How U.S. Diplomats Learn Languages (10 Lessons)

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • - The app I developed to learn languages through audio flashcards: fluentfalcon.com/
    - Video that talks about fluency development: • Learn ANY Language in ...
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Komentáře • 29

  • @MarieAnew
    @MarieAnew Před 29 dny +1

    Thank you for the grammar tip. I am reading my grammar book out loud and recording it. Just the one-month grammar overview with Anki vocabulary elevated the way I study French.

  • @sergiodejesusmunnozmorel8510
    @sergiodejesusmunnozmorel8510 Před měsícem +2

    You are the best teacher I've ever had through years of studying English.thank you so much

  • @user-wl2we9ue9c
    @user-wl2we9ue9c Před 27 dny

    It’s the most easy lesson I have ever learned , your teaching style is amazing and I love it Bcz you use subtitle to make it easy for us to learn English

  • @user-gw8ml6cg8d
    @user-gw8ml6cg8d Před 28 dny

    Please make videos on speaking and ways of practicing that on our own and how that can improve our abilites to speak the languages, thank u 🌷 for your amazing choosing of your topics and really important info that we mostly need as languages learners❤

  • @magnus8704
    @magnus8704 Před měsícem +4

    Nice video. It would also be nice to have more videos on speaking.
    Here in Brazil, you need to know at least four languages to become a diplomat (portuguese ofc, french, spanish and english), and after you pass the exams you go through a 1.5 year course. There, you'll deepen the knowledge in those aforementioned languages and learn another one of your choice from the official UN languages (arabic, chinese, german, you choose). After graduating, you should be speaking at least 5 languages if you take it seriously.

  • @derpauleglot9772
    @derpauleglot9772 Před 28 dny

    I was working on the same exact video, but you beat me to it^^ Maybe I'll make it in another language or see if I can add a different spin to it.
    At any rate, you did an awesome job. I think it's a really interesting document, and I'm glad people are finding out about it.

    • @loistalagrand
      @loistalagrand  Před 28 dny

      Yeah, I don't know why people haven't heard about this paper!

  • @lolitta7714
    @lolitta7714 Před měsícem +3

    Do you think, we can improve our Accent without speaking with Real people, just with practicing shadowing and listening every single day ??

    • @loistalagrand
      @loistalagrand  Před měsícem +6

      Yes, you don't need to speak to real people. I'll make videos on how to do this exactly.

    • @lolitta7714
      @lolitta7714 Před 28 dny +1

      @@loistalagrand Merci beaucoup

  • @todesque
    @todesque Před měsícem

    New subscriber here! The fact that you have a chess broadcast going on in the background is the icing on the cake! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Though I’m somewhat skeptical of any English speakers reaching C1 in Russian in under two years without prior Slavic language training.

    • @Phylaetra
      @Phylaetra Před 15 dny

      The FSI rates Russian as a 'Category II' language and students will reach that goal in about 1 year - note that they are spending 4-6 hours a day in the classroom, and are expected to spend time outside of class engaging with the language. Under CEFR, most of them will achieve C2 in that time (not all - but that can also have negative professional repurcussions for them, as some positions _require_ a high level of ability in the target language).

    • @todesque
      @todesque Před 14 dny

      @@Phylaetra You’re wrong, dude. Russian is most definitely NOT category 2.

    • @Phylaetra
      @Phylaetra Před 14 dny

      @@todesque so, I was using this reference:
      sealang.net/archives/sla/gurt_1999_07.pdf
      which is from 1999 - currently it's at category III, and a category IV has since been added.
      Really though, I think that is too high - I would rate Russian as about the same difficulty as German for a native English speaker. The Cyrillic alphabet is very easy to learn, and you have to wrap your head around grammatical case (as with German, Latin, or Greek), but that's not too terribly hard.
      Russian phonology is also pretty straightforward, and none of the sounds are not difficult to learn.
      So why not Category II?

    • @Phylaetra
      @Phylaetra Před 14 dny

      @@todesque Not to say that I am not open to an argument for Cat III, but I've studied both Russian and German, and I have found Russian to be slightly easier. I would not put it in the same category as Hungarian or Finnish or Tibetan...

    • @todesque
      @todesque Před 14 dny

      @@Phylaetra Russian is Cat 3 according to the FSI. I'm not sure where you're getting your information from. You're entitled to your opinion, of course, but I have NEVER and I mean never heard anyone say Russian is easier than German (for an English speaker). That's quite an odd claim, I have to say. I've heard Prof John McWhorter claim that Russian is the HARDEST language for English speakers. I respect him enormously, but I don't think he's correct at all, though Russian is very very complex. And yes I agree with you that Hungarian and Finnish are harder than Russian, though the FSI puts them in Cat 3 as well. Again, please check your FSI info, because I think you're mistaken.

  • @cw8790
    @cw8790 Před 29 dny

    When is Fluent Falcon coming?

  • @johnlomi
    @johnlomi Před 23 dny

    More....