How I Learned French

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • I got turned on to French long ago and my passion for the language has stayed with me for over 50 years. In this video I share my journey to French fluency.
    Learn a new language on LingQ: bit.ly/2WX9NuL
    Get my 10 Secrets of Language Learning: www.thelinguist.com
    #french #learnfrench #languagelearning

Komentáře • 490

  • @Gundam-bruh
    @Gundam-bruh Před 3 lety +196

    11:56 "How did I learn french? I don't remember" The answer you're looking for, short and sweet

  • @charissiana
    @charissiana Před 3 lety +368

    „So how did I learn french? I don‘t remember.“ 😂😂👍🏻

    • @BahnLife
      @BahnLife Před 3 lety +17

      I'm reading his book The Linguist in French on LingQ... he goes through his whole history, it's pretty good. I've learned alot of French just reading his book out loud.

    • @danton1333
      @danton1333 Před 3 lety +5

      J apprends le français !

    • @sleepsmartsmashstress740
      @sleepsmartsmashstress740 Před 3 lety +1

      SAY " Je ne me souviens pas."

    • @lastrepawns
      @lastrepawns Před 3 lety

      XDDDD

    • @rebeccam.7249
      @rebeccam.7249 Před 3 lety

      @@danton1333 pourquoi tu apprends le français est-ce que tu as un raison ou une raison pourquoi tu veux apprendre comment parler le français

  • @thatpilatesguy
    @thatpilatesguy Před 3 lety +618

    The hardest thing I find about French is understanding it. It all sounds the same and everyone speaks super fast 😩 But I’ll keep trying!

    • @El_Vicente1
      @El_Vicente1 Před 3 lety +107

      Maybe you lack the thousands of hours of listening your brain needs to adapt . Keep listening!

    • @DMC888
      @DMC888 Před 3 lety +62

      As an English speaker I too find French quite hard to understand. Many of their words sound vague or unfinished, eg. Peux, veux. Whereas German to my ear sounds very precise and I find it far easier to pick out words.
      I keep trying though. The fact that our languages share so many words is a massive bonus, not to be taken for granted.

    • @muttlanguages3912
      @muttlanguages3912 Před 3 lety +39

      The channel InnerFrench speaks slowly but not too slowly and he speaks clearly and about interesting topics.. It's how I got my listening skills from an awkward A1 to a mediocre B1. (I don't want to oversell my skills)

    • @staymile372
      @staymile372 Před 3 lety

      @Its RX my respect

    • @steveparker5406
      @steveparker5406 Před 3 lety +8

      They speak Castilian Spanish in Spain which was different than the Mexican Spanish I was used to. Had a rough time understanding the dialect there.

  • @jimdonovan3092
    @jimdonovan3092 Před 3 lety +72

    Steve’s technique is quite simply find a reason to learn the language, find your motivation, find something fun to do in the target language, and the rest comes more or less by itself. That’s my experience of French and Swedish, too, and what I’m now trying to do in Spanish.

    • @michaelrespicio5683
      @michaelrespicio5683 Před 3 lety

      Honestly if he had a reason to learn different languages, he should just act on them rather than wait and possible miss out on opportunities. For example, if there's a large community of say Vietnamese and Tagalog speakers in your city, which is the case in Vancouver, and you either know that or hear the language often when going out for groceries or something, then how is that a reason to not to learn those languages?
      It's like a student raising their hand at the front but the teacher picks the kid at the back, never addressing the one in front. It's no different than discrimination, and polyglots who wait years to learn a certain language just miss out

  • @carmennaveros7636
    @carmennaveros7636 Před 3 lety +135

    For us Spanish speakers French isn't so hard but the Pronunciation requires special attention.

    • @Ryosuke1208
      @Ryosuke1208 Před 3 lety +21

      It also helps if you know english too, you have more sounds at your disposal and more vocabulary in common.

    • @user-cs9hd4sb3b
      @user-cs9hd4sb3b Před 2 lety +12

      Yeah im native Spanish, im studying french and the read is easy but its pronuntation is very confusing in special the "R"
      Sorry my english isn't good

    • @sofiaelkahla3796
      @sofiaelkahla3796 Před 2 lety +2

      @@user-cs9hd4sb3b reading*

    • @user-cs9hd4sb3b
      @user-cs9hd4sb3b Před 2 lety

      @@sofiaelkahla3796 xD

    • @jeanfrancoisbe2
      @jeanfrancoisbe2 Před 2 lety +2

      Je dirais la même chose, il est difficile pour un français de prononcer de l espagnol 😊😊

  • @salomez-finnegan7952
    @salomez-finnegan7952 Před 3 lety +18

    Mandarin proverb: 興趣是最好的老師 “interest (strong interest and vehement enthusiasm) is the best teacher”

  • @SpanishwithAlma
    @SpanishwithAlma Před 3 lety +113

    You're so funny, Steve. Twelve minutes into the video: "So how did I learn French? I don't remember." Lol.

    • @jerstumc5033
      @jerstumc5033 Před rokem +1

      XD

    • @PhoebeGleeson
      @PhoebeGleeson Před rokem

      It made me chuckle too!

    • @chimauwah8133
      @chimauwah8133 Před 10 měsíci

      Title of video: "How I Learned French"
      12 minutes into video: "How did I learn French? I don't remember"
      😂

  • @wberckmann
    @wberckmann Před 3 lety +13

    I learned French on my own and he is exactly right. You need to be interested in a French-speaking country AND you need to start learning phrases and sentences first. It can be fun that way but to study grammar, conjugations, verb tenses is the WORST way to start learning. You will hate it that way! Play with the language, have fun with it, study what interests you and you will find a most marvelous experience which is rewarding and enriching. I started out this way and I have taken over 50 trips to France and consider it my co-nationality. I have friends and know Paris better than any U.S. city, although I've been to all 50 states and lived in or near both Boston and Chicago.

  • @LM-zi9te
    @LM-zi9te Před 3 lety +89

    As a french person i can tell y'all, french is hard... and imo wanting to learn it is already a brave move! so to everyone who is learning, keep going! you will like it at some point and you will really be proud of yourself then lol ;) bon courage!

    • @futurez12
      @futurez12 Před 3 lety +7

      As a native speaker, you have no business telling people your language is _hard._ You got French for FREE. You're literally the last person (along with other French native speakers) to be the judge of that. I'm a native English speaker. I have no idea whatsoever how hard/easy English is to learn, and I'd never dream of telling learners that it's one or the other. I'd have to ask an English learner that question because they would know infinitely better than I would.

    • @LM-zi9te
      @LM-zi9te Před 3 lety +27

      @@futurez12 easy big boy...You do have a point, my vision is obviously different, but I'll have you know, that languages are differents as well, and some are definitly easier to learn, it depends on your native language. I know that french has way more grammar rules than english for exemple, that can make it complex, french has harder sounds for english speakers especially, (easier for some others) while to us, english and spanish are generally the easiest to pronounce, except the old "th" lol. what i mean is, I do not no nothing like you say, i've done french studies, conjugation and grammar and it was hard! sooo i can definitly tell it can be hard for non native speaker, its not impossible and some languages might be harder, but french isnt the easiest imo, thats all i said. How can i never be a good judge? you know that some teachers teach kids their native language? its not always a non native speaker, they know difficulty if they make the effort.. the last person to help is someone non english speaker or non french speaker! and finally, I simply wanted to send good french vibes here, to people who have a hard time with it, thats all, so pardon my french but, no need to be an ASSHOLE! ;)

    • @futurez12
      @futurez12 Před 3 lety +3

      @@LM-zi9te What are you talking about? 60m+ native French people can speak French fluently, no problem at all. If it was hard, that wouldn't be the case. 1 billion+ native Chinese speakers can speak Mandarin easily, is Mandarin easier than French? Years ago, millions of French natives spoke French fluently whilst being illiterate. Did they find it hard without even being able to study these "difficult conjugations" you speak of?
      I'm assuming your comment was mostly directed at native English speakers (since that's the majority of Steve's audience)? French is listed as a category 1 language in terms of "difficulty," for native English speakers. It's one of the "easiest" languages to learn for us English speakers. As is English for you French speakers. NO language is hard BTW.
      What is it with natives thinking their own language is hard? Does it make you feel special that you learned this supposedly "hard" language for free? It's it an ego thing? I've heard Japanese people say a similar thing; they (some of them) believe that their brains are wired differently than everyone else's, making it harder for others to learn Japanese. It's complete BS. And, FWIW, they don't know how easy/hard their language is either.
      I had to study English spelling and grammar at school, does that mean I know how hard English is? Nope. Not in the slightest. Was learning it hard for me? Nope. Not in the slightest. It was one of the easiest things I've ever had to do, and I have little to no memory of it either. It was completely painless.
      Do you see what I was saying? Leave the comparisons to non-native speakers. I would be interested to hear how easy English was for you though...

    • @lojfiojo4725
      @lojfiojo4725 Před 3 lety +7

      @@futurez12 dude he is right my native language is french and I became fluent in english. French has more grammatical rules, and its just more challenging. Of course it also depends on the the persons native language, french and italian are similar so it might be easier for an italian native to learn french than english. But from my own experience and other peoples opinion its obvious that english is easier to learn than french.

    • @LM-zi9te
      @LM-zi9te Před 3 lety +4

      @@lojfiojo4725 merci homie :)

  • @ameonna8810
    @ameonna8810 Před 3 lety +42

    I’m learning French this year as my next language learning resolution and I think this video is a sign!!

    • @inari.28
      @inari.28 Před 3 lety +1

      Good luck!!

    • @wint3rxxx
      @wint3rxxx Před 3 lety +5

      No google is spying on your browser searches

    • @libiaaa1454
      @libiaaa1454 Před 3 lety +2

      I'm learning French too. Good luck 🧡

    • @tfjdfhozs3s849
      @tfjdfhozs3s849 Před 2 lety +2

      Bonne chance et bon courage à tous ceux qui font l'effort d'apprendre cette langue 😉

    • @sidharthaery1662
      @sidharthaery1662 Před 2 lety +1

      How's it going so far?

  • @realtalktina
    @realtalktina Před 3 lety +23

    I want to get to the point where I fall in so deep I wake up being fluent in French. I’ve lived in France a total of two years of my life and studied it as my minor in college and I know it well but want to be completely fluent I will get there!!this video was helpful to know it just happens and at that point you don’t remember the point where you become fluent. Thanks for the inspiration

    • @mailgibson4168
      @mailgibson4168 Před 4 měsíci

      I am french and i am struggling to become fluent en english. I wish i had a friend like you wich with i could speak and help each other become fluent in our language. If one day you cross a very cool blond guy eating cheese, that's me! And don't hesitate to talk to me and i will be your teacher and you will be mine if you agree. 😅

    • @dagobert54
      @dagobert54 Před 3 měsíci

      Je suis sûr que vous allez vous réveiller un matin en vous croyant française! Bon courage et bonne chance.😀

  • @foreverlearningfrench
    @foreverlearningfrench Před 3 lety +42

    C'est tellement inspirant d'entendre votre histoire d'apprentissage de la langue française. Vous avez une bibliothèque impressionnante !

  • @wminerva252
    @wminerva252 Před 3 lety +7

    These videos are always so motivating, thanks for all you do Steve!
    Also that English accent was great

  • @gfrankenstein4425
    @gfrankenstein4425 Před 3 lety +35

    Immersion! Couldn’t agree more. I wouldn’t have continued with my Spanish as much as I have (reading Vargas Llosa and routine discussions) without the Spanish culture to tempt me! What wonderful worlds we language learners can explore... (And I loved the library tour, too, maybe this for other languages and respective recommendations?)

  • @paule8099
    @paule8099 Před rokem +2

    Je suis française et c'est passionnant de vous écouter. On ne se rend pas compte quand on est français que la prononciation est monotone et on a tendance à parler anglais, italien ou espagnol sans mettre d'intonation. Et la prononciation de l'anglais pour un Français est une réelle difficulté. De même , on ne pense pas que les liaisons que nous faisons automatiquement peuvent être difficiles pour un anglophone. Et il y a aussi en France deux grandes variétés de prononciation , celle de la moitié nord de la France, la langue "officielle " des medias, où on parle plus rapidement en sautant des lettres et celle de la moitié sud de la France où on parle plus lentement en prononçant toutes les lettres. Merci pour cette vidéo très instructive pour moi et je retourne à mon perfectionnement en anglais !

  • @antonior1908
    @antonior1908 Před 3 lety +18

    I do tell you my experience when I was learning French at the University of Alberta...my class mates in that time, they got stuck in the accent,they my English class mates had debates over the French accent and the origin of the French language. I did not participate to that debate and they quit the class or never learn French...but me I have succeed.Today I speak and write french....not perfectly but that does not bothers me...I am happy of my success and everyday I keep learning...I live in Quebec city....good luck to all who want to learn french

    • @Lalita_Chevaliere_108
      @Lalita_Chevaliere_108 Před 2 lety +1

      Hi, I am curious to know how the French language is viewed in Quebec, and even Canada in general. Is it part of the culture and identity of the place? Is it viewed as something precious, to be protected and continued by future generations?

    • @Austin_Patrick
      @Austin_Patrick Před rokem

      @@Lalita_Chevaliere_108 It is a part of our country's identity, whenever a politician speaks, they state their speech in both languages. English takes a back seat in Quebec for sure.. unfortunately the Quebecois are looked poorly upon by western canada and vise versa. However, not everyone shares that mindset; I am western Canadian and have respect for them.

    • @Lalita_Chevaliere_108
      @Lalita_Chevaliere_108 Před rokem

      @@Austin_Patrick Thank you so much for taking the time to reply! That's really interesting - social and cultural subtleties. I wonder why Quebecois are looked down upon generally. Good on you for not sharing that! Anyway, have a great day.

    • @dagobert54
      @dagobert54 Před 3 měsíci

      Bravo. Vivre à Québec, génial ! Comme tous les Français, j'adore la façon de parler des Canadiens francophones, Québécois, Acadiens...J'aimerais visiter ce grand pays. Tous les gens que je connais, qui sont allés là-bas en sont revenus enchantés de l'accueil des Québécois, si gentils et chaleureux!

  • @veroniquemathez8051
    @veroniquemathez8051 Před 3 lety +26

    Reading the comments, I'm so glad to be French ! Bonne et heureuse Année !

  • @alobo_78
    @alobo_78 Před 3 lety +1

    Happy New Year ! My Best wishes for You and your family....🙏

  • @thompi8726
    @thompi8726 Před 3 lety +2

    Merci beaucoup, en tant que français j’ai trouvé votre vidéo très intéressante et instructive sur mon rapport à ma propre langue ! Comme apprenant en Anglais votre retour d’expérience m’a conforté dans ma façon de d’étudier. Cordialement de Toulouse

  • @deediem2186
    @deediem2186 Před 3 lety

    Very helpful tips Steve. Thank you!

  • @user-mrfrog
    @user-mrfrog Před 3 lety +88

    Le français est une belle langue. Ce que je trouve tragique et déplorable, comment au fil de l'histoire, on a tenté d'enrayer la langue en Louisiane et dans certaines provinces canadiennes. Courage à tous ceux et celles qui défendent ce bel idiome et vive la diversité linguistique dans le monde!

    • @mariethereseascar4910
      @mariethereseascar4910 Před 3 lety +9

      Bien dit. Pour encore mieux connaître le français, se mettre au latin et au grec !

    • @kalvinstrohkopp8726
      @kalvinstrohkopp8726 Před 3 lety +4

      D'accordo!
      Eu attempto apprender aquesta bella lingua romance a solo.

    • @yeehaw693
      @yeehaw693 Před 3 lety

      @@kalvinstrohkopp8726 C'est censé être quelle langue, ça ?

    • @kalvinstrohkopp8726
      @kalvinstrohkopp8726 Před 3 lety

      @@yeehaw693 C'est portugais antique.

    • @tfjdfhozs3s849
      @tfjdfhozs3s849 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kalvinstrohkopp8726 merci, c'est bien la première fois que je parviens à comprendre une phrase entière en portugais (que je n'ai jamais appris, j'essaie de progresser en espagnol) 😉

  • @leks8845
    @leks8845 Před 3 lety +3

    Feliz año nuevo Mr.steve

  • @josephst3792
    @josephst3792 Před 3 lety

    I am really willing to see Steve in a french lesson series. In this marvelous language he really meets all my points.

  • @yourfirstsecondlanguage4782

    I’ve always thought French is really hard to follow when spoken but after a good bit of listening practice I learnt to follow it easily enough.... still not really there with the speaking though

    • @samuelemmanuel9384
      @samuelemmanuel9384 Před 3 lety +6

      any progress is good,I'm still trying to ge there

    • @joanlynch5271
      @joanlynch5271 Před 3 lety +3

      Parle plus lentement, s'il te plaît.

    • @joanlynch5271
      @joanlynch5271 Před 3 lety +3

      Practice! That is what it takes.

    • @missNCW
      @missNCW Před 3 lety +2

      Any particular thing you did to 'practice'? Any particular things you listened to?

    • @yourfirstsecondlanguage4782
      @yourfirstsecondlanguage4782 Před 3 lety

      chantelle r lingq playlists I’d made (mostly short stories plus history series) and also some Harry Potter audiobooks

  • @Diptarko4550
    @Diptarko4550 Před 3 lety +1

    Bonne nouvelle année, Steve

  • @alices.2805
    @alices.2805 Před 3 lety

    thank you for everything your do !!!!! You are a true inspiration !!!!!!

  • @ranevc
    @ranevc Před 3 lety +78

    To save your time: He says in the end he doesn’t remember how he learned French.

  • @jaspritkaur2967
    @jaspritkaur2967 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing your experience Steve. We tend to separate language as a 'tool' for communication, which it of course is, but we also need to remember that it is embedded in a culture and society. And therefore, it is important to connect to the essence of the language, which as articulated by you happens when we try learning about the place it comes from, the people, the monuments, stories around them etc. In the standard curriculum, french culture is taught towards the end of the intermediate level, but this could be shifted to levels preceding that.

  • @poojadeshmukh4323
    @poojadeshmukh4323 Před 3 lety +2

    Hey Steve, please start teaching all the laungages...it would be greatest gift you can give to students and this world !!!

  • @ericdidier2328
    @ericdidier2328 Před 3 lety +8

    Hi, i'm french, these are precisely the problems encountered by foreigners who learn the French language, you made the difference between sounds "in" et "un" but the ultra big french majority doesn't sound the difference, for the whole arguments and as other many languages, how to speak is different than how it's written in books as the Passé simple which is not spoken but often used in books, it's the same for the italian language, mainly not spoken in the north but still used in the south of Italy and often used in books. Congratulations it's a very pertinent video ! Et les liaisons sont un véritable problème pour ceux qui apprennent notre langue. Bien amicalement.

  • @GeorgiosMichalopoulos
    @GeorgiosMichalopoulos Před 3 lety

    Very interesting, thank you!!

  • @dominiquehoungbo5501
    @dominiquehoungbo5501 Před 3 lety

    Great video Steve! It will help a lot of French learners. You talked about the challenges of the French pronunciation which will help a lot of French learners. I need to mention one thing though, I believe that the English pronunciation is way more challenging than the French pronunciation.

  • @joshina4497
    @joshina4497 Před 3 lety +59

    As a german speaker, I never knew the "u" which is like a german "ü" is a problem for english speakers 😳
    My biggest problem with learning French is that there are sooo many French words in English, and since I've been studying English for 12 years already and I am on an almost fluent level in English, I keep mixing up English and French words which are similar 😅 I started learning French over English now, because I realized how much easier it is than learning it over German.

    • @sleepsmartsmashstress740
      @sleepsmartsmashstress740 Před 3 lety

      German has stolen a few French words too Wie gehts Ihnen?

    • @Angelo-wg2kb
      @Angelo-wg2kb Před 3 lety

      @@sleepsmartsmashstress740 gut :)

    • @carloswhisper1281
      @carloswhisper1281 Před 3 lety +1

      I can totally relate to you. I get French and Portuguese mixed up, so for now it's only active listening and reading subtitles.

    • @marsattaqueladelinquancest9727
      @marsattaqueladelinquancest9727 Před 3 lety

      Sépare les deux langues , vraiment.

    • @ThisIsMissCheeky
      @ThisIsMissCheeky Před 3 lety +2

      Do you mean you started learning French in English? Saying over (and from) does not make any sense.

  • @Falconlibrary
    @Falconlibrary Před 3 lety +3

    I'm currently learning French. The key to comprehension is input. There are studies of children who are born mute yet learn to understand language as well as anyone else even though they literally cannot speak it--so speaking a language isn't necessary to comprehending it. So I listen to French movies with French (not English) subtitles, listen to French music all the time, in addition to language classes through Busuu, immersing myself in the language.

    • @javierbustamante7975
      @javierbustamante7975 Před 3 lety

      I totally agree mon ami. Our brain is recording information at all times.

  • @vincentng2392
    @vincentng2392 Před 3 lety +4

    The u and oe sounds in French are so easy for Cantonese speakers like me.

  • @paholainen100
    @paholainen100 Před 3 lety

    I enjoy these types of videos , i.e how i learned French, Chinese, Russian etc. Interesting and I like seeing your book collection.

  • @ENGLISHTAINMENT
    @ENGLISHTAINMENT Před 3 lety +3

    French is very useful. We need to learn it even if we weren’t originally motivated. He’s so right about how French is taught in Canada!

    • @retroblue69696
      @retroblue69696 Před 2 lety +1

      especially back when he was in school when the separatist movement was on the rise.

  • @txpyro1885
    @txpyro1885 Před 3 lety +10

    I've read around 3000 books in my life. Best way to learn languages is by reading books. There are so many French writers to choose from, Camus, Proust, Sartre, balzac, Stendhal, Zola etc. Learning a language whilst reading French greats, killing two birds with one stone. I've learned French, German, and Spanish in this manner. Fun to be a polyglot and a polymath. :) Learn German and read Goethe

    • @lizakhan2713
      @lizakhan2713 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Bruh you’re such a cool human being. Wow.

    • @davidpo5517
      @davidpo5517 Před 5 měsíci

      Not even close to those high profile authors, but I've started reading practice using TinTin and Astérix. It's reading French with images for context. It's helped a lot already.

  • @klaytonsilva5890
    @klaytonsilva5890 Před 3 lety +11

    "I don't remember it"
    Ok sir I got it.

  • @javierbustamante7975
    @javierbustamante7975 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm a native Spanish speaker and french was very easy for me. I already knew English so it became easier to follow. Now, I have a problem with pronunciation. I need to live in France in order to fix that.
    I recommend everyone to listen to conversations on CZcams every day even if you dont understand at first. You will start picking it up little by little. Learning a language takes a lot of patience
    Dont give up amigos

  • @JPeraltavideos
    @JPeraltavideos Před 2 lety

    Usually I find your insights about language learning so helpful, this time I gotta say I didn't get much out of it, just the remainder of the importance of making things interesting for you and a couple difficulties you had with this and that pronunciation

  • @CBRONXY
    @CBRONXY Před 3 lety +4

    4:45 so "how I learned French was by becoming interested in its culture" thank you very much best advice ever I'm heading to wikipedia now.

    • @gabrieltomaz6034
      @gabrieltomaz6034 Před 3 lety

      what hahha

    • @Qladstone
      @Qladstone Před 2 lety

      If you are interested in history, Napoleon is what you are looking for! Can you imagine someone so powerful and so feared that he retook France without an army, and immediately the rest of Europe declared war on France, not to conquer France, but to put the King of France back on the throne! Thereafter he was exiled to a isolated island off the West coast of Africa, far away from France.

    • @Qladstone
      @Qladstone Před 2 lety

      The 19th century French literature too!

  • @marsattaqueladelinquancest9727

    Félicitations monsieur ! Je suis très fier de vous ! Un exemple pour toute l' Amérique ! Prenez soin de vous

  • @renatorodenelle8407
    @renatorodenelle8407 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm checking your useful videos about a lot of languages and Frances got me in different aspects the romantic way and great stability in words I am falling in love for it my mother language is Portuguese even thus France give me suspense atmosphere through air anyway thank you and keep up your excellent job

  • @bornaradnik8296
    @bornaradnik8296 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Hi Steve, I'm a Canadian education in Ontario. Despite taking mandatory French lessons in elementary school I was never able to learn the language. They way it was taught turned me off! Now, at the age of 37 I am committed to learning French by myself because I'm excited about it. I don't enjoy learning it as an academic discipline and prefer your method of immersion. Many thanks for these videos!

  • @TooLittleInfo
    @TooLittleInfo Před 3 lety +1

    This must surely be true. I'm currently learning Arabic and what started it was my passion for ancient history and wanting to visit Egypt, Jordan, Syria etc 😁😁

  • @naojoymatsu
    @naojoymatsu Před 3 lety

    You are outstanding! By the way, I thought that the mother language in your area Montreal is French?! I respect your passion for many languages and still learning more. Thank you for sharing your goodness with others. Please keep up your great work!

  • @marinaaleksandrova7986

    Merci beaucoup!

  • @Zipperneck.
    @Zipperneck. Před 3 lety +6

    When I began studying French and after I became fairly proficient, I used to read mystery short-stories by Pierre Bellemare. They were a collection of relatively short and interesting stories written in fairly easy-reading, uncomplicated French. I recommend them.
    My background: I came to live in France in 1992 (at age 29), after spending some time in the USAF and having studied Russian at DLI and KU.

    • @roum9
      @roum9 Před 3 lety

      Tu peux me recommneder quelques titres des histores qe tu as trouvé plutôt interessantes et merci d avance

    • @Zipperneck.
      @Zipperneck. Před 3 lety

      @@roum9 C'était il y a tellement longtemps... mais je souviens que ses histoires étaient très agréables à lire. Au début j'écoutais ses histoires qu'il racontait à la radio, puis j'ai fait la transition à ses livres. Ils sont formidables pour les débutants, je trouve.

    • @roum9
      @roum9 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Zipperneck. merci en tout cas je veux evoluer mon fr alores je trouve que commencer par un guide tellement simple est tres utile merci pour le nom de l auteur . 👌👌

    • @Zipperneck.
      @Zipperneck. Před 3 lety

      @@roum9
      Il faut se pencher vers les sujets qui vous intéressent et que vous connaissez déjà un peu. Ca aide.

    • @user-wb1vm9ex4k
      @user-wb1vm9ex4k Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you you’ve inspired me. I am 26 just starting to learn and I live in London so not far from France. I love mystery novels so I will read those

  • @Eric-le3uu
    @Eric-le3uu Před 3 lety

    Another epic video from THE LANGUAGE GURU.

  • @arsstellarum
    @arsstellarum Před 5 měsíci

    Le Horla! Excellent taste, Steve.

  • @amirieducation
    @amirieducation Před 3 lety

    Thanks a lot

  • @rodrigomartuscelli9700

    Dear Steve Greetings from Japan. I really appreciate your work. Your videos are amazing and inspiring. Thanks a lot for all your hints. If you allow me, may I ask you what is your secret to keep such energy and also how did you learn Russian. Learning languages is a hobby of mine but at the same time a source of motivation and inspiration. It is like a key which opens the doors to new cultures, history and people's hearts. Please keep making the difference and being the difference to a lot of people. 誠に心から御礼申し上げます。

  • @jgurtz
    @jgurtz Před 3 lety +9

    Was very surprised not to hear mention of the difficulty in pronouncing the French "r" with its back-of-the-palate roll. Even after quite a bit of practice I cannot get it 100%. I guess maybe my small amount of prior German practice made the eu/ü sound not so difficult. Another reflection I have on speaking French (coming from American English) is how the focus shifts from consonant sounds/syllables to vowel sounds with diminished syllables. My pronunciation improved when I realized I needed to really focus on moving my face. If you watch speakers of English, there is this unconscious thing of moving the face as little as possible, whereas in France you see everyone's faces in constant animation to get the proper vowel and nasal sounds. Bonne année à tous!

    • @muttlanguages3912
      @muttlanguages3912 Před 3 lety +2

      Some accents of French barely make that r sound too while others use it heavily

    • @screamtoasigh9984
      @screamtoasigh9984 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/yNJtAibUeOc/video.html that's the sound and the easiest to learn video

  • @Black_Nest
    @Black_Nest Před 3 lety +6

    I'm French born and raised and I just started to take French lessons again! I keep discovering new rules or rediscovering it. It's actually offered and paid for by my French university. It became quite a social issue, maybe, in France since a lot of French people make too many mistakes in French even though we are French. Actually it is often said that foreigners speak better French than French people themselves. If you are learning French, don't worry if you make mistakes, just keep learning and wanting to improve. If French people correct you, it's not persecution or rudeness, they really want to help you improve. French people are more authoritative/mad at French people making mistakes than foreigners doing so.

  • @lindylee1139
    @lindylee1139 Před rokem

    J’adore votre bibliotheque!

  • @ncordeau45
    @ncordeau45 Před 3 lety

    Wow you are very good, congrats !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! From Quebec City 😀😀😀

  • @samuelemmanuel9384
    @samuelemmanuel9384 Před 3 lety +13

    the pronunciations are easy because I grew up speaking haitian creole

    • @jamesatem6046
      @jamesatem6046 Před 3 lety +1

      La langue française très facile.

    • @lucasrba
      @lucasrba Před 3 lety +1

      Very cool. Here in Brazil I meet a lot of haitian people everywhere I go and I love them, always in a good mood and talkative

    • @samuelemmanuel9384
      @samuelemmanuel9384 Před 3 lety

      @@lucasrba wow I didn't know they were out there

    • @samuelemmanuel9384
      @samuelemmanuel9384 Před 3 lety

      @@jamesatem6046 wi

  • @Sakura-zu4rz
    @Sakura-zu4rz Před 3 lety +1

    Hello 😁Arriving 2021 Jan 1st, I am here to tell you about the future because we have a lot of thing coming 2021, This is a new year and a great call for celebration with family and dear ones. Start the new year holding on to the old memories with a new spirit and hope. Happy new year! This year may finally realize that real fun in life comes from real people, not from the virtual ones. Have a great year!

  • @fabriziocapolini4349
    @fabriziocapolini4349 Před 3 lety

    The stack of material you got from the Italian Tourist Bureau was probably about the twenty different regions :-)
    Regional identities are actually quite varied in Italy because of their long, twisted and separate histories.

  • @major8362
    @major8362 Před 3 lety

    I loved that video, I'm a French speaking man from Cameroon. I'm still learning English, I have a lot of problem with connected speech is English and I have noticed French learners face the same problem. I laughed when he talked about the verb "devenir" in French, French people pronounce it like it was " devnir" they do the same thing with a lot of others words. For instance pronounce my country name" camroun" instead of " Cameroun" they don't pronounce one syllable. French people delete a lot of sounds when they speak, I don't have any problem with that, I understand all French accents perfectly, but it sometimes super hard for French learners to understand spoken French, because they don't pronounce words as they are written. I generally recommend to French learners to watch movies which have been translated into French instead of watching an original French movie, you can watch the French version of an American movie, or English movie, it doesn't matter but the original movie has not to be in French. When I watch a French movie and a movie which has been translated into French, I can perfectly see the difference, actors speak more clearly, they articulate better, compared to an original French movie. And I also notice that it's the same thing with movies in English, when I watch an American or a British movie, sometimes I feel like actors don't speak English, but it was before. Now I can understand some American movies at more than 70% depending on the movie thanks to the fact that I sometimes watch movies which have been translated into English. When I didn't watch movies translated into English, I thought that we didn't speak English in the USA. Generally in my country, we don't reduce words as much as French people do, that's why we recognize very easily when French guys speak, they like doing" uh uh uh " as he said in the video, the way he said it made me laugh 😂😂

  • @artKarolina
    @artKarolina Před 3 lety

    I like how your accent shifts to Montrealer as you think about being in Montreal.

  • @nurseae4586
    @nurseae4586 Před 3 lety +6

    I always wanted to attend McGill. Not too late I think After all, I will only be 67 on February 01😆

  • @WoodyGamesUK
    @WoodyGamesUK Před 3 lety

    The final E, like in "Ne me quittE pas" was commonly pronounced in French songs until the 70's. It was also common to add the E sound to the last word of a line, even for words that end in a vowel, which was a device typically used in songs but not spoken language. Like in that random line of a French song pre-70's: "Mais elle nest pas revenuuuE" (and the final E is pronounced). Later it became old fashioned, and with the style of French music being influenced by British/American pop music (even when sung in French), it is not used today.

  • @kalvinstrohkopp8726
    @kalvinstrohkopp8726 Před 3 lety

    Tu es modelo d'inspiraçon pera multas personas amantes de lingua estrangera.
    Felicitaçons a ti!

  • @alfonsohshk8998
    @alfonsohshk8998 Před 3 lety +2

    I don't remember either how I learned French. My case is similar to Mr Kaufmann's.
    I never found French complicated. The key is to start learning it at a very early stage and massive exposure.
    The ones trying to learn it through grammar have later troubles with all the exceptions, subjunctive, liasons, argot, etc.
    I speak 5 languages at C level and French is the only one you never finish learning it. French is one of the few languages where native speakers will fight regularerly about how to say things correctly and they will keep correcting each other forever as a national sport.

  • @valentinaegorova-vg7tb

    AMAZING! BRAVO!

  • @huellintonsilveira3571
    @huellintonsilveira3571 Před 3 lety +3

    Steve gostaria de saber com qual idade voce comecou a estudar seu segundo idioma ? Quero aproveitar e te agredecer voce é minha inspiration pra estudar ingles

  • @donfzic7471
    @donfzic7471 Před 3 lety

    Bonne Année 2021 ! Happy New Year 2021 ! 😉🤩🎊🎆

  • @humera121
    @humera121 Před 3 lety +2

    It's easy to understand how a language works if one knows more than one language. I know 6 languages and French is my 7th ( still learning) I understood how it works. I can read write and speak but listening is the hardest because of the liaison as you rightly pointed out.
    I think to learn any language the steps should not be to learn the grammer first or read and write first. The first step should be just to speak and listen. Like when a child is born , it learns only to hear and speak first and then learns it's working at school. If we use the same model for learning any language it will become much easier to pick a language.

    • @michaelrespicio5683
      @michaelrespicio5683 Před 3 lety

      Let's not forget that some children are born deaf in which case they would have to learn sign language. If the child is born blind, they can't read anything except braille. I have seen people learn languages, despite these handicaps even if they don't use them the same way. For example, deaf people can still read and write, and blind people can still speak and hear

    • @humera121
      @humera121 Před 3 lety

      @@michaelrespicio5683 you may be correct but isn't your examples are on exceptional situations? Our brain is so plastic that it learns to accommodate and rewire itself when there is deficiency of a vital function. What do you think? So those children born with special needs have different path of learning in their brain hence they pick up. I was referring to normal course in which speaking and hearing comes first before anything else in language learning. But then I could be wrong. Hehe

  • @dagobert54
    @dagobert54 Před 3 měsíci

    Lire Marcel Proust en français, chapeau Steve! J'ai connu une jeune étudiante américaine, il y a plus de cinquante ans, qui le lisait couramment, alors que moi, pourtant Français, je trouvais cet auteur plutôt difficile, avec ses phrases interminables, parfois longues d'une page entière; quand on arrive à la fin de la phrase, on ne sait plus de quoi il était question au début😀. Mais Proust est un génie de littérature, il mérite largement un peu d'effort pour le lire. Je suis convaincu que votre méthode pour progresser en langues étrangères est LA meilleure, avec en même temps le bain linguistique dans le pays concerné ou, à défaut, les radios, télés, films, chansons... Merci pour cette vidéo.

  • @sumasurya9521
    @sumasurya9521 Před 3 lety

    Well said Sir. Merçi Beaucoup. Suggest a few books for beginners.

  • @Einstein_albert01
    @Einstein_albert01 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I'm Brazilian, but I think that learning English is easier than learning French.

  • @edcottingham1
    @edcottingham1 Před 6 měsíci

    Of being captured by the culture and propelled into the language:
    I had a dismal experience with French in high school and couldn't get far enough away from it. One day, maybe around 1970, I was watching Bill Buckley's "Firing Line on PBS." Bill shared an anecdote about an American reporter interviewing the French minister of education. It went something like this:
    He was formally ushered into the minister's office by a stiff functionary. Without waiting for the invitation, he flopped into an ornate, Louis XV chair and offered a breezy, "bonjour, minister." The huge office had a 14-foot ceiling and a row of ornate, floor-to-ceiling windows along one wall, the "window treatment" featuring rich and graceful draperies of jaw-dropping richness and elegance. The minister sat behind his very large and highly-polished, antique desk, barely within conversational range of the reporter's chair, all of it formal and intimidating, to say the least. Being a brash young American, our reporter said, "So, minister, what's up with French education these days?" The minister, appearing stern and startled, hesitated for only a moment. He looked at his watch and clearing his throat said, "It is 11:45, the children are studying Molière."
    I took that to mean that all the children, or a least the older ones, from Menton to Cherbourg, in every town, village, and city were having their Molière lesson. Buckley's point in this story was that French education -- like many other things touched by the government -- was managed in minute and unwavering detail by a large, disciplined bureaucracy spread out from Paris and headed by this man in this office. It was an amusing insight into French sociology and government. France is not a slack, do-your-own-thing sort of country like the USA (although I have no doubt that it has become considerably slacker in recent decades, due in considerable part to the slopping over of American culture).
    On that day, I became obsessed with France (and am still struggling with the language to this day). I saw that the French had a different take on things, a different point of view, and I wanted to know more.

  • @lesfreresdelaquote1176

    It reminds me of how I learnt English as a French speaker. I had three main issues: the two "th" as in "this" and "teeth", stress on consonants, and the worse part the aspiration on consonants such as p, t, k, which is an absolute nightmare for a French speaker. Actually, I would go as far as to say that this is usually the main error that French speakers make in English. I say worse, because the only time I got a teacher talk about it was during a phonology class, where the professor compared words such as: pub(ads in French)/pub, khan/can, tombe/tomb. It took me years to muster all these differences to be able to at least get rid a little bit of my French accent. But as my phonology professor at the Université de Montréal used to say, he was American but spoke French without a hint of accent, to speak is to hear... The more you speak, the more you train your pronunciation, the more you understand... hearing and speaking trigger the same zones in the brain...

  • @pyeh322
    @pyeh322 Před 3 lety

    Happy New Year!! I am encouraged by hearing you say in one of those interviews with other youtubers about many languages you can speak actually learned after age of 60. Do you learn one by one or more than one at the same time? Thanks.

    • @michaelrespicio5683
      @michaelrespicio5683 Před 3 lety

      For enjoyment learners, they should try what Lindie does which is learn like 2 at the same time for a few months and then switch to a new set, learning 2 or 3 for several months to more than a year leads to missed opportunities for not learning other languages

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Před 3 lety +1

      I try to focus on one at least for a few months at a time. I'm working on Persian right now but I still do listen to the odd bit of Arabic to so I don't fall too far behind. I think you have to experiment to see what works best for you.

    • @michaelrespicio5683
      @michaelrespicio5683 Před 3 lety

      Then why not try Lindie's method? That way allows for focus on several languages over the year instead of just doing doing 2 a year. If you learn multiple languages you can't hope to maintain all of them decently so what's the problem in building a base so you can always go back to improve? At least you know something to make a good impression when meeting natives and sometimes that good enough, especially when you never interact with them again.
      If there's a community that speaks a language you don't, you miss opportunities every time you hear it since you don't understand anything, and every time you interact with them, you have no choice but to resort to English which is an ego bruiser for a language learner.
      How does it feel to hear Vietnamese and Tagalog so often in Vancouver and not understand? How many natives of either have you met in person and felt bad because you still can't speak their language?

  • @valeriemcdonald440
    @valeriemcdonald440 Před 3 lety +1

    I also learned nothing but French grammar in school. And Roch Voisine music.

  • @auntpurl5325
    @auntpurl5325 Před rokem

    I'm visiting Quebec for my third extended visit. I understand a fair bit of basics, but oy! The speed of speech is impossible for me to understand. But I'm working on it. I love love love the people. Already making plans to return, but I want to be more prepared to engage next time.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Před rokem

      Each visit to the country where the language is spoken is a chance to use the language, but even more a new encouragement to spend more time with the language.

  • @electronlibre4163
    @electronlibre4163 Před 3 lety +9

    Talking about the dominance of the E, somebody managed to write a whole novel without a single E 😄
    It's called "la disparition".

  • @AlexisLK
    @AlexisLK Před 3 lety

    Okay, first of all, I'm a native french speaker, and I have to say your pronunciation is absolutely fantastic.
    Secondly, I'm learning Czech as a fourth language. And with great surprise, I see that you're also into Czech!
    I have to say the Czech language is fresh new for me and pretty tough, can I have some tips, advice or is there any e-book, program, or anything to help me with my Czech?

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Před 3 lety +1

      I would definitely recommend you go to LingQ. Start with the mini-stories and then look at the other material we have there. You can also import from CZcams or other sources as you progress in the language.

    • @AlexisLK
      @AlexisLK Před 3 lety

      @@Thelinguist Thanks a lot

  • @michaelrespicio5683
    @michaelrespicio5683 Před 3 lety

    Can you share how you learned Finnish?Lots of learners struggle to acquire the spoken language

  • @jananovakova2840
    @jananovakova2840 Před 3 lety

    Thanks a lot.It is awesome.Unfortunately, I can t speak French.But I am preparing for English exam, could you help me and recommend anything useful, how to be more successful with reading part? Sometimes it us so hard to choose the correct answer.Thanks a lot.

  • @andrewclack4881
    @andrewclack4881 Před 3 lety

    The problem of pronunciation is basically the same with all languages. I taught myself a lot of French and French words and got the accent(in my opinion) pretty good. I just started 2 weeks ago to teach myself Cantonese. and im just starting to get the sound correct. You just have to listen and then listen again and when youve done that. Listen some more. And repeat of course.

  • @SLEVY-ro9sp
    @SLEVY-ro9sp Před 3 lety +2

    HI, STEVE, YOU ARE RIGHT. I AM FROM MEXICO. I SPEAK 3 OTHER LANGUAGES & YES, I´D SAY MEXICAN SPANISH IS MORE LIKE SINGING, EVEN THOUGH MANY PORTUGUESE SPEAKERS WOULD SAY THAT "PORTUGNOL", A MIXTURE OF BRAZILIAN PORTUGUESE & SPANISH IS THE MOST SING-SONGY.... GREETINGS! UN SALUDO SONRIENTE SOLAR SIMILAR AL SOL DE MEXICO (SONG-SINGY, ALL RIGHT...!)

  • @jdprettynails
    @jdprettynails Před 5 měsíci

    I’m four months into learning French and my biggest frustration is not yet being able to say sentences in my head smoothly. I speak in small chunks, translating 2 words at a time.

  • @grahamduckett3782
    @grahamduckett3782 Před 3 lety +2

    I have lived in France for over eight years, I listen to news and television programmes every day, I have two young daughters at school. I still don't hear individual words. I still can't construct a sentence. I did a six month course (15 hrs per week) and all that did for me was stop me speaking as I couldn't remember the gender or conjugation. I've just turned 70 and have made a new year's resolution to learn French.
    As an aside I didn't learn English grammar at school, so understanding grammatical vocabulary is a big problem.
    Any tips?
    Thanks

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Před 3 lety

      I suggest you get on LingQ and do our mini stories. Probably you know all the vocabulary, but focus on the phrases, focus on listening many many times, although not all at once, so that this core vocabulary and core phrasing becomes a part of you. This forms of base from which you can go forward into more interesting content. It's also a place where you can go back and work on your core, like a gym.

  • @dbellatrix4446
    @dbellatrix4446 Před 3 lety +1

    Could you please make a video like this for german?

  • @jeanfrancoisbe2
    @jeanfrancoisbe2 Před 2 lety

    C'est une très bonne idée que d'apprendre le français. De mon côté, j'apprends l'anglais avec une professeur particulier native English and it is a pleasure 😃

  • @atom4890
    @atom4890 Před 2 lety

    You may have gotten bored of French in Gr7 but that was when my immersion class went to Quebec, haha. I forever live with the shame of forgetting the word cucumber while trying to order at Subway. My headstone one day will just have the word "concombre" on it.

  • @wolfthequarrelsome504
    @wolfthequarrelsome504 Před rokem +2

    Wow... You studied for 3 years in France...in French.

  • @marjankrebelj4007
    @marjankrebelj4007 Před rokem

    It was the same with me and English. As long as it was only a boring school subject, nothing happened. I was the dumbest kid in class. But then I discovered music, from Sinatra to Eminem, later on books, and finally the internet. The only time I remember putting some real effort in was when I had to remember the irregular verbs (at the age of 16). I memorised them all and that was it. The rest I absorbed organically through books, music, and movies. Now, as an adult, I try to repeat this process with French, Italian, and Slovak.

  • @muttlanguages3912
    @muttlanguages3912 Před 3 lety

    Good advice. First build motivation. Then show them the language. Then teach the language as needed. Don't teach all the rules upfront! No one needs to be able to say "I would have bought that except for all the thing I would miss out on," if they can't clearly say, "hi, I'm bob"

  • @e-gata9749
    @e-gata9749 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm Brazilian and I'm learning english yet But I already want to start learn french too

    • @antoniochagas701
      @antoniochagas701 Před 3 lety +1

      Boa sorte miga, eu já tô tentando o francês, tô lascado rsrs

  • @luizcarlosborgessantosborg149

    Hi Steve, while you have learned French language, I Have learned English too, my favorite language. By the way, l am from Brazil

  • @iberius9937
    @iberius9937 Před 3 lety

    3:22 🎶"Out of the night, when the full moon is bright....comes a horseman known as Zorro". 🎶😉

  • @domseyboi
    @domseyboi Před rokem

    im learning german rn, i thought of learning french and german at the same time but i thought its a bad idea because french needs a lot of focus, well lets see, ill update this after months, maybe.

  • @learnwithsr1539
    @learnwithsr1539 Před 3 lety

    I am also trying to learn french but i am totally a biggner

  • @ramborose4030
    @ramborose4030 Před 3 lety

    I want to learn both Spanish and French but my want to learn French is stronger. however, living in the US we have a large Spanish speaking community so in torn between the two. I have social media accounts (IG, YT,) in each language. This CZcams account is the French one, I only follow French channels, and my other is all Spanish. I’m drawn to them both but when I run into a Spanish spear at work, I think “ugh I need to learn Spanish) then I hear a French song and it’s down hill from there lol.

  • @therealgoat8992
    @therealgoat8992 Před 3 lety +4

    If you know similar languages, such as Spanish, French, and Italian, how can you make sure you don’t mix them up?

    • @deanjoseph3410
      @deanjoseph3410 Před 3 lety +2

      As a person that learned French at the school and learn Italian now I can say it's impossible (at least, for me) cause I always mix them and even don't notice.

    • @d314159
      @d314159 Před 3 lety +1

      As a native English speaker, with a very good level of fluency in Spanish, French and Italian, I can say that's it's inevitable that you will occasionally mix words but it absolutely doesn't matter! Worrying about errors that don't matter can hold you back. Fear of making mistakes is often an unhelpful hangover from a formal education.

    • @daiweihan1209
      @daiweihan1209 Před 3 lety

      I speak French, English, spanish and Chinese. French is very similar to Spanish. English is the most easy language in the world.

    • @davidalvarez325
      @davidalvarez325 Před 3 lety

      @@daiweihan1209 estoy estudiando Inglés desde hace 4 meses y la verdad me parece súper complicado entenderlo. Quisiera saber por qué piensas que el Inglés es fácil.

    • @daiweihan1209
      @daiweihan1209 Před 3 lety

      @@davidalvarez325 Yo estuve

  • @sabalaq3461
    @sabalaq3461 Před rokem

    6:57 thanks god we have this sound in kazakh