be very easy to me.
      i still remember the basics of everything school has taught me. What was just nationalism regarding history and what we now know that it wasnt the entire picture of some events. Your point doesnt stand atleast not when it comes to me.

    • @86samsky
      @86samsky Před 3 lety

      @@s1os2s3 i wasn't insinuating that we all just wipe that memory of french class out. I still remember things like please i live in i like i dont like( only writing in english as i would probably offend someone with my spelling in french).
      For some reason the uk system taught us french for 2 years then you choose spanish or german which you do for 2 years then choose to drop the french or chosen second language for the last year. (Might be for the thicko classes like mine😂)
      Either way it's a terrible waste of time as i much preferred german but had to do 4 years of french.

  • @Mythrose
    @Mythrose Před 3 lety +337

    I took French for 12 years in elementary and high school, couldn’t speak or understand it, always just barely passed the class but I wanted to speak it. After high school I lived in Quebec for 3 months and volunteered at a day care and suddenly I could speak french.

    • @muabyt7333
      @muabyt7333 Před 2 lety +7

      Same situation as you were before. Will try to teach it myself after high school.

    • @janibii_608
      @janibii_608 Před 2 lety +12

      I went to french elementary school and the way they spoke french was just speak it around the kids and we sucked it up like sponges and im fluent

    • @margoxathegamer9371
      @margoxathegamer9371 Před 2 lety +3

      I had the same with english, however I didn't travel, but I started watching a lot of videos in english and it happened way sooner(in 5th grade).

    • @johnclements2574
      @johnclements2574 Před 2 lety

      Great job it’s the exposure that matters

    • @truthboom
      @truthboom Před 2 lety +2

      probably your 12 years worth of experience suddenly resurface

  • @rangerecho
    @rangerecho Před rokem +5

    I'm a native spanish speaker, and I've learned both french and english the traditional way for many years. I definitely agree you may not be "fluent", but you're surviving the language. "Enough to get by", as they say, and the amount of italian that you know is absolutely commendable, especially for the span of time in which you've learned it.
    The way I've come to think of it is that you know the phrases and the expressions, but you don't know the language until you're able to _think_ in that language, the click, as I call it. Your brain just shifts gears and suddenly you're not thinking of the phrase in english, translating it, and then sending it back in the other language, but instead you're processing the information without the need of the translation process.
    And the thing is, to do that, there's certain rules that must be learned, like the casual omission of a subject in spanish (i.e. "_estoy comiendo_", "I am eating" without the "I"), which are simply not gonna make sense to speakers, native or otherwise. Not all languages are the same, which is perfectly alright.
    I wish I could agree with the method, but I can't argue with the results to your objectives. Yours was amazing work.

  • @chrispyfade
    @chrispyfade Před rokem +3

    I learn korean at a korean university language institute. My perspective: Learning in school provides the tools (grammar) to communicate. Speaking with locals, watching movies, playing games, doing things in the specific language gives you the opportunity to practice while using the tools. So I can recommend going to a language school but you have to invest the same amount the time you spend in school in practicing.
    And the best way to learn a language is by having a really close friend or boy/girlfriend who's native to the language you are learning.

  • @aly9799
    @aly9799 Před 2 lety +608

    I got super incredibly lucky with my French teacher in high school. She taught French immersion from day 1 of freshman year--starting with very basic French and working up to more complex language by the time I graduated. She had us speak back to her in French, as well as reading/writing exercises, but never any grammer or conjugation lessons (unless we asked). In only four years of her class I learned to speak and understand much of it. I'm not fluent and I make many mistakes, but I could go to France and have a decent conversation. One of the best teachers I've ever had!

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 2 lety +8

      Well my little brother’s quite lucky too, as his teacher started using Comprehensible Input in his French class.

    • @mitchos9925
      @mitchos9925 Před 2 lety

      Yet you didn’t even give her the simple credit of saying her name…

    • @Paehrin
      @Paehrin Před 2 lety +28

      @@mitchos9925 Name droping people on the internet isn't the greatest of thing^^' I get what Aly said, I just posted my experience about my german teacher, and I wouldn't give his name up either

    • @IxiaClover
      @IxiaClover Před rokem +2

      i agree that this is the best way to learn, but it only works for students who WANT to study in my experience. i teach english as a second language, and a lot of the kids who are bad at english just dont listen to you or dont try to respond in english, so the method is lost on them. i dont blame them, despite doing this for my job i dont think everyone NEEDS english, nor should they. but all im saying is its a good tactic, but only works for those with some will to learn, or who are already good enough to work around the basics

    • @blissful.ignorance
      @blissful.ignorance Před rokem

      Same! I graduated in 2020, but back in 7th grade, I took German, and that Jr. High (7-9) German teacher was so cool, and so much fun! He taught us about the culture, introducing new things to keep it exciting and fresh, but still teaching us new words, the sentence structures, and so forth. He was mostly talking to us in German, and followed up with English shortly after, speaking less English as the years went by. Unfortunately my high school (10-12) teachers were the opposite. 10th grade was fun, but was mostly history quizzes, with very little German speaking. 11th grade was a new lady, and she thought she was a cool teacher, but we would just sit around reading text books, “Correcting Astrid’s grammar!”. I dropped it my senior year. Aber ich liebe die Sprache! Auch jetzt noch!

  • @FrancescaDePaolis
    @FrancescaDePaolis Před 3 lety +361

    I teach Italian and it actually made me smile how you mentioned “double object pronouns”, “subjunctive” “irregulars” and “past participles” - definitely among the things my students like the least!😂
    That’s a great strategy indeed, and definitely more of a fun one! :)
    (Another great tip when it comes to learning a language from 0 is watching cartoons, you learn basic structures and everyday vocabulary. It has helped me a lot in language learning! )

    • @niccolobattistoni1113
      @niccolobattistoni1113 Před 3 lety

      ahhahahaha non immaginavo che questi argomenti dessero così tanti problemi

    • @FrancescaDePaolis
      @FrancescaDePaolis Před 3 lety

      @@niccolobattistoni1113 sì sì è così! Se non smettono di studiare italiano dopo i pronomi doppi, capisci che vogliono davvero imparare la lingua! 😂

    • @whatever6223
      @whatever6223 Před 3 lety +3

      If your prime minister doesn't understand subjunctive, why should I? Sorry I couldn't help myself.

    • @palmsky1119
      @palmsky1119 Před 3 lety +2

      thank you

    • @FrancescaDePaolis
      @FrancescaDePaolis Před 3 lety +3

      @@whatever6223 don’t worry, used to that 😉 thankfully not all Italians are like that! Anyways you probably haven’t heard some of our politicians speaking in English...that’s where they need the most help I’d say haha