How to Learn a Language: INPUT (Why most methods don't work)

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
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    RECOMMENDED BOOKS to get started in developing a productive approach to learning a language:
    ・Principles and Practice in Second Language Acquisition by Stephen Krashen
    ・Fluent forever by Gabriel Wyner
    ・Fluent in 3 months by Benny Lewis
    ◆I don't agree with everything in these books. For example, Benny Lewis has some great approaches to language, but I don't agree with "Use the Language from Day 1" unless you are entirely comfortable embarrassing yourself in front of strangers. As per Krashen's Input Theory, The affective filter hypothesis states that learners' ability to acquire language is constrained if they are experiencing negative emotions such as fear or embarrassment. I totally agree with this based on my experience and think this is why "classroom language teaching" does not work. You are risking embarrassment every time the teacher calls on you and may be in fear of failing as you study the language.
    ◆Also, I do not think techniques for "memorizing" words are a good use of your time, unless you are taking a language test. If your aim is to learn the language to where you can understand media in that language and have enjoyable conversations, then mnemonics are not helpful. This is because they facilitate "learning" of the language and not "acquisition." For example, if someone says "Do you know what taberu means?" You can access your mnemonic of "I eat on a table [TABEru means eat!]," but if someone says to you "issho ni gohan tabenai?" you probably won't be able to rapidly comprehend this phrase and respond in a natural way.
    ◆The distinction between acquisition and learning is tricky, but very important to keep in mind while you develop methods to acquiring your target language in an efficient manner.
    ・Beginner Vocabulary: Try and find the "Core 100" words of your target language. After you get those down, move on to the next 100 and so on. The "core" is the most commonly used words (make sure the list you get distinguishes between the 100 most commonly used spoken words and written words) Relevant resource: fluent-forever.com/the-method...
    ・Beginner Grammar: I recommend Tim Ferriss's "13 Sentences for introducing yourself to the Grammar. • Video
    SHADOWING
    ・Shadowing is simply finding a clip of a native speaker speaking and mimicking everything about their speech - pacing, intonation, cadence, and most importantly of course: pronunciation
    ・Try and shadow with video clips that show the speakers mouth so you can copy their mouth positioning.
    ・Especially if you're a beginner, do not attempt to shadow everything. For example a beginner shadowing session of an English sentence like "Hey bro I was thinking we should go grab some steak at that place around the corner when we finish work." would be like "Hey bro .... grab some... around the corner.... work." In short, you don't want to rush yourself to try and copy everything because you will mumble and that is not a good habit
    ・Be attentive of your frustration level. Shadowing is super hard and challenging. Let your goal be to slowly increase the amount of time you can sit in frustration. For example, one day you start shadowing, get super frustrated because you feel like you can't get more than 3 syllables right at a time and give up in 10 minutes. No problem. See if you can sit in that frustration for 11 minutes the next day. Don't overload yourself and turn language learning into a chore or you'll become more and more averse to doing language acquisition and shoot yourself in the foot.
    ・BEGINNERS may be especially frustrated, but even a little bit of shadowing will be very helpful. Work your way up from just 5 minutes or so.
    ・Get apps like "Video Speed Controller" for chrome so you can quickly adjust the video's speed on the fly. (Being able to quickly adjust the speed is helpful if you have one character in a TV show who mumbles and other characters who speak really clearly)
    ・RECORD yourself. This is a tip from @Dogen, and I wish I implemented this more often when I was learning Japanese, it adds more time to your practice, but really does reveal where your pronunciation is lacking.
    JAPANESE
    ・If you're trying to improve your Japanese skills, particularly pronunciation, I recommend checking out @Dogen . He's got a funny youtube channel / dogen But if you're interested in specifics on how to step up your Japanese, check out / dogen
    For Business inquiries:
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Komentáře • 9K

  • @WhatIveLearned
    @WhatIveLearned  Před 5 lety +2194

    EDIT:
    Points discussed in this video:
    [1] We improve our language skills *only* when we *acquire* language through understanding what is being said (According to Krashen).
    [2] Your brain is a massive pattern recognition device that can piece out vocabulary and grammar rules IF it gets the meaning.
    [3] Dictionaries may help you "learn" words, but they do not help you improve your language skills (though it may indirectly help you "acquire" language which would improve your language skill)
    [4] Input of content in the target language is so important because it rapidly exposes you to a wide variety of vocabulary, grammar and contextual clues for how the language works.
    [5] NO SUBTITLES IN YOUR NATIVE LANGUAGE. You can kiss any language gains goodbye if you use them. Though, subtitles in the target language can even have you learn quicker.
    [6] Speaking is NOT necessary for acquiring language. (Though it is surely necessary for pronunciation and being able to speak fluidly) As per Krashen "It means talking out loud to yourself in the car in Spanish will NOT help your Spanish ability." However, speaking can *indirectly* improve your language because you can use it to elicit more speech from speakers of your target language.
    [7] Use shadowing to improve your listening and pronunciation.
    Extra tips:
    RECOMMENDED BOOKS to get started in developing a productive approach to learning a language:
    ・Principles and Practice in Second Language Acquisition by Stephen Krashen
    ・Fluent forever by Gabriel Wyner
    ・Fluent in 3 months by Benny Lewis
    ◆I don't agree with everything said in these books. For example, Benny Lewis has some great approaches to language, but I don't agree with "Use the Language from Day 1" unless you are entirely comfortable embarrassing yourself in front of strangers. As per Krashen's Input Theory, The affective filter hypothesis states that learners' ability to acquire language is constrained if they are experiencing negative emotions such as fear or embarrassment. I totally agree with this based on my experience and think this is why "classroom language teaching" does not work. You are risking embarrassment every time the teacher calls on you and may be in fear of failing as you study the language.
    ◆Also, I do not think techniques for "memorizing" words are a good use of your time, *unless you are taking a language test.* If your aim is to learn the language to where you can understand media in that language and have enjoyable conversations, then mnemonics are not helpful. This is because they facilitate "learning" of the language and not "acquisition." For example, if someone says "Do you know what taberu means?" You can access your mnemonic of "I eat on a table [TABEru means eat!]," but if someone says to you "issho ni gohan tabenai?" you probably won't be able to rapidly comprehend this phrase and respond in a natural way.
    ◆The distinction between acquisition and learning is tricky, but very important to keep in mind while you develop methods to *acquiring* your target language in an efficient manner.
    ・Beginner Vocabulary: Try and find the "Core 100" words of your target language. After you get those down, move on to the next 100 and so on. The "core" is the most commonly used words (make sure the list you get distinguishes between the 100 most commonly used spoken words and written words) Relevant resource: fluent-forever.com/the-method/vocabulary/base-vocabulary-list/
    ・Beginner Grammar: I recommend Tim Ferriss's "13 Sentences for introducing yourself to the Grammar. czcams.com/video/dxqo47eGOLs/video.html
    SHADOWING
    ・Shadowing is simply finding a clip of a native speaker speaking and mimicking everything about their speech - pacing, intonation, cadence, and most importantly of course: pronunciation
    ・Try and shadow with video clips that show the speakers mouth so you can copy their mouth positioning.
    ・Especially if you're a beginner, do not attempt to shadow _everything._ For example a beginner shadowing session of an English sentence like "Hey bro I was thinking we should go grab some steak at that place around the corner when we finish work." would be like "Hey bro .... grab some... around the corner.... work." In short, you don't want to rush yourself to try and copy everything because you will mumble and that is not a good habit
    ・Be attentive of your frustration level. Shadowing is super hard and challenging. Let your goal be to slowly increase the amount of time you can sit in frustration. For example, one day you start shadowing, get super frustrated because you feel like you can't get more than 3 syllables right at a time and give up in 10 minutes. No problem. See if you can sit in that frustration for 11 minutes the next day. Don't overload yourself and turn language learning into a chore or you'll become more and more averse to doing language acquisition and shoot yourself in the foot.
    ・BEGINNERS may be especially frustrated, but even a little bit of shadowing will be very helpful. Work your way up from just 5 minutes or so.
    ・Keep in mind certain types of clips will be more useful to shadow than others. For example, since most people in Japan don't speak much like a newscaster or anime character at all, that's not a really good shadowing target.
    ・Get apps like "Video Speed Controller" for chrome so you can quickly adjust the video's speed on the fly. (Being able to quickly adjust the speed is especially helpful if you have one character in a TV show who mumbles and other characters who speak really clearly)
    ・RECORD yourself. This is a tip from @Dogen, and I wish I implemented this more often when I was learning Japanese, it adds more time to your practice, but really does reveal where your pronunciation is lacking.
    JAPANESE
    ・If you're trying to improve your Japanese skills, particularly pronunciation, I recommend checking out @Dogen . He's got a funny youtube channel czcams.com/users/Dogen But if you're interested in specifics on how to step up your Japanese, check out www.patreon.com/dogen
    ・JLPT - If you're aiming to pass the JLPT, don't waste any time on WRITING Kanji. It's 100% not necessary for the test (As of 2012). Which, honestly I think is a good thing, because I can get everything I want to done in Japan without being able to write a lick of Kanji. To clarify: I would say I am fluent in written Japanese, I can read newspapers, books and can type and read most Kanji. *However,* I can hardly _write_ Kanji. Then again, I don't need to. The only time I do is when I have to fill something out on a tax form or address a letter - but there's no rules against referring to your phone when filling forms in. Just make sure you know the stroke order behind Kanji.

    • @FrameByFrame96
      @FrameByFrame96 Před 5 lety +32

      Amazing video. As usual.
      However, I'm quite surprised that inspite of your excellent critical choice of your research rsources, you haven't mentioned Chris Lonsdale and his Third Ear book. It's a book that basically illustrates a very effective way to learn a language starting from the very beginning of trying to make sense of your environment until the very end when you get a language parent that helps you learn how to actually coverse in that language. And he gives very interesting and useful tips. For example, with the language parent, basically some native, s/he has to converse with you and cofirms that s/he understands you every time you say something correctly. However, if wrongly said, s/he would reformulate what you've just said but in the right way.
      One question, though, did you study Japanese at the university or at some institute or did you manage to have that certificate on your own?
      Cuz if it's on your own, only using the concepts you discussed in your video, man that's amazing!
      I have a similair story with lagnauge acquisition as well. I was born and raised speaking Arabic and learnt English at uni. Then I traveled to Hungary to resume my studies there. I couldn't make sense of what they were saying so I looked up how to learn a language from scratch and Chris Lonsdale's video came up. Since then, I've been implementing his concepts and now, I'm able to more or less hold a conversation in Hungarian :D (quite the achievment considering it's only been a year and never studied the language in uni or some private school)

    • @ikosimazaki723
      @ikosimazaki723 Před 5 lety +6

      Super helpful, definitely gonna use the techniques to teach my students!

    • @TruFlyFox
      @TruFlyFox Před 5 lety +5

      Get some sleep! Also, I use these techniques to learn languages. I gave 4...learned to different levels of proficiency but I'm planning on sticking with one for now with MASSIVE input until I'm dreaming in it. Then on to another one.

    • @Terri_2.0
      @Terri_2.0 Před 5 lety +4

      Your sleep is more important right now; thank you for the very informative video.

    • @SouthPark333Gaming
      @SouthPark333Gaming Před 5 lety +2

      Where is that lecture you showed bits of? I would love to watch that

  • @dixiiid3842
    @dixiiid3842 Před 3 lety +11524

    There is no better feeling than when a new language starts to click

    • @menaatefadly
      @menaatefadly Před 3 lety +234

      U mean...its better than sex?

    • @JohnSmith-gd8ec
      @JohnSmith-gd8ec Před 3 lety +900

      @@menaatefadly yes

    • @nodeue
      @nodeue Před 3 lety +397

      @@menaatefadly it's absolutely better than sex, better than the best sex you can imagine.

    • @deez3
      @deez3 Před 3 lety +126

      @@menaatefadly yes

    • @abdullahhamoodah3200
      @abdullahhamoodah3200 Před 3 lety +129

      @@menaatefadly ye man because I’m a virgin

  • @spanishafterhours
    @spanishafterhours Před 3 lety +11950

    People pretend to learn a language in 3-6 months, when kids are still making mistakes at age 5. Patience and dedication is the answer.

    • @EmilyKinny
      @EmilyKinny Před 3 lety +1040

      most underrated comment.... people think they've always "known" their language and so think they magically one day at the age of 2 became perfect at it. Not so, my guys. Even for your FIRST, native, language it takes 6 or more years to be "fluent" and even longer to be fluent in an "adult" way. But people expect to talk like perfect adults in their second language within a year.

    • @InsertHere
      @InsertHere Před 3 lety +494

      Remember that kids are also learning how to live, and what the hell is going on. Although they learn stuff much more easly

    • @spanishafterhours
      @spanishafterhours Před 3 lety +248

      @@EmilyKinny Exactly, it takes time, but nowadays we feel like everything must be done in a rush.

    • @spanishafterhours
      @spanishafterhours Před 3 lety +188

      @@InsertHere That is also true, hahah they are not only learning a language, they are learning everything, but still, the fact that learning a language takes time, is still true even for kids, whose learning ability is way better than that of adults.

    • @pooyamazloomi6548
      @pooyamazloomi6548 Před 3 lety +45

      One learn the language once, the rest is only differnt tongues and words

  • @john27638
    @john27638 Před 3 lety +1336

    I am currently 17 years old, not a native English speaker, and have been speaking English fluently since I was 11 just from watching a bunch of CZcams videos. Ever since I won some competitions, I have been an advocate for learning from consuming media.

    • @bestusernameever6518
      @bestusernameever6518 Před rokem +46

      This works as long as you're still within the critical period (which ends at 20).

    • @tubax926
      @tubax926 Před rokem +94

      Bro, are u me? I basically speak and write like a native (I've literally talked with strangers, and they were surprised to hear that I wasn't from the US because of my accent). Literally learned it through youtube and video games (of course, it took me like 6-7 years to reach the level of a native). Planning to do the same with German, once I get to the B1 level.

    • @gianfranco8572
      @gianfranco8572 Před rokem +2

      Nice

    • @metaphordreams378
      @metaphordreams378 Před rokem

      @@bestusernameever6518 I have heard its between 2 and puberty

    • @9000ck
      @9000ck Před rokem +1

      amazing

  • @Mohjo19
    @Mohjo19 Před 2 lety +1010

    As a Brazilian, all my knowledge about English came from everything but english classes. All the content I really liked to watch/consume back then was in english, so I did to learn it in the "hard way", watching videos without subtitles or with just the native language subs. At some point I just acquired knowledge enough that the English classes I had in school just seemed trivial, aaand here we are today.

    • @cfilgueira
      @cfilgueira Před 2 lety +92

      Literally learned English the same way. I used to consume so much content in English that eventually i didn't need subtitles in Portuguese anymore.

    • @bastianse8235
      @bastianse8235 Před rokem +13

      My case is similar like yours and also English classes becomes so easy to me (not always but in the most of the time)

    • @bepreparedforwhatscoming4975
      @bepreparedforwhatscoming4975 Před rokem +5

      @@cfilgueira how long do you think it took? 6 months? 2 years+ ?

    • @ViniciusRodriguesBR
      @ViniciusRodriguesBR Před rokem +10

      @@bepreparedforwhatscoming4975 it took me 2 years and some moths

    • @mrnarason
      @mrnarason Před rokem +45

      Every Brazilian person I know who is pretty fluent in English learn it the same way.
      I'm trying to learn portuguese kkkkkk

  • @victorgrazziani4055
    @victorgrazziani4055 Před 3 lety +9808

    Learning a new leanguage is like unlocking another part of the internet you didn't had access before

    • @ndescruzur4378
      @ndescruzur4378 Před 3 lety +205

      this!

    • @RussianWonder29
      @RussianWonder29 Před 3 lety +298

      so truee for russian !!!

    • @HolahkuTaigiTWFormosanDiplomat
      @HolahkuTaigiTWFormosanDiplomat Před 2 lety +10

      0.0

    • @Termenz1
      @Termenz1 Před 2 lety +309

      @@RussianWonder29 Are you Russian too? For me it feels like English internet is so much different than the Russian one, different tastes, different community etc.

    • @RussianWonder29
      @RussianWonder29 Před 2 lety +115

      @@Termenz1 Нет, я Францус но учу русского языка ;)

  • @Dixxi91
    @Dixxi91 Před 4 lety +12326

    In short: learn like a child would. Lots of listening with pictures and things for context, then try to mimic sounds.

    • @neruya09
      @neruya09 Před 4 lety +62

      Dixxi91 thank you so much 💕

    • @kaichpotato6156
      @kaichpotato6156 Před 4 lety +82

      thanks for the tldw

    • @maze7376
      @maze7376 Před 4 lety +61

      I love you, bye.

    • @DinosaurNick
      @DinosaurNick Před 4 lety +49

      That makes so much sense! Gracias!

    • @SirDavid290
      @SirDavid290 Před 4 lety +156

      It's literally how i learned to speak english, with Markiplier's reaction compilation.

  • @aikuisviihteenarkkipiispa8602

    I talk to myself in English all the time. It's a fun way to practise pronunciation and it helps with getting used to actually using the language for more than just watching stuff online. Making comments like this one is also really helpful for the same exact reasons after reading out loud what I've written.

    • @MysticHeather
      @MysticHeather Před rokem +29

      Your written English is fantastic!

    • @AdamOwenBrowning
      @AdamOwenBrowning Před rokem +2

      based finn

    • @Hanuuuuuuu
      @Hanuuuuuuu Před rokem +11

      I thought you're a native speaker lol

    • @gus7130
      @gus7130 Před rokem +16

      I have learned on my own skin that if you don't take the time to practice speaking and writing, you will never wake up one morning suddenly able to communicate fluently in the language. I'm aware of people who can comprehend every single word they read or hear, and someone is even able to write decently, but they simply connot speak.

    • @jessicalourenco7472
      @jessicalourenco7472 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@gus7130I feel like that... But the craziest thing about my speaking is sometimes I'm able to have a productive conversation with myself (when I'm talking alone in English 😂) but sometimes I feel unable to do it.. it's horrible.. but maybe it's part of the process...

  • @chikokishi7030
    @chikokishi7030 Před rokem +426

    Im am an english teacher in Japan with no formal english training... Im an engineer grad. But over the years, i have slowly learned this as well so my teaching is 90% focused on situational cues and understanding more than exact grammar.

    • @juleslefumiste9204
      @juleslefumiste9204 Před rokem +4

      so your students probably say 'everyone DO it'? lol

    • @chikokishi7030
      @chikokishi7030 Před rokem +79

      @@juleslefumiste9204 No, but ill be using your comment to teach "how to be a lowkey dbag online" lessons. Thanks lol

    • @FireyDeath4
      @FireyDeath4 Před rokem +2

      @@chikokishi7030 erm never gona give you up
      xd yesh

    • @chikokishi7030
      @chikokishi7030 Před rokem +25

      @@FireyDeath4 never gonna let you down buddy

    • @TheFrantastic
      @TheFrantastic Před rokem +2

      I am an aspiring English teacher, I would like to know what do you do exactly, because this video has made me doubt my choice of career and your comment gave me hope.

  • @verybarebones
    @verybarebones Před 3 lety +4022

    I learned English by playing videogames that were untranslated. All the years of English classes in middle school were useless compared to 10 hours of pokemon with a dictionary.

    • @Hanex94
      @Hanex94 Před 3 lety +98

      Same happened to me with resident evil and silent hill :D

    • @FranciscoBattistella
      @FranciscoBattistella Před 3 lety +64

      Same for me, but with Age of Empires!

    • @si-bang-sat
      @si-bang-sat Před 3 lety +51

      It was GTA San Andreas for me... with a running e-dictionary in the background!

    • @triforce_xiii
      @triforce_xiii Před 3 lety +15

      i played Resident evil by the age of 13 and learned a lot by it, same with breath of fire 2, played it at about 11 or so; now i think i am pretty decent at this language.

    • @luciosobrinho7508
      @luciosobrinho7508 Před 3 lety +18

      This way is the best way that a lot of people have to get english vocabulary

  • @adde9506
    @adde9506 Před 4 lety +8197

    "I learned English through magic, like every other baby." Word.

    • @wesnohathas1993
      @wesnohathas1993 Před 4 lety +406

      Those darn babies with their unfair advantage in language acquisition...

    • @MrEysox
      @MrEysox Před 4 lety +73

      As a baby I didn't learn English sadly...

    • @Zaefnyr
      @Zaefnyr Před 4 lety +40

      my first language isn't english and same

    • @kyrakia5507
      @kyrakia5507 Před 4 lety +67

      Eysox
      Don’t you understand?
      All babies learn English through magic, even if they live in a non-English speaking country and never meet anyone who speaks and English. Its magic.

    • @MrEysox
      @MrEysox Před 4 lety +30

      @@kyrakia5507 but I'm a muggle...

  • @nicholaswise5818
    @nicholaswise5818 Před rokem +140

    Shadowing made a lot of sense to me when I started Japanese. As a Jazz musician, I often "Lift" solos, in which I learn a solo by ear and try to match the tone, time, and other characteristics of the solo as closely as possible. Music really is a kind of language acquisition!

  • @nathanielcolbert9070
    @nathanielcolbert9070 Před rokem +161

    Conversation is also very important. I have plenty of friends that grew up with parents that spoke another language to them, but my friends only responded in English. As a result, they are able to understand everything perfectly but are unable to speak the language back because they aren’t used to thinking about responses in that language. It’s really strange, but speaking and listening skills are two separate things.

    • @us3rG
      @us3rG Před rokem +7

      I spoke three languages all my life since I was a kid but now am starting to lose one couse I rarely speak it nowadays

    • @NikeshDahal-yz1bf
      @NikeshDahal-yz1bf Před 11 měsíci

      Sad what language?

    • @nesounesouu1133
      @nesounesouu1133 Před 10 měsíci +7

      Same here ! I'm from France but I'm of Moroccan origin. My parents used to talk to me in Moroccan and I always respond in French... I understand Moroccan, but I find it a little tricky when it comes to speaking...

    • @Acro_LangLearn
      @Acro_LangLearn Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@nesounesouu1133What is Moroccan? Because you either mean: Moroccan Arabic or any of the Berber/Tamazight languages.

    • @702degrees
      @702degrees Před 4 měsíci +1

      this is receptive bilingualism!

  • @nenufae7499
    @nenufae7499 Před 5 lety +26651

    Shadowing is great technique until you learn japanese by mimicking anime and you end up speaking like jojo characters

    • @MrDadidou
      @MrDadidou Před 5 lety +3010

      tbh to be successful in life, all you need is some MUDA MUDA MUDA MUDA

    • @KAFaye-nk5tl
      @KAFaye-nk5tl Před 5 lety +392

      Nenufae lmaooo i laughed at this

    • @bvamstel9282
      @bvamstel9282 Před 5 lety +576

      KONO DIO DA ゴゴゴゴゴゴゴ

    • @rizkyanuar
      @rizkyanuar Před 5 lety +415

      NANI!?

    • @makarlock
      @makarlock Před 5 lety +395

      Yare yare daze

  • @finbar21
    @finbar21 Před 5 lety +9598

    By watching Star Wars learned a language I did

  • @Nosttromo
    @Nosttromo Před rokem +68

    I am a natural portuguese speaker, and I learned english without noticing it, through a method that this video basically described almost perfectly step by step. I had english classes at school, and learned some things about the structure, and many words in english are similar to portuguese, because english takes a lot from latin. For example, "prepare" in portuguese means "prepare" in english. It's that similar.
    My dad bought me a PS2 game called Ace Combat 5 and I started playing it. I didn't understand a thing about anything so I started blasting planes, but I got stuck at a particular mission. At this time, I started looking up what I should do in the mission, and started paying attention to everything, without understanding anything, of course. Then, I started paying attention to the words I knew, together with the words that I thought similar to my natural language, and then deduced the meaning of the rest of the words, based on context. Once in a while, some word's meaning would get confusing and contradictory, so I looked it up on a dictionary. Not an english to portuguese dictionary, an english dictionary, that tells the meaning of words in english. Usually the same cycle would repeat 2 or 3 times, until I found something that would make the entire chain click, and then i would learn not only my target word, but many other similar ones.
    When I started playing the game, I didn't understand a thing. The campaign lasts for 5 hours, and by the end of it, I didn't need the dictionary anymore. Of course, i didn't learn everything in 5 hours, beause I would fail missions a lot and repeat others to learn the context and plot.
    It's so curious to see the video describing very precisely the things that I did alone by myself. Needless to say, it worked.
    I'm now learning japanese because I like to watch a lot of anime. And it's going through the same process.

  • @SparklesNJazz
    @SparklesNJazz Před 3 lety +16

    when i was in Greece, i hardly knew any, but this little girl came up to me who knew zero English and started talking to me. by the end of our conversation i knew the words for milk, cup, and table. one of my best memories, and i realize now, taught me everything i need to know about language.

  • @user-nf9xc7ww7m
    @user-nf9xc7ww7m Před 3 lety +2257

    Dyslexia is fun too. I kept calling my teacher 생선님 instead of 선생님. She was wondering why I kept calling her the "honourable fish" instead of "(honourable) teacher" 😋

    • @sonofthepatient1714
      @sonofthepatient1714 Před 3 lety +171

      I'm not even gonna lie,this made my day😂😂😂😂

    • @erikamiglioranza1559
      @erikamiglioranza1559 Před 3 lety +7

      ahahahaha 😆

    • @dywsliws
      @dywsliws Před 3 lety +4

      Lmaoo this also made my day 😂

    • @butterflyexists
      @butterflyexists Před 3 lety +35

      honourable... fish...
      that’s hilarious

    • @default632
      @default632 Před 3 lety +32

      Yeah Hangul has this weakness. Japanese doesn't do this and make you learn a lot of different symbols for each sound. Even then there are similar looking ones -.-

  • @thatredheaddan5809
    @thatredheaddan5809 Před 3 lety +3787

    I think this is basically how I gained most of my knowledge in English. I would just consume every bit of American media I could find during middle and high school. I still remember how I mostly didn’t understand about 40% of the words but overtime I learned the meaning only by context.
    Turns out, now I can’t give u a precise translation in my mother language because I never learned it. In my head certain words are saved like a feeling of what the word actually means.

    • @MrBombSTI
      @MrBombSTI Před 3 lety +418

      Same here, I struggle to translate words from english into german directly since I dont know the direct translation a lot of the time, usually I give a few examples to describe in which context a word is used and mention synonyms

    • @thatredheaddan5809
      @thatredheaddan5809 Před 3 lety +73

      tahjera robinson I guess, counting from the beginning I started learning English in elementary school, around 15 years. Now I would consider my English to be quite fluent but it changes over time depending on how much I speak in real life.
      Although I can’t really count the first six years or so in school, cause I wasn’t really invested in learning anything.... sadly

    • @thatredheaddan5809
      @thatredheaddan5809 Před 3 lety +14

      NBFGTA4 oh that’s so true! Plus German media, in my eyes, became kind of spoiled. Too much pretentious behavior, superficial content or the typical “Assi“ (short for asocial, but as a very derogatory term) stuff, when talking about television. Not saying that American Media is free of all that stuff but it‘s a foreign culture to me so I’m not so judging or can just look over it

    • @Pvemaster2
      @Pvemaster2 Před 3 lety +5

      @@thatredheaddan5809 I had the same when I told someone I was watching Neo Magazin Royale for German language practice, like I don't really get the "level" of the content anyway, I was just using it for listening/understanding purposes. They made sure to tell me it "wasn't their preferred thing to watch" lal. Now I binge this channel called bushfunkistan cus I really like mushroom stuff and it's a great "context" way of learning while someone's describing characteristics or whatever

    • @Hanex94
      @Hanex94 Před 3 lety +55

      Understanding a language and translating seems like two different things to me, sometimes I try to do that in my home with my family (spanish speakers), but always find myself using all my brainpower and failing in my head like 4 times before giving a proper translation

  • @Sugarglidergirl101
    @Sugarglidergirl101 Před rokem +147

    Moving to Japan through a language school was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made. Never felt more free in my life. I was a pretty sheltered kid and this was my first time ever being away from family longer than like two weeks maybe. And going from a small town in the southern states of America to living in Tokyo was so exciting. My life back home seems bland and boring now.

    • @mobaplayer307
      @mobaplayer307 Před rokem +9

      How does one get into a language school!? i’m trying to do something similar when i get out of the marines but for portuguese!

    • @eleanorgates3700
      @eleanorgates3700 Před 8 měsíci

      how long did u go for? and did u go after highschool or college?

    • @Sugarglidergirl101
      @Sugarglidergirl101 Před 8 měsíci

      @@mobaplayer307 I just found one I liked and sent an application! I actually visited the school in person first during a trip there!

    • @Sugarglidergirl101
      @Sugarglidergirl101 Před 8 měsíci

      @@eleanorgates3700 I was in the language school for a year and a half. Went back home temporarily to see family and right now I live in Japan.
      I went after university (technically not right after, I worked in my studied field for a while first.

  • @harktischris
    @harktischris Před rokem +13

    I did a ton of flash cards at the beginning, basically just to scaffold my way up to the point where I *could* start consuming media in my target language (German) without having to look up every word. Then language "practice" became listening to podcasts, watching shows (consciously trying to avoid subtitles when I could), playing video games in German, reading books (esp ones that I knew I would enjoy, like the German Calvin & Hobbes), etc. It felt really effective, but felt like, i dunno, "dirty", given that my german grammar worksheet book was going unused. Glad to find this video that puts words to what I was dancing around, and even provides some studies validating this approach towards focusing on input! (I took some tests and I'm apparently now ~B2 overall in German, w/ C1 when it comes to reading/writing. Compared to years of me failing to learn French in school, focusing on input is the only approach that has actually worked for me. I was beginning to comprehend content well before I even know what grammatical structures were at play)

  • @SuperOnigiripanda
    @SuperOnigiripanda Před 3 lety +4594

    “And in two years I was able to pass the highest Japanese proficiency test”
    -throws all my textbooks out the window-

    • @nicolelindsay2098
      @nicolelindsay2098 Před 3 lety +169

      Same, I've spent two years in university and I'm not that level. And now people tell me

    • @bobhoskins8306
      @bobhoskins8306 Před 3 lety +112

      I wouldn't bother. Passing the JLPT N1 isn't as scary as you think. There's no speaking component.

    • @dererlkonig7428
      @dererlkonig7428 Před 3 lety +69

      I was really surprised when he said it.N1 is 10 000 words 2000 kanji+grammar.It's insane.

    • @pao-sol
      @pao-sol Před 3 lety +45

      Looks like I’m wasting my time with genki and anki :(
      But how do you learn kanji with this method?

    • @alfredomulleretxeberria4239
      @alfredomulleretxeberria4239 Před 3 lety +69

      @@pao-sol Read at least 3 hours a day every day. Also, don't learn kanji. Just learn to recognize them as squiggles inside of words.

  • @alnatex9815
    @alnatex9815 Před 3 lety +3086

    If you're still very new to a language and consuming media is too overwhelming try starting with media geared towards children. Especially programs that are ment to teach native kids their own language. They have lots of visual clues, easy plots to follow and a simple vocabulary.
    That's something one of my English teacher did with us in school.

    • @coralpuppytin1139
      @coralpuppytin1139 Před rokem +148

      I tried doing this but it was just dubbed Peppa pig, too much of an obnoxious show for me. I’m trying to find something else

    • @drvlnn
      @drvlnn Před rokem +24

      watch a news is helpful

    • @koolooc726
      @koolooc726 Před rokem +248

      @@coralpuppytin1139 dont watch cartoons aimed at infants, lighthearted simple cartoons such as the ones in Cartoon Network are better

    • @unicorn111
      @unicorn111 Před rokem +26

      Dora the explorer for the 🏆 win

    • @KR_Kosmik
      @KR_Kosmik Před rokem +51

      We watched a lot of German SpongeBob in my German class

  • @fyradur
    @fyradur Před 2 lety +49

    It's so cringe when some language learners say things like "you can't learn Japanese by just watching anime", but they don't realise that most of us non-native speakers of English in the comment section acquired it by just watching Cartoons and CZcams.
    (the reason why most weebs don't know Japanese is because L1 subtitles completely hinders language acquisition)

    • @sazukegu
      @sazukegu Před 2 lety +3

      And English is super easy too.

    • @t.ist666
      @t.ist666 Před 2 lety

      @@sazukegu Easy to learn, hard to master.

    • @Krasses
      @Krasses Před 2 lety +2

      Some might be able to do it. I didn't learn through anime but I learned it through dramas and a shitload of anki jpod101 and stacks of A4 paper writing characters every single day.
      You might be able to learn phrases and repeated words in anime but for the grammar things? Yeah no. Listening is one thing, forming sentences in your head is another thing

    • @fyradur
      @fyradur Před 2 lety +2

      @@Krasses Read the referenced studies in the literature by professor Stephen Krashen. Grammar drilling does not help one in the path to fluent comprehension. Hundreds of hours of comprehensible input is the only path to true fluent comprehension. "I before e, except after c" is not a rule, it is a pattern. You can only learn patterns and their exceptions from examples.
      I know it sounds unitiutive that just mindlessly consuming content leads anywhere, but it is supported by the literature and I can anecdotally confirm this as a non-native speaker of English.

    • @Krasses
      @Krasses Před 2 lety

      @@fyradur English is not my native either. Japanese is probably my 4th. But yeah I'll look into the guy

  • @racoon_in_ankhmorpork
    @racoon_in_ankhmorpork Před rokem +114

    It’s funny-I clicked on this video thinking “oh, this’ll be useful for my Japanese studies!”, and it turns out the example language is exactly that!
    Thanks for all the tips: some of it I knew intuitively (I learned many languages at a young age, so the importance of acquisition was something I already knew about), but I gained insight on many other things I had previously overlooked. Great video ;)

  • @smokesparkdragonfly1368
    @smokesparkdragonfly1368 Před 4 lety +4252

    I have two native frech speaking friends, and I like to parrot them under my breath to get the feel of the language. So one day I parrot a word a little too loud and they hear me. They look horrified, but don't tell me what the word means, so I repeat it. Over and over, I pester them to try and get the awnser. Then I go to french class and ask my teacher, who politely informs that I am saying the f word

  • @ClemensAlive
    @ClemensAlive Před 5 lety +7287

    After school I learned english by just watching CZcams and Netflix in english, and forced my brain to learn it.
    My thought was: "If a baby can do it, why shouldn't I?"
    So..7 years later my english is far from perfect. But fluent enough to make serious business conversations with international partners.
    (I never visited an english speaking country for more than 1 day.)

    • @NicolaiSyvertsen
      @NicolaiSyvertsen Před 5 lety +399

      English being the defacto world language makes it so easy as well. I got massively exposed to it through computers back in the early 90s and being online and interacting with people from all over the world. I'm trying to learn spanish now and started out with the Duolingo app which has been fun. I need to start reading some spanish language news sites and try out some of those duolingo podcasts but I feel like I don't know enough spanish yet to understand much. Norwegian is my mother tongue.

    • @emmamemma4162
      @emmamemma4162 Před 5 lety +156

      It was so difficult for me to start understanding what people where saying in Spanish, @@NicolaiSyvertsen. What helped me a lot was watching Spanish series with subtitles in Spanish. There is an educational series called "Extra Espanol" that can be found on YT. Watch with subtitles first and then re-watch without subtitles, after this you will have an easier time with regular movies and series.

    • @Isaac-cq6ns
      @Isaac-cq6ns Před 5 lety +6

      Did u watch with subtitles

    • @meat.
      @meat. Před 5 lety +37

      ClemensAlive babies learn language differently than teens/adults so not really a great route to take without subtitles lol

    • @michaelshultz2199
      @michaelshultz2199 Před 5 lety +49

      ClemensAlive your English seems perfect to be honest 👌

  • @tillie_brn
    @tillie_brn Před rokem +24

    Having a positive experience while learning is such a huge factor. I learnt English mostly by watching TV shows, CZcamsrs, and looking up the translations of my favorite English-language songs. I was fluent within 3 years. Meanwhile, I took German classes for 10 years. The first two years I had horrible, abusive teachers, and the rest of the time even with better teachers it was always all about learning grammar rules and lists of vocabulary by heart. I never got past a mediocre intermediate level. These days I've been into a lot of Korean media, and surprise surprise, although I've only been actively trying to learn the language for a few months, I'm already starting to pick it up much more naturally than I ever did German. I guess this applies to anything you want to learn, not just languages, but I find it fascinating the way our brains just refuse to absorb information if we view it in a negative light.

  • @avgchoobafan
    @avgchoobafan Před rokem +98

    I can confidently say that this is one of the most time consuming but more solid ways to learn a new language.
    Just look at me, I studied Tourism in school but never got past the barrier of giving directions and receiving basic orders from customers, but at some point you just 'know' the language you want to learn and the more you consume from it you're just getting better at it.
    I'm a native Spanish speaker but I can say I can interact with pretty much anyone who speaks English, although my pronunciation is not the best, in text at least I think I'm indistinguishable from a native speaker, almost everything self taught, or better said, learned through comprehensible input.

  • @sallybradshaw4576
    @sallybradshaw4576 Před 3 lety +1427

    The "positive learning experience" thing is honestly so underrated. I had an awful French teacher who was really rude and condescending, and every person in that class now has an aversion to learning French, which is really a pity.

    • @herp_derpingson
      @herp_derpingson Před 3 lety +92

      " French ... who was ... condescending" thats redundant ;)

    • @sallybradshaw4576
      @sallybradshaw4576 Před 3 lety +110

      @@herp_derpingson I should clarify that he was an American who taught French, not a teacher from France. But your comment made me chortle.

    • @mimihua2
      @mimihua2 Před 3 lety +21

      Same tho. I now have an aversion to french because of my French teacher

    • @viktorreznov1548
      @viktorreznov1548 Před 3 lety +16

      Interesting.. i had a similar experience with my french teacher. Maybe languages really do have a character.

    • @user-up7nb6id1f
      @user-up7nb6id1f Před 3 lety +28

      @@sallybradshaw4576 “chortle” haven’t seen this word in a while

  • @zissler1
    @zissler1 Před 4 lety +3966

    Took me a while to finally realize he wasn’t talking about learning c++

    • @grendo45
      @grendo45 Před 4 lety +279

      Maybe reading tons of source code and understanding what it does also works well for programming languages

    • @zjohnson870
      @zjohnson870 Před 4 lety +212

      grendo44 or just copy from stack overflow

    • @OrangeC7
      @OrangeC7 Před 4 lety +75

      @@zjohnson870 That's what everyone does anyways

    • @Para_dachs
      @Para_dachs Před 4 lety +19

      Which steps do you guys suggest for learning a language on a c++ level?

    • @Flipoutpk2015
      @Flipoutpk2015 Před 4 lety +16

      How high r u my dude

  • @dl5641
    @dl5641 Před 2 lety +43

    Holy crap, I already speak Japanese but that example between just having text and a spoken sample vs. having basically a step-by-step demonstration of what you are referring to is night and day! I can definitely see where that is super helpful in acquiring a language at any point in fluency.

  • @lizannedsouza1838
    @lizannedsouza1838 Před 2 lety +16

    When I was learning French, only watching shows with French subtitles was super helpful. Thanks so much for this incredible video!

    • @rixille
      @rixille Před 8 měsíci +1

      Vous avez raison. Les jeux videos et livres m'aider aussi. I'm not perfect but it seems to be working.

  • @aninhagamez
    @aninhagamez Před 3 lety +1625

    The biggest proof that I'm improving in my 2nd language is that I understood almost everything of this video, even though my native language is Portuguese

    • @chaeaddicted6346
      @chaeaddicted6346 Před 3 lety +39

      mitou

    • @Kim-rw6tz
      @Kim-rw6tz Před 3 lety +79

      same. i haven't attended classes. just some verrry basic lessens in school (alphabet and some simple grammars.) but bcz of spending a loooot of time in youtube and watching korean and thai series with eng subtitles, now i understand 99% of youtube's eng videos. and bcz of commenting and chatting with people in comment sections my writing also improved a looot.

    • @chaeaddicted6346
      @chaeaddicted6346 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Kim-rw6tz on CZcams*

    • @Kim-rw6tz
      @Kim-rw6tz Před 3 lety +4

      @@chaeaddicted6346 thanks for correcting me. >.

    • @chaeaddicted6346
      @chaeaddicted6346 Před 3 lety +16

      @@Kim-rw6tz youre welcome also youre so smart cause self studying is tought, wish you luck keep on improving :)

  • @flutterbyfisto
    @flutterbyfisto Před 3 lety +717

    In short:
    See like a baby
    Listen like a baby
    Talk like a baby
    Learn like a baby
    BE the-
    Lets not be too ahead of ourselves now~

  • @vannedotdash7749
    @vannedotdash7749 Před 2 lety +49

    This was so peaceful to watch. Because this is what I did to learn English. And that's what I'm trying to do to learn Japanese now. It's a lot of fun, and I'm glad there's more people learning about this.

    • @MrWackydoodles
      @MrWackydoodles Před 2 měsíci

      y fluent now?

    • @vannedotdash7749
      @vannedotdash7749 Před 2 měsíci

      @@MrWackydoodles in Japanese? Not yet, I'm taking it slow 😂 admittedly I haven't really studied in a while, this comment reminded me of it, thank you!

    • @MrWackydoodles
      @MrWackydoodles Před 2 měsíci

      @@vannedotdash7749 haha! I'm 2 months in and I'm starting to doubt myself If I'll ever learn it lol

  • @temar_tinez
    @temar_tinez Před 3 lety +20

    Dude your ideas where in my brain but I couldn't put them into words. This is exactly what I am going through. I'm studying Japanese and found the interactions with native speakers helped me more with actual vocabulary and the way to use them than just memorizing them from the course. Cheers

  • @anastasiadolgaya9618
    @anastasiadolgaya9618 Před 3 lety +2134

    I agree that input is crucial - I, for one, was able to learn English by watching CZcams and reading books, with no actual speaking practice with native speakers. However, I'd like to add that simply talking out loud to myself (I promise, I'm not crazy) helped me to feel more confident in my ability to express my ideas in English. So I wouldn't say it's completely useless. I still like doing these lengthy monologues in foreign languages haha idk why it's never in my native language

    • @proverbalizer
      @proverbalizer Před 2 lety +135

      Definitely. If you want to be able to speak a language you're definitely gonna have to speak. I guess you could "learn" or "understand" the game of basketball by watching NBA games, reading books, listening to coaches...but if you never actually pick up the ball and practice shooting....

    • @tamaszalanyi6316
      @tamaszalanyi6316 Před 2 lety +11

      Haha, I can totally relate to that!

    • @egyptianpools
      @egyptianpools Před 2 lety +61

      omg i thought i was the only one! one day i was talking to myself while in the shower and my dad overheard me. later he asked me "who were you talking to?" and i said " ummm no one? do you not do that when you're alone?" and he looked at me weird lol

    • @JamesKelly89
      @JamesKelly89 Před 2 lety +43

      You're not crazy. I talk to myself in Spanish all the time. It seems to have helped a lot actually.

    • @thedeegeesaga
      @thedeegeesaga Před rokem +31

      Production, if you desire active skills (speaking and writing) is key, and talking to yourself is production, you organize the ideas on your mind quicker and quicker if you keep talking to yourself, shadowing, etc.
      Only input is a myth, otherwise there would be much more people better at languages.

  • @i-dunnowhatimtalkingaboutbut
    @i-dunnowhatimtalkingaboutbut Před 4 lety +2037

    I initially thought I learned some German words at 2:53 and was hyped about it, until I realized I'm a native German speaker :(

    • @thomas.thomas
      @thomas.thomas Před 4 lety +86

      Nein nein, die paar Wörter haben einfach dir das ganze deutsche Vokabular beigebracht.

    • @liamthom7127
      @liamthom7127 Před 4 lety +30

      Thomas S. *haben ihn ein Deutscher gemacht*

    • @aan2538
      @aan2538 Před 4 lety +3

      Thomas S. Ziben ziben ei lu lu ziben ziben eintz

    • @rebeccan8290
      @rebeccan8290 Před 4 lety +78

      Same though, I was like woooaaaah, I understand and then I was like wait, I am German....

    • @gjmarin2004
      @gjmarin2004 Před 4 lety +7

      😂🤣

  • @elizabethmonroe2290
    @elizabethmonroe2290 Před rokem +7

    The most powerful learning ive done as I start learning Japanese, is to pick the words i learn from the media i enjoy. I take a word from a song i like, look up it's meaning, bonus points if i can find where someone broke the word down to it's individual ideas that explain why a word means what it means. From that point on, that word acts like hook at the end of a fishing line, where if im zoned out, it grabs my attention and my mind translates, or at least makes it's best effort to translate, it without needing to intentionally, and manually, translate it. I find that this helps me to learn the word as it's own word, rather than as a translation to an english word i know, though ive also spent time intentionally learning the very few words i do know in a way that tries to avoid translations, and just links the word to the 'feeling', object, or meaning of the word. Now, when i hear one of those words, my mind doesnt translate it automatically, yet i can "sense" the meaning of the word in the same way as i just know what words mean in my native language (albeit, the mental connections feel much much weaker than i have with those of my native language)
    What I plan to do is learn a few words a day, especially those that pop up in songs and when i zone out to music, i just focus on keeping up with the speaker, making sure i hear each mora without focusing too much on any words i recognize, then working on comprehension overtime while keeping up

  • @agalva100
    @agalva100 Před rokem +18

    I've tried to learn german for a while now. Maybe 8-9 years. It's an on and off thing for me. I always get discouraged because in classes the focus on grammar is too much and German grammar is a tough one. But lately I've seen improvements by attending a class where there's more to it than grammar. We listen, we speak and we focus on situations. True, I still need to review grammar but I feel a lot less pressure because I know it's okay if I make a mistake.

  • @kannan3801
    @kannan3801 Před 5 lety +1026

    1.learn through context
    Movies
    Shows
    2.maximise input
    3.listen and shadow

    • @allina15
      @allina15 Před 5 lety

      10x

    • @mikesaunders8411
      @mikesaunders8411 Před 5 lety +20

      Perhaps after shadowing record your voice and allow a native speaker to correct you thats the final test of fluency !!

    • @Luis-io6fb
      @Luis-io6fb Před 4 lety +1

      @@lorax121323
      Where can I get raw manga for free?

    • @AmiciCherno
      @AmiciCherno Před 4 lety

      Kannan Ravinther maximize*

    • @magnificentsven1694
      @magnificentsven1694 Před 4 lety +5

      Maximise is fine for UK/ex-USA spelling

  • @RachelleAshmanWells
    @RachelleAshmanWells Před 4 lety +1715

    so you're telling me that continuing to watch korean dramas nonstop will indeed help me in my efforts to learn korean? i am pleased with this information.

    • @Jack-lc9zu
      @Jack-lc9zu Před 4 lety +334

      Without subtittles tho

    • @banhbae
      @banhbae Před 4 lety +305

      have to avoid historical dramas though since they use outdated korean to fit with the time period (imagine someone learning english from a shakespearean play). which sucks since i love historical dramas 😭

    • @Jack-lc9zu
      @Jack-lc9zu Před 4 lety +33

      @@banhbae Thanks..I didn't know that. But yeah in my country they use the old language to. It makes sense

    • @litchtheshinigami8936
      @litchtheshinigami8936 Před 4 lety +22

      Tsubasa Datenshi eh i prefer ones that are in this time but have spiritual or fantasy esque undertones. I recently watched hi bye mama on netflix and I ADORED that show. Sucks it came to an end though now i’m watching itaewon class wich though isn’t exactly spiritual er fantasy esque i still really enjoy.

    • @meghanagk2578
      @meghanagk2578 Před 3 lety +52

      I actually did learn Korean that way. Pay more attention to words and how they're used and maybe study a little about them.

  • @user-jr1vl3do5b
    @user-jr1vl3do5b Před rokem +188

    As a Ukrainian, I know perfectly both Ukrainian and Russian. But I never spoke or wrote in Russian. My entire family speaks Ukrainian, I use it at school, but some of my friends speak Russian and I was watching a lot of films and videos in Russian and reading books. Despite the fact I have almost never spoken Russian, I speak it perfectly. I have much more experience in speaking or writing in English or German, but I speak this languages much worse than Russian. So, it is not really obligatory to practice speaking. On the other hand, I have 16 years experience of listening and reading in Russian. The question is: which way is more efficient? I've been learning English for 3 years and I feel more comfortable when I speak it. I can't imagine how much time would it have taken if I had decided to learn it by Netflix, but I don't believe I would have understood such phrases like "to be used to doing" without simply learning the meaning. I agree it can help to improve your language, but just without any level of the language you can't learn a lot from it. Just imagine how would you understand "I did it yesterday" without knowing the word "yesterday" and Past Simple. How could I understand it is even Past Tense?

    • @karynatheeducator8727
      @karynatheeducator8727 Před rokem +7

      саме так)

    • @derp195
      @derp195 Před rokem +15

      I'm not sure you'll find anyone who thinks that you should learn a language by only watching Netflix - more that its the most efficient way to spent most of your time. Of course you should supplement it with other tools.
      Edit: he actually makes this same point at about 8:15

    • @axk1
      @axk1 Před rokem +2

      Yet children learn it somehow without any explanation. For adults it just should be much more difficult.

    • @khaenrialorewhen
      @khaenrialorewhen Před rokem +11

      I tried learning English through usual methods many times, but it didn't stick. I learned it pretty much in a year just by watching everything in English.

    • @derp195
      @derp195 Před rokem +8

      @@khaenrialorewhen What kind of foundation did you have? I've just started learning Japanese and I can't imagine I would learn much by just watching Japanese television.

  • @gierasole
    @gierasole Před rokem +7

    so here's something i've learned. My best friend through my school life was from Colombia, living in Canada. He spoke spanish with his mom at home around me almost all the time, and i've learned that I am almost fluent now through minimal learning as an adult because I'm already used to how the language sounds already (and I also just retained a lot of what I heard)

  • @sMowlad
    @sMowlad Před 3 lety +7242

    Bilinguals be like: "We learned 2 languages through magic!"

    • @xofantaxoo4690
      @xofantaxoo4690 Před 3 lety +695

      As a bilingual I agree

    • @orangekoi
      @orangekoi Před 3 lety +198

      That's kinda true

    • @hazensze4490
      @hazensze4490 Před 3 lety +207

      Damn my English is kinda off cuz I stopped using it for about three years when I was 11. I guess I'm just a half bilingual :(

    • @angrydoodle8919
      @angrydoodle8919 Před 3 lety +156

      I learned English through watching only spongebob and by talking only English in my school for five months.There was a program to learn English in 6th grade. The first five months of school, we would do it in French and we would use it to learn all that we have to learn during the year and in the last five months, the only class we had was English class and we were not allowed to speak another language. The only time we could talk French was to be understood by younger students.

    • @dq8431
      @dq8431 Před 3 lety +100

      Idk how I learned English when basically all my family doesn’t know it or prefers Spanish

  • @chewygami8781
    @chewygami8781 Před 4 lety +3811

    "you dont need to use your mouth to lea-"
    **Celebrates in social anxiety**

  • @thetimetravellingtailor6323

    Thank you so much for this video! I have been trying to learn Japanese for a long time but because of various life events it put a bit of a block in the way of traditional language learning. A lot of the points you made really resonated with me when I thought about what language has actually stuck in my head - I know a lot of more casual ways of speaking because I picked them up from listening to Japanese people talk and there are some of these phrases where I fully understand how to use them but I don't think I could really translate it to English.

  • @e-genieclimatique
    @e-genieclimatique Před rokem +5

    in brief:
    This video discusses language learning and highlights four key points that are important for acquiring a new language efficiently:
    1-Acquiring language through context
    2-Maximizing input
    3-Practicing listening and pronunciation simultaneously
    4-Ensuring a positive learning experience
    The video emphasizes the concept of comprehensible input, which means understanding messages through context rather than explicit explanations. To acquire a language effectively, it is crucial to expose oneself to a lot of content in the target language, such as media, books, or conversations. Deliberate learning can trigger language acquisition when combined with context.
    Watching television without subtitles can be helpful, as a study showed that watching a show in the target language with subtitles in the same language resulted in a 17% improvement in language ability. The video also highlights the technique called "shadowing," which involves mimicking native speakers' pronunciation and intonation to improve one's own pronunciation and ability to recognize phonemes in natural language.

  • @KevWebsz
    @KevWebsz Před 5 lety +2490

    Apple Brad Pitt
    Got it
    Moving to Japan.

  • @junsuidearu
    @junsuidearu Před 3 lety +1224

    MY JAPANESE TEACHER MAKES US DO SHADOWING ALL THE TIME!!! Makes so much sense now. However, we had some Japanese students in a exchange and they all said we spoke like anime characters... :,)

    • @mpatel7080
      @mpatel7080 Před 3 lety +31

      If only I could speak like an anime character! :(

    • @exhhhhh_b
      @exhhhhh_b Před 3 lety +231

      @@mpatel7080 nah u dont wanna do the moan gasp konichiwa and "B-BAKA!" when trying to get your bread in japan

    • @junsuidearu
      @junsuidearu Před 3 lety +50

      @@mpatel7080 hehe the japanese made fun of us xD

    • @yiumyoumsan6997
      @yiumyoumsan6997 Před 3 lety +24

      @@mpatel7080 Please don't

    • @mpatel7080
      @mpatel7080 Před 3 lety +2

      @@junsuidearu ok.(-_-)

  • @wiscgaloot
    @wiscgaloot Před rokem +19

    I've tried for over 3 years to learn Korean and in a few days I'll be making my fourth trip there. I learn most languages very easily, but I struggle with Korean because there are SO many different ways of saying the same thing. I know a few dozen words and phrases, but if I try watching "Extraordinary Attorney Woo" without subtitles I will only recognize maybe 1 word in 50.

    • @MrSuperNickJonas
      @MrSuperNickJonas Před rokem +2

      Rigth? All the different word endings drive me crazy. I'm learning for almost two years on and off and I'm still feeling like an absolute beginner.

    • @wiscgaloot
      @wiscgaloot Před rokem

      @@MrSuperNickJonas If you come up with any tricks for getting around this, please let me know!

    • @user-qb7lu5ny5r
      @user-qb7lu5ny5r Před rokem +4

      I don't know exactly where I've heard it, but it said that it's better to watch reality shows than dramas. Esp. dramas that have "formal settings" like court or business settings. In reality shows, they use colloquial which is more useful esp. for beginners.

    • @MrSuperNickJonas
      @MrSuperNickJonas Před rokem

      @챌 sounds easier than it is 😩 do you have any "input" you can recommend? Sometimes it's overwhelming to see how much there is.

  • @amarug
    @amarug Před rokem +93

    I think the importance of "input" can't be overstated, except perhaps by saying "it's ALL input". If you don't also start practicing from the start, you will miss out on organically developing the "synthesis" part of the language, practicing the sounds and intonations that are most likely different, and possibly most importantly, you overcome that "barrier" it takes to put yourself out there and sound terrible, early on. I tried the all-input method with Spanish and sure, I do understand it almost perfectly, but I cannot speak much at all and since the divergence between understanding and speaking has evolved so far, I lost all motivation and abandoned the study. Later I started Japanese and told myself to keep up the input as high as possible but additionally, I decided that I will try and practice using the first three words that I learned already in "real life" and searched for language exchange partners. The thing is, if you don't practice speaking the language from the start, the "barrier" to start speaking just grows and grows, because you have a lot of "potential sentences" that you might be able to squeeze out somehow, but the feedback on how your newly acquired language lands on others (best with natives) is completely missing. Then you get overwhelmed and stressed and you can't talk at all. If you start practicing crappy sentences with an exchange partner early on, you know how your sentences "land" (are they even understood etc). Building up this experience is of utmost importance. The advice I have heard a few times now, esp. from MattvsJapan to not speak the language for like 2 years at all, is one of the most bizarre language-learning "tips" I have ever heard. Speaking of the Japanese learning community, I think people like Matt and also Dogen (unintentionally) have inflicted tremendous damage by somehow normalizing the twisted idea of "you need to sound exactly like a native or you can't even be considered speaking the language". The vast majority of people will never have the time to tank hours of their lives every day for a decade or more dedicated to learning a language as these guys have done. Most of us will just want to communicate and have some fun with it or even have functional use of it during travel, business etc. Many (including myself at the start) can get insecure and demotivated by this.

    • @firstlast-wg2on
      @firstlast-wg2on Před rokem +9

      Completely agreed, and I don’t understand how he can say it’s not necessary when he himself was learning Japanese, which has pitch-based pronunciation (at times)… I feel as though I remember as a kid first learning language, and we just pronounced the alphabet, you know? And in any language, it’s so important to create those utter basics, same goes for music, another form of language. You learn the notes, the basic rhythms, maybe build into the scales, subdivided rhythms and from there building chords and polyrhythms, etc.

    • @elishevabarenbaum5319
      @elishevabarenbaum5319 Před rokem +1

      Agree. You're building up a perfectionist psychological barrier which becomes harder to overcome as the gap between your aural and oral abilities grows.

  • @X33Ultras0und
    @X33Ultras0und Před 3 lety +2502

    Did I just buy a language course by accident or something? This seems like knowledge you have to pay for.

    • @correctionguy7632
      @correctionguy7632 Před 3 lety +37

      what do you mean? MattvsJapan and Ikenna all cover this and more on their youtube.

    • @luxraider5384
      @luxraider5384 Před 3 lety +56

      people spent their time creating this textbook so it is normal to pay for it. It is still better than learning a language from scratch by only listenning to native people. Theorically you can learn everything by yourself but what you're buying is not knowledge, it is the time to learn the knowledge that can be reduced by buying the book

    • @user-hf6jm4tv2v
      @user-hf6jm4tv2v Před 3 lety +7

      If you need a little bit of aid but not from textbooks as they do view languages such as japanese as if it's a European language when it's far, far from any sort of european language in reality but from independent sources that actually understand what the Japanese language is structurally then it's in option but even this particular independent source I mentioned also says that you need to be immersed in the language, watch things that you enjoy in the language in order to get something out of it, they take modern day knowledge into account.
      Cure dolly is the great source I mentioned as it actually helpful, say if you're mind cannot absorb the language particularly as consistently as people who can understand 20% of the language then after a second viewing end up understanding up to 30-40% afterwards, basically they have an approach for those with a lower tolerance to ambiguity though if you particularly do have a high tolerance for ambiguity and that it's working for you then they say continue on with what you're doing as that is actually working well for you. A "whatever size fits you the best" kind of line of thought.

    • @alaskawoolf3737
      @alaskawoolf3737 Před 3 lety +10

      You don't need to pay for knowledge if you have internet. Somewhere, somebody is sharing it for free. Just look in the right places.

    • @X33Ultras0und
      @X33Ultras0und Před 3 lety +2

      @@alaskawoolf3737 You are right.
      Only thing is, those who have more money (the ones you pay for) take all the attention and Google / YT search space. So it is really difficult.

  • @stavrostziounis4756
    @stavrostziounis4756 Před 5 lety +1274

    That's exactly how I learned and became fluent at English, from CZcams. Even though I was studying English as a lesson I never got much out of it and never really studied. Looking at my old textbooks now even from the proficiency level I know almost all the words and can perform very high on the grammar and other exercises even though I hardly studied for the class. I've noticed that it is kinda hard for me to translate from English back to my native tongue and that makes me think that when learning a second language you are not associating the words with your native tongue words but with the concept itself.

    • @etofok
      @etofok Před 5 lety +138

      haha i have the exact same experience. Several years ago when I was on Advanced level I couldn't translate "on the fly" AT ALL, it'd take me unpractical amounts of time to do so. Granted I improved on that matter but yes I came to the same conclusion = I got my 2nd language separated from my native and the words/phrases have no "bridges" so to speak. It's like a completely different skill

    • @muhammedberkonder7802
      @muhammedberkonder7802 Před 5 lety +5

      palm boy69 same

    • @grumpyrabbit1934
      @grumpyrabbit1934 Před 5 lety +3

      Same hahahahahha

    • @zeeschelp
      @zeeschelp Před 5 lety +1

      @palm boy69 did you use a dictionary while watching vids?

    • @SlackwareNVM
      @SlackwareNVM Před 5 lety +82

      Although it sucks for translating, that is the point where you want to be at. To have an intuitive understanding of the concept that is being talked about, and not having to translate it to your own language in your head to understand it (that's terribly inefficient). Translating on the fly is then a different skill to learn on top of the language you've acquired.

  • @ComprehensibleMandarin
    @ComprehensibleMandarin Před 2 lety +28

    Thank you for spreading the word on the benefits of learning a language through comprehensible input! We are so used to learning in a classroom environment that many people believe natural acquisition, and picking up meaning through context, are literally impossible for adults. It's great that so many people have seen this video on some of the science, & examples of its effectiveness.

  • @ByGriPhone
    @ByGriPhone Před rokem +8

    So true about watching TV shows without subtitles. Studied Japanese on the Internet during the pandemic for about a year, learned some vocabulary, hiragana, katakana and a handful of basic kanjis but didn't venture forward. Started watched Japanese comedy TV shows (most of which don't have any available translations), but due the basic knowledge of the language, I acquired bunch of vocabulary including verbs and slang. I'm not studying Japanese anymore, but I learned more Japanese words during the year I was just watching TV shows regularly vs the year I actually was studying Japanese every day for a year.

  • @kylebui1530
    @kylebui1530 Před 3 lety +143

    1. Learn from the context
    2. Maximize the input
    3. Listen & pronounce

  • @aryanshygun4317
    @aryanshygun4317 Před 3 lety +2112

    *tries to learn japanese and find patterns by watching movies with japanese subs
    * KANJI : ALLOW ME TO INTRODUCE MYSELF

    • @Mu5icGodzilla
      @Mu5icGodzilla Před 3 lety +14

      Cries

    • @Iluhvahtar
      @Iluhvahtar Před 3 lety +59

      @@scorpioassmodeusgtx1811 IDK, i find seemingly random sounds easier to learn than seemingly random images. And I don't get what you mean by the second part. I mean, 車 and 電車 have similar kanji, but not a single phonem of one is in the other.

    • @egiamulyabaskara897
      @egiamulyabaskara897 Před 3 lety +49

      @@Iluhvahtar kanji imo make it easier to understand the meaning of a word, but not how it pronounced in japanese. Like in your example, at least for me, i know automatically its a car and a train in english, but i usually forgot how the pronounciation in japanese.

    • @Iluhvahtar
      @Iluhvahtar Před 3 lety +15

      @@egiamulyabaskara897 Yeah, I cam see how kanji could help make it easier to understand a word (even though I'm really vocal and want to know how to say it). What I don't get is how it would help to know how it sound

    • @davidmacdonald9159
      @davidmacdonald9159 Před 3 lety +3

      Scorpio Assmödeus GTX1 i agree, especially having already learned a few hundred words in chinese for school

  • @Burt1038
    @Burt1038 Před 3 lety +21

    I dunno, I've listened to Rammstein albums for decades and all I can figure out is they're usually angry...about somethin'

  • @leonardohamdany1123
    @leonardohamdany1123 Před rokem +2

    4 years ago. Bruh, such a high quality video and content, thanks bro 🔥

  • @screamcheeese7175
    @screamcheeese7175 Před 3 lety +226

    This is actually how I learned German, and it was even in my 100 level classes. My professor spoke only German, but he also pointed at things so that we would understand context. Best experience I ever had in learning a language.

    • @taranpreetkaur3134
      @taranpreetkaur3134 Před 3 lety +7

      Heyy, ich würde dir die Serie "How to sell drugs online fast" empfehlen. Die ist SUPER LUSTIG und SPANNEND! Du wirst sie lieben!

    • @user-up7nb6id1f
      @user-up7nb6id1f Před 3 lety +2

      @@taranpreetkaur3134 ich habe angeschaut, es ist sowieso ok aber konnte nicht jenseits der fünfte Folge schauen. weiß nicht warum, zu viel Wörter wahrscheinlich 😂

    • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
      @user-cd4bx6uq1y Před 3 lety +7

      A thing my teacher told me is that you need atleast a small word base. She talked only German, we had no training data and no idea about how to feel about german stuff, it was just horrible. Nobody knew what to do and what page is it

    • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
      @user-cd4bx6uq1y Před 3 lety +2

      @@user-up7nb6id1f ich habe nicht "drugs", das die habe "drugs"? Ich finde essen "drugs" SUPER LUSTIG und SPANNED!
      (Ich night Deutch, ich spreche deutch bekommen kuh)

  • @megancress1384
    @megancress1384 Před 4 lety +605

    I learned English through SpongeBob. I watched so much SpongeBob when I was little that I managed to learn the damn language

    • @megancress1384
      @megancress1384 Před 4 lety +76

      @m m oh afterwards I came to Canada. It's just the amount I learned from SpongeBob managed to get me through school and conversations and such, which surprised us all

    • @marley4273
      @marley4273 Před 4 lety +12

      @@megancress1384 WOAHH!!

    • @litchtheshinigami8936
      @litchtheshinigami8936 Před 4 lety +25

      In my case it was a mix or winnie the pooh for ps1 and the tweenies wich was a british tv show i adored as a kid. I used to beg my mum to watch more so she then searched it up on the internet and let me watch the english version

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 Před 3 lety +12

      I'm squidward, I'm squidward, I'm squidward squidward squidward

    • @muthiafrachman9234
      @muthiafrachman9234 Před 3 lety +4

      I love that for you

  • @betacenturion237
    @betacenturion237 Před 2 lety +2

    1.5 years into learning German and even though I have not progressed as quickly as I would have like, this is by far the most amount of progress I'v made since I first watched this video back then and started adopting the techniques. Your interview with Kaufman was great too!

  • @TheARTY50
    @TheARTY50 Před rokem

    Your videos have always been spot on. Thanks for the content.
    Ive been self studying japanese for a year or 2, at that level almost any method is better than nothing. Repeating podcasts and following along to free courses worked in my homecountry really helped! I moved to Japan afew months back and immediatly drowned in Japanese, it felt like I wasnt learning enough.
    I quickly learned which methods work for me and which dont. The old method of writing down new words and just rereading till i learnt them didnt work. Similarly I love reading but reading Japanese books is the slowest learning process for me. But the minute Id hear that word in conversation, in anime or used around me, in a way that gave me real understanding, then that word was learnt
    The result is, you can textbook write your way through every word on the course for months and still forget words. But all it takes is hearing it used afew times, meaningfully, by natives, for you to really memorise the word.
    Learn like a baby...babies dont use courses or textbooks. But you arent a baby, you are most likely an adult, so you can combine raw input that a baby learns from WITH courses, textbooks etc to get the most bang for your buck

  • @greyfoxninja1239
    @greyfoxninja1239 Před 5 lety +1757

    I started doing this and now I run into people in my dreams who speak Japanese I can't understand but it sounds fluent. I don't get it, it's MY dream, those words are coming from my mind and yet I can't understand them.

    • @MagnusSkiptonLLC
      @MagnusSkiptonLLC Před 5 lety +486

      Maybe they're just speaking Japanese-sounding gibberish.

    • @shuu_39
      @shuu_39 Před 5 lety +163

      Hey I've had that dream. But that was after I played a japanese visual novel game. The characters appeared in my dream, and their said words would come out in big bold text blocks that floated in the air. I have to thank the voice actors of the game and the massive text dialogs that came along with it lol

    • @OfficialFedHater
      @OfficialFedHater Před 5 lety +98

      Have you ever heard the idea that other people's consciousness can influence your dreams? Like a guy in Germany just showing up in your dream while he's also sleeping and trying to speak to you.
      Weird to think about, we really know very little about what's going on with our brains while sleeping.

    • @Hyperactivi
      @Hyperactivi Před 5 lety +37

      That is the funniest thing i’ve heard in a long time haha

    • @dylanlacelle3728
      @dylanlacelle3728 Před 5 lety +110

      Its just gibberish but your brain thinks its correct japanese

  • @RookieN08
    @RookieN08 Před 5 lety +1038

    This video pretty much explains how I've gotten fluent in English. My English was atrocious to say the least when I was learning it in school. But after a decade of playing video games and watching movies with English subs, I now find it easier to speak and write English compared to my first language lol.

    • @RICKtoSICK10
      @RICKtoSICK10 Před 5 lety +29

      What is your first language by the way?

    • @abysswatcher9172
      @abysswatcher9172 Před 5 lety +4

      I know right

    • @diersteinjulien6773
      @diersteinjulien6773 Před 5 lety +75

      Same for me. I'm french and I was speaking very decent english at 10 because I just wanted to play video games. Also, my girlfriend started watching english youtubers, and her english is getting better really fast (as for me, watching english youtubers didn't get my english better, but it got my listening comprehension throught the roof)

    • @chemmaz
      @chemmaz Před 5 lety +2

      same af.

    • @MedK001
      @MedK001 Před 5 lety

      Same

  • @zitatoth9458
    @zitatoth9458 Před 3 lety +6

    Oh! Now I understand how I could learn English within 2 years. I remember that I started watching English CZcams videos, and at some point, I could understand everything from them. I thought it's some sort of magic, but now I can utilize this for learning Japanese and Korean! Thank you so much, this helped me a lot!

  • @OlgaSmolkova
    @OlgaSmolkova Před 3 lety +11

    I literally had goosebumps while watching this and realizing that years ago I intuitively had picked the best way to learn English by watching English CZcams

  • @nickc3657
    @nickc3657 Před 5 lety +1335

    Lmao my applied linguistics professor took almost two months to explain what you laid out in less than 13 minutes.

    • @theshagidelicgamers4232
      @theshagidelicgamers4232 Před 5 lety +182

      College in a nutshell

    • @OatmealTheCrazy
      @OatmealTheCrazy Před 5 lety +101

      @@theshagidelicgamers4232 School in general really

    • @Meverynoob
      @Meverynoob Před 5 lety +33

      @。ガッレット you wouldn't learn anything in 13 minutes though, there's no one lesson that can be learnt without hours of build up.

    • @rotnmold7861
      @rotnmold7861 Před 5 lety +1

      Imma leave it at 420

    • @nickc3657
      @nickc3657 Před 5 lety +1

      。ガッレット *she. Most of the professors I’ve met are women, it turns out

  • @Kiwikick238
    @Kiwikick238 Před 5 lety +180

    My mom says she learned English by watching kids shows with me and my siblings and she’d do her own copy of my kindergarten work like practicing the letters and learning the shapes and colours. She’d also try to talk to us a lot in English so the convos were easy to follow since vocabulary wasn’t that big in early elementary. To this day she’s still better than my dad at speaking English and he did some classes lol

    • @ht1ps555
      @ht1ps555 Před 5 lety +9

      Kiwikick238 wow she’s a genius!

    • @Cuticatie
      @Cuticatie Před 5 lety

      Cheer to your mum! and your dad may learn a thing or two from your mum (esp. the appropriate method for ur dad and an enjoyable experience in learning will improve your dad's English). remember the comprehensible input! (you don't need to be genius to acquire a foreign language imho)

  • @DiarioCarnivoro
    @DiarioCarnivoro Před 2 lety

    I swear you make the best videos on the tube. Great job!
    I've been saying these things for years and I've always learned languages this way!

  • @TrollMcLolTheFirst
    @TrollMcLolTheFirst Před rokem +2

    You’ve described Hermeneutics, the process of analyzing ‘part’ to apprehend the ‘whole’.
    Current worldview(the whole)-> event or text raises the need for the meaning of said event or text(the part)->the need for meaning is projected through actions or speech->engaging with the part elicits feedback, which challenges our understanding of the whole.->challenge triggers reflection, reinterpretation and greater understanding->cycle continues.

  • @maklasik
    @maklasik Před 5 lety +651

    I spent 5 years studying English in school. Even though I had better chances to study a new language back then (due to brain plasticity) after 5 years I had little to no knowledge. Then I decided to learn language by watching all seasons of South Park in English, my English perception skyrocketed to say the least.
    Started with subtitles and I spent 40 minutes per episode because I really wanted to understand all the jokes and had to use Google translate. After 5 seasons I was done with subtitles and after 7 more seasons I only needed google translate 1 word per episode. I finally made learning English fun!
    My advice would be to learn basics first. Like alphabet, 100-200 most common words and learn most used sentence structures. Then go rewatch your favorite tv-shows/movies. You most likely remember what people say in each dialog (since you watched it in your language) and now you just make these connections with the language you learn. It's fun, it's fast and if you think about it, it gives you that high "input". Happy learning guys!

    • @ly_0
      @ly_0 Před 5 lety +34

      brain plasticity degrading with age is a myth

    • @Panic_Pickle
      @Panic_Pickle Před 5 lety +25

      Alaya or at least a vastly exaggerated one.

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred Před 5 lety +15

      That's similar to how I learned english too. Playing strategy games and always looking at the dictionary for any word I didn't know. This was shortly before the internet.

    • @willmcpherson2
      @willmcpherson2 Před 5 lety +8

      This method is genius.

    • @not-so-smartaleck8987
      @not-so-smartaleck8987 Před 5 lety +4

      so what'd you think of South Park? "screw you guys, I'm goin' home" ;)

  • @DarkAngels1600
    @DarkAngels1600 Před 3 lety +190

    When I was a kid I would get mad at my sister and mother for speaking German to each other so I wouldn't understand them. So I started to watch kid shows in German without any subtitles and learned the language based on context.
    This makes so much sense to me now!

    • @weltraumkotze
      @weltraumkotze Před 3 lety +23

      may I ask why your mom apparently taught your sister, but not you?

    • @justthere845
      @justthere845 Před 3 lety +28

      @@weltraumkotze probably a huge age gap like me. I have a 14 year difference from my oldest sibling and the next is 9 older than me.
      My older siblings can speak and write our 2 native languages but things changed as time went on and I can only barely speak the one and understand a little of the other one.

    • @woodaloo5982
      @woodaloo5982 Před 2 lety

      can you recommend german shows for kids pls? im a beginner at learning german

    • @Kutaibon
      @Kutaibon Před 2 lety

      @@woodaloo5982 Angelo, because it plays offen in School

  • @user-wf5os5bn3c
    @user-wf5os5bn3c Před rokem

    Got a pure pleasure from this mix of great clips, solid information and theme of video. Great job!

  • @OntheSpotLanguage
    @OntheSpotLanguage Před 2 lety +22

    Appreciate you making this video and emphasizing COMPREHENSIBLE INPUT. This is exactly why we take our Japanese English learners on the streets of Toronto and speak with thousands of English speakers every month. The learners hear English in a variety of accents on a daily basis, but more importantly, they gain the confidence and are empowered to be able to actually USE the language in REAL LIFE.
    Acquiring the language is one thing, but becoming a resilient and autonomous language learner is a while other thing.
    Keep up the great videos!

  • @MegaLuros
    @MegaLuros Před 5 lety +449

    A lot of us learned English without speaking a word. CZcams was our school. I never went into an English speaking country before I became fluent in English. I almost never spoke English before I started a year of study entirely taught in English.

    • @americanfootball5939
      @americanfootball5939 Před 5 lety +14

      I can write, understand and read english... thanks CZcams !

    • @ani_n01
      @ani_n01 Před 5 lety +7

      I learned it by asking Google to translate linkin park lyrics lmao... And then I got into mobile games yoh know those alliances and stuff

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie Před 5 lety +13

      MegaLuros, when I was a kid, I wish CZcams was a thing... you kids are lucky, I had to learn English from text based adventure games and later on Strategy games and RPGS. So in the year 2000 when Broadband became a thing I was semi-fluent in English, at age 8, mind you I wasn't even fluent in my native language.

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie Před 5 lety +1

      egal, Deutschen CZcams... let me think, if you are interested in music, then listening to German music would be a great idea, other than that, I think that the channel Gibt's nicht might work, as it's a lot of talking seeing that it's a German top 10 channel. Other than that, it's too interest based of what content you would like to watch. There should be a lot of German gaming channels as far as I know.
      I just wish there were a lot more interesting youtube channels out there period though. Oh and try shadowing the words Daaruum says in her videos, it should help out a lot, or go to Google Translate and type in your hobby/interest and translate it into German and paste that into CZcams to maybe find other similar channels.
      I've run out of other ideas, sure you could combine this with some other language help such as Duolingo or Babbel.

    • @ajhhc
      @ajhhc Před 5 lety +1

      @@Retrosenescent I haven't started learning German actively yet, but I found a channel called Don't trust the rabbit, and she has some videos in German, you may want to check it out if you haven't yet.

  • @IndellableHatesHandles
    @IndellableHatesHandles Před 3 lety +687

    "The Japanese word for persimmon is..."
    I don't even know what a persimmon is lol

    • @ronlugbill1400
      @ronlugbill1400 Před 3 lety +55

      A fruit. Looks kind of like a tomato but it is sweet and tasty. I ate persimmons in Italy and didn't know what they were in English either but they were delicious.

    • @Antonina_Naamah
      @Antonina_Naamah Před 3 lety +10

      @@ronlugbill1400 oh you mean a kaki in german. :D

    • @MarcosAntonio-xt8xp
      @MarcosAntonio-xt8xp Před 3 lety +13

      @@Antonina_Naamah Ah, you mean a caqui in portuguese!

    • @OJapaXD
      @OJapaXD Před 3 lety +1

      @@MarcosAntonio-xt8xp Agora entendi mano kkkkkk

    • @JoaoPedro-qk3uq
      @JoaoPedro-qk3uq Před 3 lety +1

      @@OJapaXD Sksksksksksksksksk tbm mano

  • @asdf3568
    @asdf3568 Před rokem +19

    I learned English by watching movies. And every American I speak to think I'm American. I have met a handful of people who speak the same, and they all learned the same way.

  • @joshthreu8775
    @joshthreu8775 Před rokem +2

    Oh I actually did this for my English learning process, it's what has made me improved so much so quickly. I was trying to figure out how to learn vocabulary and learn them by context into French and Japanese and I just forgot the acquisition part, which is the main feature for anyone who's learning a language and it's just what I did with my second language, English... Thank you a lot for reminding me that.

  • @fire6889
    @fire6889 Před 4 lety +160

    Had me in the first half, not gonna lie. He genuinely made me believe that his mother had forced him to go through verbs, nouns and other such stuff when he was a child.

  • @XIL3GANDIX
    @XIL3GANDIX Před 5 lety +1989

    This is why i watch anime like a true linguist

    • @AstraIVagabond
      @AstraIVagabond Před 5 lety +173

      This is unironically what I'm planning to do now, though.
      (Slice-of-life will probably work best, obviously, since I'm not trying to learn to become a galactic mech hero just yet.)
      How did CZcams know I needed this video??

    • @asdfgoogle
      @asdfgoogle Před 5 lety +39

      How is that? In Japanese language with Japanese subtitles?

    • @user-dw2yp6jl8s
      @user-dw2yp6jl8s Před 5 lety +19

      @@asdfgoogle , Romaji and/or hiragana subtitles 🤔

    • @justwow1915
      @justwow1915 Před 5 lety +64

      Because of this video I realized I actually knew a lot of phrases from anime.

    • @jimmyd.6431
      @jimmyd.6431 Před 5 lety +1

      +Just Wow same

  • @wullum8902
    @wullum8902 Před 9 měsíci

    This video is excellent. You did a great job of converting key concepts thoroughly, without wasting my time.

  • @IanCelo
    @IanCelo Před 11 měsíci

    You put words on my thoughts and feelings about language learning. Thanks.

  • @angelb8317
    @angelb8317 Před 3 lety +640

    It really does seem like we learned our native languages magically tho 😂

    • @dixiiid3842
      @dixiiid3842 Před 3 lety +73

      I thought that too but then I think of all the language classes you take in school to learn about sentence structure, verbs, everything! Still insane that we can absorb all of it at such a young age, language is pretty cool

    • @inconnn
      @inconnn Před 3 lety +24

      @@dixiiid3842 it's bc we gotta use the info we learn right away since everything we see and listen to is in that language so we remember it

    • @Comintern1919
      @Comintern1919 Před 3 lety +21

      ​@@dixiiid3842 But you also have to remember it takes children around 6 years to get a decent control of their native language, and another 4, 5 years to "perfect" it.
      An Adult can achieve that in around 3 years and even less with the right methods and resources.

    • @dixiiid3842
      @dixiiid3842 Před 3 lety +12

      AugustusCaesar I would have thought children would learn it quicker than adults. I remember reading that it’s far more difficult to learn a new language as an adult because our brains don’t have the same plasticity as children do, but I suppose 3 years is still a fairly long time. Would take an awful lot of language acquisition for that!

    • @heatherperleberg7816
      @heatherperleberg7816 Před 3 lety +2

      @@dixiiid3842 as a youngen myself trying to learn Italian, i think i missed the gap that would yield the greatest return in the shortest time. I know too much about english to be able to think about another language as an individual thing, by which i mean something seperate from English. Id say being a younger child arounf 4-6 is probably the best time to learn a language. Not entirely fluent, so they can disassociate languages from english easier. Thats my thought process, at least.

  • @AwesomeCrabman
    @AwesomeCrabman Před 5 lety +969

    I came here to improve my English, now I've learned some Japanese. Ringo tabaru.

  • @basaksungur9068
    @basaksungur9068 Před 2 lety +6

    Watching with subtitles in your own language definitely help, for sure it's not %0. That's how I've learned English and was only studying when I had exams at school, but watching a ton of shows (with subtitles in my language)
    Also, talking to yourself Aldo DEFINITELY helps. I was talking to myself in English while showering of preparing in the morning and that really helped my accent, lots of people are shocked how I've never been to the US or UK etc.

  • @chriswixtrom6514
    @chriswixtrom6514 Před 2 lety

    An outstanding video! Thanks for making and sharing it!

  • @cry-wr4wt
    @cry-wr4wt Před 3 lety +739

    As a german, english is my main second language. And if im honest, besides the basics i've learned not much of it in school.
    But playing games, watching movies, yt so and so on i managed to get really confident in it, with no stress whatsoever.
    Now i try the same tactic with norwegian and so far id say it works :)

    • @Sternburg
      @Sternburg Před 3 lety +12

      wahre Worte

    • @mallagallabumbum8209
      @mallagallabumbum8209 Před 3 lety +39

      I'm also German and its the same for me. I still don't get how anyone is supposed to learn, let alone acquire, a language (apart from Latin and Old Greek maybe) with the methods used in school.

    • @Arrijoyyy
      @Arrijoyyy Před 3 lety +11

      OMG YES! I learned most of my English from watching english movies, games, and of course watching CZcams videos and Twitch streams! :D

    • @CJ-be2cu
      @CJ-be2cu Před 3 lety +7

      I learned most of my English through magic, and some in school using flash cards

    • @MsBonsai2010
      @MsBonsai2010 Před 3 lety +2

      Your written English is spot-on

  • @Brutaltronics
    @Brutaltronics Před 5 lety +5272

    I learned English through memes. Yes I yeet

    • @risingstars3478
      @risingstars3478 Před 5 lety +87

      Brutaltronics lol wut

    • @user-ij3ub7zx2o
      @user-ij3ub7zx2o Před 5 lety +412

      I learned english through youtube and cartoons. Thus i can't speak it properly, but most of the times i can understand it.

    • @brandonwong8169
      @brandonwong8169 Před 5 lety +1

      Haha

    • @ixalaz4536
      @ixalaz4536 Před 5 lety

      Me too

    • @Manie230
      @Manie230 Před 5 lety +98

      I learned English through English CZcams videos. One day I just started watching English videos even though I only knew the basic stuff that you learn in school. Now I often use words in the right context but can’t translate them in German( german is my native language.) And in my class I am know as the dictionary. So watching native speakers is the best learning method in my opinion. But my teachers always said that I have a talent for learning languages.

  • @MuhammadArnaldo
    @MuhammadArnaldo Před rokem

    your comprehension and explanation is just mind-blowing

  • @fatimahmakgatho8968
    @fatimahmakgatho8968 Před 18 dny

    thank you for the advice in the description!

  • @SapphFire
    @SapphFire Před 5 lety +510

    Another technique you can try out is:
    1. Watch a movie or an episode of a series with subtitles on for a language you're fluent in
    2. Watch it again later with the subtitles and audio track in the language you want to learn
    If the time between those is great enough you won't exactly remember what anyone is saying but you'll have more context which helps your brain understand the new language better.
    Of course only do this with movies that you feel like watching again. If you bore yourself out you wont pay as much attention to the language.

    • @RayZin
      @RayZin Před 4 lety +19

      My favorite part is that I can’t understand this comment. My brain stopped working

    • @Dankschon
      @Dankschon Před 4 lety +12

      @@RayZin Just watch a movie you like and then watch again with the subtitles from the language you want to learn.

    • @yunusseven
      @yunusseven Před 4 lety +6

      I was just looking for German movies I could watch with German subtitles when I saw your comment. Makes a lot of sense to me but I can't seem find any German movies with perfect German subtitles (not those simplified subtitles for the hearing impaired). Anybody have any suggestions? Thanks.

    • @calspencer5862
      @calspencer5862 Před 4 lety +6

      I do this with Ghibli! I used to watch the movies in english dub as a kid a lot so I already know the general context and then just re-watch in japanese with corresponding captions :) It's really fun

    • @bonvabriones
      @bonvabriones Před 4 lety +1

      That's exactly how I finally learned English. Years and years of school classes didn't make the cut.

  • @halls4849
    @halls4849 Před 4 lety +1784

    Everyone laughs when I tell them that minecraft taught me a big part of the vocabulary I can use now

    • @Redcloudsrocks
      @Redcloudsrocks Před 4 lety +26

      pokémon blue for game boy taught me

    • @heckinmemes6430
      @heckinmemes6430 Před 4 lety +110

      "Hnnnnn"

    • @stepa9595
      @stepa9595 Před 4 lety +3

      same

    • @33blue
      @33blue Před 4 lety +32

      The input from factions servers wasn't that useful to learn communicative language lol

    • @Frahppei
      @Frahppei Před 4 lety +8

      mine was barney

  • @stephanivaz3204
    @stephanivaz3204 Před 11 měsíci +2

    A lot of my English proficiency so far has mainly come from watching a lot of videos on CZcams, movies, TV series, and listening to numerous podcasts. Reading has also played a significant role in improving my English, and I find this approach enjoyable. It can be challenging for me to stay disciplined when I'm not interested in what I'm doing. However, I have now started practicing my speaking skills more and focusing on reading to expand my vocabulary.

  • @cmaven4762
    @cmaven4762 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I also wanted to comment on the difference between acquisition of a language and communication in that language. There's been more than sufficient linguistic study to ascertain that comprehension precedes expression, so those expecting to be able to speak or write at the same level as they understand need to be a little more realistic. I also note that, as several other comments illustrate, it's possible to acquire a language without being able to speak it. And we all know of people who are fluent orally but unable to read or write a language.
    It's also wise to think about your goal for learning a language. For some of us, just being able to use the language orally, that is, to understand and be understood when speaking, is enough. Others need to read and write in the language more than we need the spoken parts. If your goal is the former but you get bogged down with the latter, you can waste a lot of time, effort, and even money.

  • @leoniecarolin1538
    @leoniecarolin1538 Před 4 lety +732

    And then there's me:
    I'm learning korean
    I dreamed something in korean
    And I don't have a clue what that meant😂

    • @gabic6174
      @gabic6174 Před 3 lety +31

      i feel you lol

    • @angrydoodle8919
      @angrydoodle8919 Před 3 lety +17

      You lucky ones !

    • @glitterfae6053
      @glitterfae6053 Před 3 lety +74

      it happened to me with Portuguese, I understood in the dream but woke up like ? I didn't know I knew how to say that, lmao

    • @lauragg9121
      @lauragg9121 Před 3 lety +1

      Sameeeee

    • @Emily.T26
      @Emily.T26 Před 3 lety +6

      I had a dream in Spanish once. I also didn't know what it meant either lol

  • @aykay7828
    @aykay7828 Před 5 lety +335

    Ten years ago, I was in a car accident. Hence, my catastrophic massive stroke which fork up my oral speaking and written spelling. I relearned the English language. I was a trilingual speaker and reading in French and Hebrew. My aphasia and apraxia gotten in the way of my oral speaking. And yet, I started out with no speech and began to talk with a toddler language. Missing words at all. I do mixing up the phases or placing the noun where the verb should be. Lately, within weeks, I began to talk like I used to do, before my stroke.

    • @patricioiglesias5346
      @patricioiglesias5346 Před 5 lety +7

      Did you forget all of your French and Hebrew?

    • @Brillemeister
      @Brillemeister Před 5 lety +19

      You're doing well now, all things considered! I even see an adverb in there (lately).
      My aunt has had several strokes in the last few years, and for a while she could barely talk. Now she's speaking in full sentences.

    • @sincereexistentialist4100
      @sincereexistentialist4100 Před 5 lety +34

      That’s horrible to hear man, I do hope you become trilingual again dude.

    • @busteraycan
      @busteraycan Před 5 lety +5

      are you considered lucky to only lose the information about languages in your brain instead of the ability to do something else?

  • @TheObsci
    @TheObsci Před 2 lety

    Very insightful, intuitive, and applicable. Thank you