How To Improve Your Reading Comprehension

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 10. 05. 2024
  • đŸ”„ Learn languages like I do with LingQ: bit.ly/3DeWpb5
    CC subtitles available in English.
    Reading comprehension is crucial in language learning and in life. The faster we can read, the more quickly we understand what we’re reading, and the faster we learn. There are tricks we can use to improve our reading comprehension. I discuss them in this video.
    0:00 The rich get richer and the poor get poorer with reading comprehension.
    1:17 To improve your reading comprehension you need to read a lot.
    2:14 How I'm improving my reading comprehension in Arabic.
    3:42 For me, 15% unknown words in a piece of content is ideal.
    5:32 Don't neglect your listening comprehension!
    ___
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    #reading #readingcomprehension #polyglot

Komentáƙe • 128

  • @Thelinguist
    @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem +19

    The app I use to learn languages -> bit.ly/3DeWpb5
    My 10 FREE secrets to language learning -> www.thelinguist.com
    What helps you to improve your reading comprehension?

    • @haitiancreolewithluciano
      @haitiancreolewithluciano Pƙed rokem

      I think with reading specifically, practice is key. Pattern recognition is what fuels the improvement.

    • @ddmkvlog
      @ddmkvlog Pƙed rokem

      Good, it's very praiseworthy.. Do you know Hindi( National Language) of India ? I have already subscribed you Plz, reply.
      From Bihar, India.

    • @johnharutyunyan2901
      @johnharutyunyan2901 Pƙed rokem +1

      In order to improve my reading comprehension skills, I learn a lot of vocabulary. I use vocabulary reference books. I pick up the ones with vocabulary presentation and practice tasks with answer key. I also use reading comprehension books with "before-you-read", "as-you-read" and "after-you-read" practice tasks, which help me improve my reading subskills, such as understanding the gist, details, references, inferences, the connection of ideas, and so forth. Certainly, I read a lot of fiction and non-fiction books with audio recordings, if available. I usually reread the same part of the text a couple of times, if it is hard to understand the first time around. The more I read it, the better I comprehend it without referring to any glossary books or dictionaries. Thus, I sharpen my word guessing skills too.

  • @bed7610
    @bed7610 Pƙed rokem +218

    According to some neuroscientists; when you read, your brain is shooting signals to your vocal chords and the muscles are moving as if you are speaking, just at a level that cannot be heard. So people who are well read tend to be more articulate. I guess this applied to language learning means that when you finally get to the output phase, you can improve at speaking quicker than you might expect due to plenty of reading input beforehand.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem +69

      Thank you for this. I even consciously sub vocalize when reading in a foreign language which is like speaking. Of course we do eventually have to start speaking and we struggle at first but the reading helps a great deal.

    • @sk8_bort
      @sk8_bort Pƙed rokem +9

      You are right, but that's a double edge sword, because you are subvocalizing with your foreign accent, which means that you're very likely to develop bad pronunciation habits. Some language learners have native pronunciation as their main goal and are obsessed with it to the point of avoiding reading alltogether until they've spent a great amount of hours listening to their target language and are very familiar with the phonetics of it.
      Most people do not believe in that approach though, as it slows down the language learning process tremendously, and makes it way more frustrating for most people. After all, you can always hire a vocal coach to work on your accent if that's something that worries you. Reading is an extremely powerful tool for immersion, so even if spending too much time doing it might have some slight disadvantages, it's still worth taking advantage of.

    • @oswaldocaminos8431
      @oswaldocaminos8431 Pƙed rokem

      @@Thelinguist Yes, that's the way it works. Greetings from the underground.

    • @eugeneproff5404
      @eugeneproff5404 Pƙed rokem +9

      @@sk8_bort I have a solution to the "reading with your native accent" problem. I read books while playing their audio version at the same time. I read half of a sentence ahead of the narrator, and when hear his correct pronunciation. It's like my reading is instantly corrected in proper pronunciation. Although, honestly I don't know to what extent does it help. Yes, my pronunciation gets better and better, and I get praised for it alot. But it is still not native-like pronunciation. Doesn't matter though. I don't have a goal to have a pronunciation indistinguishable from natives. Just want to speak clearly and coherently.

    • @Bol61191
      @Bol61191 Pƙed rokem +2

      Its a fact. When you noticed about the things, i realize thats there is available connection between inside voice or thought with outside voice. And when we read we not only also bold inside voice but also improving outside voice by moving the muscle.
      Reading is so powerful. Keep praticing.

  • @jpknijff
    @jpknijff Pƙed rokem +28

    Great talk as always. As a language teacher working increasingly with reading over the years I see all the time how crucial it is, but also how important it is for students to hear me read (or speak freely) in the target language. Even people who believe they need grammar grammar grammar calm down when reading a nice book at their level and simply start to enjoy learning the language.

  • @jsjourney3295
    @jsjourney3295 Pƙed měsĂ­cem +4

    I’ve struggled with reading all my life. At one point I just avoided reading because the comprehension would confuse me and I would get irritated with myself. As an adult I realized I learn better by listening and seeing . Audible and speak text have really helped me. I forgot how much I actually enjoy reading when I don’t have to keep going over the same paragraph over and over again 😅.

  • @tedc9682
    @tedc9682 Pƙed rokem +10

    Thank you. Very helpful. When I practice reading (Mandarin), I've been reading a sentence and then listening to it. I'll try listening to it first and then reading. That might help a lot -- if nothing else, it will help me remember those "I've seen it before, what does it mean?" words. As you said in another video, vocabulary is learning, forgetting, and seeing again.

  • @FOXMAN09
    @FOXMAN09 Pƙed rokem +4

    I love how Steve answers the question in literally under the first 2 seconds

  • @haitiancreolewithluciano
    @haitiancreolewithluciano Pƙed rokem +5

    Love your videos. You're an inspiration for the community!

  • @AHMEDAIDROUS-rr7hj
    @AHMEDAIDROUS-rr7hj Pƙed rokem +2

    Good morning from Saudia Arbia right now, Let me say thanks God bless you for everything you do for us, You are amazing teacher ever

  • @anajaqueline8594
    @anajaqueline8594 Pƙed rokem +2

    Thank you for the video Mr. Kaufmann, it’s very important !

  • @rubentriana1151
    @rubentriana1151 Pƙed rokem +18

    Dejo constancia que este es el primer video que pude escucharlo sin la nesecidad de subtítulos. Por fin siento que estoy progresando con mi inglés

    • @Tehui1974
      @Tehui1974 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +3

      I've been learning Spanish for just under 4 months, and I'm pleased to say that I understand what you wrote. 😃

  • @brettchristopher7589
    @brettchristopher7589 Pƙed rokem

    Thanks so much Steve - helping us all - you're awesome. - helping us all - Brett from the land down under!

  • @user-wj5tf5fy4v
    @user-wj5tf5fy4v Pƙed rokem

    You are addressing the heart of my problem. That is amazing. Thank u

  • @pauld3327
    @pauld3327 Pƙed rokem +7

    I think the best way to start reading in the target language is to read graded readers.
    And because they come with the audiobook, you can listen while you are reading.

  • @luzimarmendessouzavisintin9466

    Thank you for the video, you made me realise that I'm in the right way.

  • @Tighris
    @Tighris Pƙed rokem +2

    I find like 10% new words in LingQ to be my sweet spot. So I can guess a lot of words by context while still finding new words to learn. And I can actually enjoy the reading instaed of it being like a chore.

  • @mojganzzarif5195
    @mojganzzarif5195 Pƙed rokem

    Very informative, especially I like that 15% .
    BTW, it’s interesting that you are learning Farsi and I am a Farsi speaker. ŰšŰłÛŒŰ§Ű± ممنون ۧŰČ ÙˆÛŒŰŻÛŒÙˆÙ‡Ű§ŰȘون

  • @ShamsDawran
    @ShamsDawran Pƙed měsĂ­cem +1

    Hello Mr. Steve I hope that you feel fine and great.
    I always appreciate your ideas and information about languages as well as your flair in a variety of languages.
    Thanks from your effective videos.

  • @TheAlbaTr0ss
    @TheAlbaTr0ss Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Helpful! Thank you :)

  • @user-qo4fl3lc5m
    @user-qo4fl3lc5m Pƙed rokem

    ă‚čăƒ†ă‚ŁăƒŒăƒ–ă•ă‚“ăźyoutubeă‚’ă‚ˆăèŠ‹ăŠăŸăźă§ă™ăŒă€ă‚«ăƒŠăƒ€ć‡șèș«ă ă‹ă‚‰ăƒ•ăƒ©ăƒłă‚čèȘžăŻè‡Șç„¶ă«èŠšăˆăŸăźă‹ăšæ€ăŁăŠăŸă‚‰ă€é«˜æ Ąăźæ™‚è©±ă›ăȘă‹ăŁăŸăšăă„ăŠæ„ć€–ă§ă—ăŸă€‚ăƒŻă‚żă‚·ăŻăƒ•ăƒ©ăƒłă‚čèȘžăŒć„œăă§ăšăŁăšă‚„ăŁăŠăŸă™ăŒă€ăȘかăȘă‹è©±ă™ăźăŻé›Łă—ă„ăšæ€ăŁăŠăŸă—ăŸăŒă€ă“ăĄă‚‰ăźè©±ă‚’èžă„ăŠăƒ•ăƒ©ăƒłă‚čèȘžăźyoutubeă‚’ăŸăă•ă‚“èžăă‚ˆă†ă«ă—ăŠăŸă‚‰ă€ă„ă€ăźé–“ă«ă‹èš€ăŁăŠă‚‹ă“ăšă‹ă‚ă‹ă‚‹ă‚ˆă†ă«ăȘăŁăŠăăŸă—ăŸđŸ˜ƒă™ă”ăćŹ‰ă—ă„ă§ă™ă€‚ă“ăźăŸăŸè©±ă›ă‚‹ăƒŹăƒ™ăƒ«ăŸă§ă„ă‘ă‚‹ă‚ˆă†ă«ăŒă‚“ă°ă‚ŠăŸă™ă€‚

  • @fatp1987
    @fatp1987 Pƙed rokem

    Thanks Mr Steven You have changed my lire

  • @gamenailed9604
    @gamenailed9604 Pƙed rokem +11

    Great advice. I suffer from exact problem with German. I can read relatively well now, but my speaking and listening skills definitely need a lot of improvement.

    • @countryballspredicciones5184
      @countryballspredicciones5184 Pƙed rokem +2

      DUUuude how you will struggle with reading German if they have the same alphabet (latin) as your native language ? I struggled with Russian because it was another alphabet but I became fluent. Well take this comment as something positive to feel braver!

    • @gamenailed9604
      @gamenailed9604 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@countryballspredicciones5184 Thanks! To be clear, I didn't say that I struggle to read German. I mostly have trouble speaking and listening. In the video, Steve talked about how there are a lot of people who have that exact problem, which is something I can definitely relate to. Seems like good reading comprehension doesn't always translate to equally good speaking skills unfortunately, but I'm going to keep working on it!

    • @austinlang6946
      @austinlang6946 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@gamenailed9604 listening speaking and reading are all different skills that have to be developed through hours and hours of practice. You’re good at reading bc you’ve read a lot. If you start listening a ton, all that vocab you have will start to clear up in the language. It’s the whole English example of going to and gonna. Ppl don’t say going to they say gonna. Once you get use to the blends in German and get better at listening it’ll hit you how much the reading actually helped. Good luck!

  • @rosp8375
    @rosp8375 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Thanks so much Steve đŸ€©

  • @dewrimsirine
    @dewrimsirine Pƙed rokem

    We do need comprehensible listening to be better at language. There is no short cuts for sure but comprehens,ble input is key to open the door and learn faster and in a quality way.

  • @sarahibrahim5748
    @sarahibrahim5748 Pƙed rokem

    I'm glad that you're learning Arabic 😍

  • @tomaslaskovsky722
    @tomaslaskovsky722 Pƙed rokem +1

    It's amazing that we live in a time when there are so many audio books available. And I have one question: What's stopping me from reading a chapter first and then listening to it at the same time I'm watching the text? :)

  • @JA-jh5gr
    @JA-jh5gr Pƙed rokem

    Thank you so much for your time and educational information. I wanted to know would you recommend using the subtitles of your videos in my target language will it be beneficial?

  • @khalilahd.
    @khalilahd. Pƙed rokem +8

    I just bought LINGQ to help with this in my Japanese studies and it’s already helping so much! 😊

    • @douglasmendes6934
      @douglasmendes6934 Pƙed rokem

      How much ?

    • @cadian101st
      @cadian101st Pƙed rokem +1

      My only problem with Lingq Japanese is the parser is atrocious, by far the worst of the major Japanese learning programs I use. I really hope they implement a new one

    • @MarkKaufmannlingq
      @MarkKaufmannlingq Pƙed rokem

      @@cadian101st What are the biggest issues you find with the parser especially relative to other tools you use? We have tried different things to improve it but it's not that easy. All parsers seem to have their faults, but they each have different ones. Curious to hear what you think are issues.

    • @cadian101st
      @cadian101st Pƙed rokem

      @@MarkKaufmannlingq it is way too overeager to split up words into meaningless gibberish. Not sure if it splits up verbs based on their morphemes (stem + auxiliary/helper verb) which would be fine, or if it just happens to do that sometimes, there doesn't seem to be a consistent way of doing it. Some hiragana words get split into their syllables completely destroying the word in the process. Generally speaking every page if not every sentence will require me to go into the sentence editor and fix things, even in the official lingq lessons

    • @cadian101st
      @cadian101st Pƙed rokem

      @@MarkKaufmannlingq For example
      食ăčăŸă—ă‚‡ă† is split into
      食ăč ăŸ しょ う,
      which is gibberish. I have not seen a single other program I use do this (Migaku, Language Reactor, Yomichan, etc.).
      I could understand or maybe even prefer
      食ăč ăŸă—ă‚‡ă†, as that would be splitting the verb into useful parts.

  • @AyanAli-vm9hl
    @AyanAli-vm9hl Pƙed rokem

    wow My teacher i really love your way of teaching.

  • @valdirbergamobergamo5396

    Muito bom. Podera ajudar-nos muito. Muito obrigado. Alto nivel.

  • @sumangaming3338
    @sumangaming3338 Pƙed rokem

    Sir I am from India. Take a bow from me 🙏🙏

  • @rodrygo440
    @rodrygo440 Pƙed rokem

    Thank you đŸ‡§đŸ‡·

  • @Haydn109
    @Haydn109 Pƙed 22 dny

    Thanks for all your help. I'll buy more books and e-books to improve!

  • @hendrickx88
    @hendrickx88 Pƙed rokem +3

    I have found when it comes to languages with phonetically written languages like Spanish that watching with Spanish subtitles is a great way to do exactly what he's saying; when I do this generally I'm focusing on listening comprehension more but even so this is a good way to improve reading comprehension as well.
    Mandarin is a little more complicated but even this will help a bit.

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 Pƙed rokem +4

    I've been learning my target language since the beginning of 2019, and since 2020 I've done a lot of reading in that language. One thing that is difficult about learning my language, is that I've not found any resources where you can read & listen at the same time. It hasn't prevented me from consuming books in my language, but many polyglots, Steve included, recommend reading & listening at the same time where possible.

    • @serhiileshchinskyi4058
      @serhiileshchinskyi4058 Pƙed rokem

      What language are you talking about?

    • @Tehui1974
      @Tehui1974 Pƙed rokem

      @@serhiileshchinskyi4058 Māori, New Zealand. It's the native language, but not the dominant language.

  • @tchernobalde8106
    @tchernobalde8106 Pƙed rokem

    Thank you

  • @mrschwinn4211
    @mrschwinn4211 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Well said sir........ I noticed words influence your perception.... And guess what??? I need to read much more🔭🌌😉

  • @haroldoseverinomiranda1424

    Obrigado

  • @BARBITURICI00
    @BARBITURICI00 Pƙed rokem

    By now knowing languages, not only English has become necessary and it is also very beautiful and interesting. What is the right approach, how can I do to better study a language, step by step? I ask to the expert. Thank you.

  • @acquirearabicbylistening

    Thank you very much.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem +1

      I had a look at your channel. Very interesting. Are you interested in sharing some of these on LingQ with full credit to your channel. Please let me know at steve@lingq.com.

  • @quiveryhurdle7175
    @quiveryhurdle7175 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

    Es importante que uno estĂĄ pensando y bibujando las cosas que leyes.

  • @maufernandez4270
    @maufernandez4270 Pƙed rokem

    thanks for listening, bye for now it's my mantra.

  • @yagmurcamd
    @yagmurcamd Pƙed rokem +2

    The brain wants understood content to process. The more information goes in through the ear, the more sentences come out of the mouth. That's why we need to listen to our level. There are levels from level 0 to level 6. It is necessary to do conscious listening exercises, the text of which is in front of us.

    • @quiveryhurdle7175
      @quiveryhurdle7175 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

      Yes, the brain wants to understand any content that is useful to know. This is why people should read books they find interesting.

  • @johnsey2625
    @johnsey2625 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    Can someone please help explain the meaning of "static fortunes into the hands..." as noted below?
    The art may disappear into private hands, but its transfer will disseminate once static fortunes into the hands of various investors, collectors, and occasionally the artist.

  • @Learnwithrupesh961
    @Learnwithrupesh961 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    The more you read the more words you acquire the better you read ❀

  • @timothydouglas9474
    @timothydouglas9474 Pƙed rokem

    Have you tried reading the texts of theatrical plays?

  • @arjunsingh-so4jx
    @arjunsingh-so4jx Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Hi sir im watch your all videos

  • @austinlang6946
    @austinlang6946 Pƙed rokem +3

    I think reading also helps the learner learn to keep a longer narrative string. Which in turn will allow you to understand more nuance inside of the main points. That’s really the question you’re asking yourself when you ask “did I understand”. If the string of the narrative was never broken you know you understood it at least enough to have the right picture. So back to the point, reading does sooooo many positive things
..level 2 and 3 nat geo for kids are great, to have on hand. Learn a lot, lots of pictures and can get through a lot in an hour. Then obviously work into reg nat geo. Stories etc.

    • @jeanwashington307
      @jeanwashington307 Pƙed rokem

      Nat geo?????

    • @austinlang6946
      @austinlang6946 Pƙed rokem

      @@jeanwashington307 National Geographic. It’s a magazine that’s has articles about tons of interesting stuff

  • @patfromamboy
    @patfromamboy Pƙed rokem

    I’ve been studying Portuguese for 8 years now and I’ve visited Brazil 18 times and I practice almost every day with my girlfriend who only speaks Portuguese and we’ve been doing it for over 5 years now but I still can’t read or converse because I have to translate everything into English to understand. Even the words that I know have to be translated. Vocabulary tests say that I know 13,200 words but I have to translate them into English to understand. Even “agora” and “aqui” need to be translated. How can I learn and understand without translating? Thanks

  • @HelenD-zr5kg
    @HelenD-zr5kg Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    I like your video
    😄

  • @razorrabone4098
    @razorrabone4098 Pƙed rokem

    Steve, a dilemma I have when use LingQ is how much should I listen and read in one go. For example, if the text is challenging do you suggest doing one page on an iPad solely listening and reading without selecting every blue / yellow word? I find stopping to see the meaning of every word, interrupts the flow and I end up finishing an article and I don’t always get the overall ‘gist’. Any advice would be appreciated. Thanks Paul

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem

      I doesn't matter. Whatever you do is good. I tend to go in sentence mode for difficult texts, saving words as I go and then I go back and read the whole lesson. Meanwhile I will listen to the lesson many times.

  • @ariohandoyo5973
    @ariohandoyo5973 Pƙed rokem

    could i read manga in english to start read? i'm not really a reader boy but i will try best to read on pokemon online,read any books or article that we love, i've read an article on pokemon it was awesome article the article is named CBR..😁

  • @captivatedlunt1895
    @captivatedlunt1895 Pƙed rokem

    How should I be using LingQ??? Because when I’m using it I always have to tap the meaning of the word before listening to the next page.

  • @Mr.S65
    @Mr.S65 Pƙed rokem

    My problem with Lingq is the scarcity of content and quality. Otherwise, it’s a very clever program. I study French.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem +1

      If you are too advanced for our basic content you should be looking for content on the internet to import, easily done with the LingQ browser extension. If I can find content for Arabic and Persian you can certainly find content for French. Ask on our Forum for suggestions.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Pƙed rokem

      Here are some podcasts for French. www.lingq.com/blog/french-podcasts/

    • @danrubin7261
      @danrubin7261 Pƙed rokem

      Oh my goodness there is SO much content in French. I'm jealous. I'm learning Hebrew and was very early on it with LingQ. I learned how to import a lot great content and I created--and shared--many courses. Some of these courses were from stuff I found and imported. Other content was from native speakers I hired to write and record short (4-7 minute) interesting content--and even include circling questions. However, when I recently went to help a friend find appropriate content in French was shocked by how much good stuff is there. Just takes a little while to get use to how/where to search! Good luck!

  • @Learnwithrupesh961
    @Learnwithrupesh961 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    The more you read, the better you read❀

  • @jackuzzi5251
    @jackuzzi5251 Pƙed rokem

    I've always said if you can't read a foreign language without mentally translating as opposed to just knowing what is being written, there is no way you will understand the spoken word. My experience is read first then listen to the content for pronunciation purposes .

  • @KamolovNizomjon
    @KamolovNizomjon Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    Great

  • @ashleyl3699
    @ashleyl3699 Pƙed rokem

    i struggle to remember what i read in my target language even if i understood it 100% while reading it. i will almost completely forget almost everything that happened a chapter earlier. it's really discouraging.

  • @imoliver2822
    @imoliver2822 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    It's necessary to learn every single word or just words that occur more? please anybody help me.

  • @yagmurcamd
    @yagmurcamd Pƙed rokem +1

    If you think about grammar in the language you are learning, you cannot speak. You cannot think of grammar while speaking. If you want to speak, you have to improve yourself by practising enough. Talking is a reflex action. When using one's native language, one acts without thinking about grammatical definitions. The person speaks without thinking about the structures such as adverbs, objects, complements, subjects, predicates, and adjectives in the sentences he/she makes.

  • @HelenD-zr5kg
    @HelenD-zr5kg Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    I clicked. on notifications

  • @vikkiyates1934
    @vikkiyates1934 Pƙed rokem

    Reading seems more like a Chore to me.. Like too much work for my eyes..Any tips you can give me to like or enjoy
    reading?

    • @jimmg4585
      @jimmg4585 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

      Well, learning a foreign language seems like a chore for me, but try to read things that you like

  • @lorenzobenedusi6352
    @lorenzobenedusi6352 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    Thanks for your tips :)

  • @_Username__
    @_Username__ Pƙed rokem +1

    use your good skill to elevate your weak skill

  • @solarpoweredafricanvegansp178
    @solarpoweredafricanvegansp178 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

    My biggest issue is reading a paragraph and not remembering most of it. Or sometimes when I read, my mind is literally somewhere else.
    I want to be able to get to a point where I can read and digest 90% or more of what I’ve read.
    I’m hoping that reading is like a muscle I have to train. I just need to stick with the process and it will get better with time.

  • @oswaldocaminos8431
    @oswaldocaminos8431 Pƙed rokem

    Bed: You are absolutely right.đŸ€đŸ€š

  • @Trnaif_
    @Trnaif_ Pƙed rokem

    Guys , i am an english learner. I read for about 4 / 5 hours per day. I read Japanese (manga) and korean (manhwa) in english, is it suffice to improve my language and my reading comprehension?

    • @user-fz8fp4nf6t
      @user-fz8fp4nf6t Pƙed rokem

      As long as you’re reading you’re reading skill will improve gradually. However if you feel that reading those contents isnt challenging your comprehension skill enough you may want to find something more difficult or simply put more conscious energy into analyzing the sentence structures as you read.

    • @Trnaif_
      @Trnaif_ Pƙed rokem

      @@user-fz8fp4nf6t thanks🙏

  • @norabalogh5910
    @norabalogh5910 Pƙed rokem +1

    I’m learning Hungarian which is one of those languages like Japanese that is structured quite differently than English. A different problem with Hungarian is that there are limited amounts of quality A2/B1 level material, so I’m finding myself reading material that’s definitely above my level. I’m finding specifically with Lingq that I struggle to understand and therefore have gotten into the bad habit in sentence mode of jumping far too quickly into using the translation. I’m tempted to ask for a translate immediately as soon as I see a new sentence rather than taking my time to really try to understand without using translation. Obviously it’s good to avoid this!!!

    • @danrubin7261
      @danrubin7261 Pƙed rokem

      Don't feel bad at all! I think for difficult content this is completely fine--some of the time. However, I after do this ("ask for a translation immediately") for a few (or many) sentences, I then go back and try to read it again--sometimes in sentence mode and sometimes in page mode. If it's hard enough that you need sentence by sentence translation--then it's probably worth re-reading.

  • @Ygghkkjg
    @Ygghkkjg Pƙed 23 dny

    Bach tsahel 5edmet el tamarin , a9ra el eslé7 , wala encore mieux , eketbou w eketbou men jdid version séhla

  • @HI-et9bu
    @HI-et9bu Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    Ich bin das hundertste Kommentar
    Lol
    Hallo Klasse 7a von jkg, bin Valeria
    Bei ms odza. Ich weiß das ihr da seid!
    Wegen KA morgen hahaha

  • @Felipesuv
    @Felipesuv Pƙed rokem

    Is truth that when you reading so much, it better you English completely?

    • @jimmg4585
      @jimmg4585 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      Yeah that's true

  • @pedrocavalcante5822
    @pedrocavalcante5822 Pƙed rokem

    My biggest challenge is reading in German.

  • @_._.-
    @_._.- Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    To become good reading
    Read a lot
    Good vocabulary
    Listen more
    Listen to audio books

  • @tarunarachmad3976
    @tarunarachmad3976 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    1:06

  • @user-br2dy7sp4h
    @user-br2dy7sp4h Pƙed rokem

    You learning Egyptian dialect

  • @taiquangong9912
    @taiquangong9912 Pƙed rokem

    Chinese reading is difficult. Don't know all the kanji.

    • @falco123123
      @falco123123 Pƙed rokem

      What is your native language?

    • @taiquangong9912
      @taiquangong9912 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@falco123123 English

    • @user-fz8fp4nf6t
      @user-fz8fp4nf6t Pƙed rokem +1

      Don’t get discouraged, I can read thousands of characters now and I still have *a lot* of trouble reading content written for adults. Just trust in the process.

    • @taiquangong9912
      @taiquangong9912 Pƙed rokem

      @@user-fz8fp4nf6t hell I have a hard time finding a Chinese language partner.

  • @natasha6431
    @natasha6431 Pƙed rokem

    Woaw, the more you get old the more you become handsome .

  • @narsplace
    @narsplace Pƙed rokem

    Try to get a friend who is willing to read out loud to you.

  • @Zhalghas-YZ
    @Zhalghas-YZ Pƙed rokem +1

    We Need Ukrainian đŸ‡ș🇩 & Kazakh 🇰🇿.

  • @dgmario
    @dgmario Pƙed rokem

    ⛑⛑⛑Hi there, SOS: i have a level where i understand 90% of news in english, but i don't retain the info, can you help Steve, maybe some others have this problem, bless you and yours.

  • @thequinnsfamilyvlog6551
    @thequinnsfamilyvlog6551 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you