✨ He’s like the Bob Ross of languages ✨
Gaelic with Jason, is a great teacher for Scottish Gaelic (I’m currently studying both Irish and Scottish Gaelic) and he’s another Bob Ross type person too! Totally recommend his videos, even if you have no intention to learn the language!
"Since the age of 60 which was 14 years ago" you're telling me my guy is 74?! Dude looks amazing
I think because he is actively learning. I remember seeing that learning new things at an older age keeps your mind sharp. It helps to avoid alzheimer. I think that has contributed to him aging well.
Yeah he is very coherent , engaging and has an active mind- which is great at his age.
This man learned 10 languages after the age of 60. That's impressive.
@@sleepsmartsmashstress8705 I know that learning several languages after 60 is not impossible but as someone that studied linguistics I know that it becomes harder for the brain to learn new languages because your cells aren't as active and have a harder time making the connections required for language learning. I also speak 7 languages so I know how hard it can be to even learn a language when you don't live in the country where it is spoken, plus the dedication this man has for it. All of that just makes what he did impressive to me, you know.
@@ollynolly4592 I know, right? I'll be 68 years old on December 15, 2020 and said to myself, "why are you trying to learn a new language at your age?" Now, I'm pumped up and ready to learn Mandarin!
@@PepperWilliams_songcovers as you should be. Good luck with that sir and I hope that despite covid you have a great birthday
I am a byelingual, because I started forgetting the words even in my own language
"It doesn't matter if you use LingQ or not"
That's one of the best sales pitches I've ever heard
So many are like "if you don't use my system, you'll die a failure!"
yeah! you guys should also check matt vs japan! he explains steves methods and ideology in a lot more depth!
everyone here like: “i speak 40 languages 🥺” and i’m here with english and bad french
i’m here with english that’s in between “fluent person but not native” and just “native speaker” and very bad japanese
i'm learning english for over twelve years, yet can't speak it properly.
@@lightlawliet3526 my first language is english and i still can’t speak it properly
i cant even speak english properly
@@julietagutierrez9139 I can't speak English properly and I'm English
it’s the camera quality for me WOW it’s so clear
Separately recorded videos to be sure. He recorded on his computer while in a chat and sent the raw files to her. Too many CZcams interviews just record the chat and it looks and _sounds_ horrible.
Languages are such a beautiful thing. My goal is to be a polyglot and learn at a minimum 10 languages, but more is better. 😹
@@peachtokkii863 i speak Kyrgyz, Russian, English and Chinese. How about you? Where are you from?
I liked hearing that he started learning the languages at age 60, sometimes I feel like I'm "too old" (at 30) to become fluent in a language or that my brain won't be able to absorb it as well. But this was encouraging, thanks!
It depends to what degree you want to reach with the languages.. The more languages, the less proficiency in each. It is only logical.
Though younger people are more susceptible to picking up languages faster it doesn't make it impossible to learn one even if you're older
I have sometimes felt "too old" to learn things, when I am still 20! Can you believe that? 🥺 I think this facts science has given us, about kids being the proper ones to learn things, is just bullshit 😔 Parents are putting too much pressure on their kids believing this is the time of their lives and we, grown up people, are feeling demotivated believing our brains are not capable enough of learning... Sad story... We must get rid of all those negative beliefs and start giving things a chance 😉❤
@@paulagabriela8399 the brain till age 7 or 8 is called a sponge because it absorbs very quickly, that’s why it’s encouraged to pick up new skills very young. However, adults are smarter than children and would see through things without it being explained to them and come up with tricks to make learning easier.
Im starting to believe society discourages adults from learning because it needs them to focus solely on their job/family.
I took French from 7th grade through college. Every teacher, every year, had us focus on grammar from day 1. I learned practically nothing. Now, I’m teaching myself through children’s books & subtitled movies, etc. It’s so much more fun & effective. Goal is to be fluent. Good luck to everyone. Stay the course!
@@jeffreymoran8484 mhm m moroccan and hey we study french more than arabic or any other language , like 6 hours per week since 1st grade . m sure he/she is moroccan + even if a moroccan sucked in french even tho we studied it during all our life , it's bc they hate it , i dont think that they'd ever make efforts lol especially students of public school they hate french . overall we studied just like french peeps
@@hibluvdacland9642 hey im moroccan too. And i approve that the reason why I'm not that fluent in french is because i hate it. But the reaosn of this hatred is acctually that i got criticized by elders when i was so younh for my lack of vocabulary and fluency in expressing myself which automatically made me feel intimidated by speaking that language. I was afraid of being criticized. But still though, in school, they only focused on grammar rules which didnt help me that much. If i can't speak a language which i have studied for several years, then i probably did nothing. They didn't make us fall in love or get interested in the language itslef. It. Was always in the papers. We had to answer silly questions of reading and grammar and writing. But we barely focused on speaking. Currectly, I'm self learning it and im trying to overcome my fear.
@@naaahh2837 yep i understand that , i saw things like that happening by my side too and it's just sad :/
I speak 11 languages and here's my tips (english, german, french, portuguese, chinese, russian, korean, japanese, Turkish, persian Spanish ) ( stopped taking Spanish for a year and I am now up back again doing spanish) :) thank you for all the likes btw!
First learn your languages alphabet and pronunciation
Start off with basics such as hello and understand word pronunciations
Start grammar (there are plenty language websites)
Learn vocab along the way, depending on how devoted how you are practice words, and writing
These helped me to get fluent within a year or less
Understand that everyone learns at their own pace so don't rush yourself because you aren't great yet! It takes time and potential.
I hope these help. Love you all.
Should I learn on a app? And practice everyday? Becasue that's what I'm doing lol
@@Giomz I use a mix of textbooks and online resources it depends what language your learning if I know it I can recommend some resources if you would like? :)
@@Giomz what language do you speak, I have different things for many? )like what are you learning?
The high-input method makes sense if you think about it. Babies learn to talk by listening to their family speak. We're just simulating the same thing, because the part of us that knows Korean (or whatever new language) is basically a baby.
With the input method for adults, though, it needs to be at a very easy level and progressively become more difficult. Adult brains are NOT the same as babies. You can't just watch anime for ten years and expect to pick up the language. The input for adults needs to be at a somewhat comprehensible level.
@@fuckbored4724 Oh very true. It's important to balance the input with actual grammar lessons, writing exercises, etc.
But the reason people don't learn Japanese from anime is mainly that they use subtitles. They're not trying to figure out what's being said, they're tuning it out to read the translation. If you watch without subtitles, or ideally with Japanese subtitles, you'll end up learning a lot more.
@@BeinIan While you ARE right, in such a case dramas would be better since there is more information you can rely on to try to get what's happening. Animation makes it more difficult, even though this depends on the anime, the decade it came out in, studio, animating style, cuality, etc.
In animation (2D) things NEED to be simplifyed in order to animate or else you're pretty much a masochist, so you don't really have as much information as you'd ideally have
If you learn as a baby, you ll sound like a baby. From what I ve seen. People who learn that way sounds like 3 years olds, can't write or read. But smh very proud of themselves cause they picked up some basic grammar and 20 words.
this is what you're doing in front of us? XD i am sooooooo jealous you got to interview steve!!!
LMAO I’m writing the English captions as we speak 😂😂 that’s why I’m staring at the screen rn haha
The dislikes are from:
1.Those people salty that they didn't learn their languages.
2. Those that have been taking forever to learn one language.
I’m struggling to learn Japanese like how he learn so many in such little time when I’m studying daily and know only the basics of Japanese😒
@@OutcastYBJ You have to keep trying, don’t give up. Why would you want to quit what you started? Everyone is more than capable of doing what they really desire to do. So as long you attain the urge, motivation and dedication, you’ll get where YOU want to be. YOU have to believe this.
@@spideyhacks3055 I’m so motivated now I had a rough start but I’m actually learning a lot I have a lot of apps that help me I’m even paying for monthly subscription I’m planning on being an alt in Japan u don’t need to know Japanese but I want to communicate and make friends while I’m living their.
@@OutcastYBJ I'm so glad that you havent given into your procrastination; I honestly wish you all the best in learning your target language. I'm also on the journey of learning french myself.
i'm also a polyglot but i mostly learned by asorbing languages as a child. now as an adult it's lil bit more difficult. so thankyou for sharing great tips!
@@jesusismysavior3888 J'insiste qu'il réponde en utilisant chaque langue. Afin qu'on puisse juger.
Steve is such an inspiration to everyone in general, he is an example that it is never too late to start doing what fuels you with passion. I am 31 now and have always dreamt of learning multiple languages, but never got to it. I am in the right mindset now and began my journey to language learning with my 3rd language Korean this month. And this is only the beginning. 🥳 fantastic interview, very inspiring.
@@geraldinedorville Right - I also dreamed about to speak multiple languages when I was young. Sadly I'm not a natural talent when it comes to languages so I had to work hard learning english in school - and even harder when we had to choose a second foreign language. After school I never use them. But than one day I began to read english books and over a year ago I also restart learning french and started to learn japanese as well. It's really hard work for me but such videos keeps me motivated. It's never to late to learn and to use this languages nowadays.
He truly inspires us. As for me, he teaches me that you must not learn all the languages you learn now. Even if it takes you 5 years per language, after 20 years one would be able to speak four languages which is still a lot.
i think i have a problem when i saw "18+ languages" i thought he was fluent in dirty talking in languages. help.
well english is your 2nd langauge? the plural s at the end kind of gives it away he means multiple cultural languages
MA in Liguistics here! Just wanted to let the people feeling "too old to learn a language" know that research has not only disproven the myth that you can't learn languages past a certain age, but also shown really impressive results for older adults - compared to a control group who didn't learn anything, a group of elderly people who learned a language showed much less cognitive decline, suggesting that language learning helps delay age-related diseases like dementia. This benefit also applies to those who speak multiple languages from any age, your brain will always be stronger :) language rocks!!
Thank you so much. My daughter and I have been learning Korean for almost 3 months now and we am very motivated. My first language is Spanish. I learned English on my own before moving to US and now I am trying to do the same with Korean. Watching your videos keeps my motivation running. Thank you for introducing Mr. Steve to us. Seeing his passion for learning language makes me keep going. I thought I was being greedy trying to learn Korean and Mandarin but I guess I am in the right path. Thank you!!
He is definitely an inspiration~ Haha no need to feel greedy 😂 Learn as much as you can~ If I had the time I would definitely learn more than just Korean~!!
Estamos en el mismo barco! Pero aun haci le sigo hechando ganas a lo que hago. Korean will not learn itself. I am so lucky to keep making progress everyday. ♡
Pimsleur+Assimil then move to Glossika; this is pretty much the tried and true polyglot formula to developing a functional, baseline level-- around a low-intermediate level.
FRIENDLY, PUBLIC R E M I N D E R : Don't just watch the video. Implement the advice given into your routine.
P. S. Let us grow fluent together ♡
@@d00mMoonXP My lovely bean!! SO nice to hear from you again. What a beautiful surprise /heart attackkkk/
From my experience, the best way to learn a language is to be able to express yourself. That why I start by learning the most commons verbs and some basic vocabulary, then I look at the grammar. And I write, I write a lot. Short sentences at first, then longer ones. I tell little stories about things I interested in and I look up the vocabulary as I need it.
yes I completely agree, I try to review what happened during my day at night with as much Spanish as I can and I find it very helpful to talk to myself sometimes as theres not really many Spanish speakers close by
@@masonthejar8890
I completely agree, too. When learning Spanish, I would think of scenarios where I might be trying to explain something in Spanish. Every time I would hit a snag, where I had no way to express my thought, I would look up the word I needed in a dictionary. Thirty years later I became a court interpreter.
Thanks for sharing this. I just started learning Japanese at 47 and was thinking I'm too old, Steve really gives me hope.
Nice profile picture. I should inform you that the symbol there is actually the alchemical symbol for sulfur and doesn't directly have anything to do with satanism, if that's what you were using it to represent. Also, I wish you luck with learning Japanese. Personally I'm trying to learn Cherokee but there aren't that many resources for it.
Nope . You are just in the right time. I have seen people much older and doing sooo good I admired them so much.
Person: so what instruments do you play
Me an intellectual: macaroni in a pot
I just scrolled past a video called “playing WAP with only macaroni sounds” 😂
I’m so inspired hearing that he learned 10 languages after 60, I’m 15 trying to learn a third language and I feel like I’m too old aha
I’m 14 trying to learn danish at the moment and it’s really hard :(
Heyo man, I'm also 15, and I also want to learn a third language (Korean) after my native(Hungarian) and my second(english ofc)
Are you learning korean also?
Ok, actually I'm just started today, with 'learning' Hangul
I’m 13 learning a 3rd language which is Japanese and it’s hard when it comes to forming sentences since I only know English alphabet characters in both of my languages 😭 but I just started 3 days ago but I already feel like I won’t be able to learn it properly
My languages are English and Welsh which is similar in alphabet and so,e words sound like the English version when in Welsh
Russian is my native language but I’ve learned English, so now wanting to learn Korean is a totally different language ha
One thing my aunt told me to do when being new to learning languages is to read books or watch shows targeted towards kids. They’re meant to teach the children vocab and customs so being new to a language, shows and books for kids can help target those beginning stages of the language learning
Yeah, great advice.. Looking for Spanish kids programs in CZcams now... Lol
@@jasondaniels640 any recommendations? I have been learning Spanish in school for a few years but I’d like some more practice.
@@wakkjobbwizard I found Telenova's Mi Vida Loca a fantastic soapie to follow and in chidlren's programs, 'Peppa Pig' in spanish is fantastic, it has extended spanish videos on youtube over 1 hour long and the words/sentences are beginner to intermediate. I also make use of 'Butterfly Spanish' on CZcams, she is an excellent teacher for grammar and rules, this all coupled with Duolingo (free mobile app), i've come to know over 2500 words and the basic grammar.
Just started learning Italian on my own. Never spoke any other languages and I'm 58. This guy is very inspiring!
I'm a bilingual, I'm learning KOREAN and so badly wanna be a trilingual. Korean is difficult but still I'm learning.
i’m learning korean as my second language 😭 it’s so BEAUTIFUL i want it to be my second language
Pimsleur+Assimil then move to Glossika; this is pretty much the tried and true polyglot formula to developing a functional, baseline level-- around a low-intermediate level.
hsjjdjjsd i feel so far away from korea even as a native and i want to polish my korean skills lol
I actually like to listen to the sound of a language before I stare learning it. I like to get a feel for how the language sounds so that I can start to recognize specific sounds are as I start to study the actually words. It helps me to not feel so overwhelmed or discourage to keep learning.
Wow! Good job Natalia. I’m feeling so pumped up!!!! I really liked his suggestions!
We always hear that it's harder to learn a language the older you get I'm so I really appreciate him sharing that he started at the age of 60. This gives me more hope and drive to start, and continued learning at age 30
I love how he said “oriental” then immediately corrected himself to “Asian”
So much love for this video💞
People are going to try to cancel this dude because he's old enough that that was just the word people used lol
This is genuinely the most interesting and somehow insightful video on language learning I’ve heard. Not too pragmatic that he’s giving me exact exercises to do and not too high in the sky that he’s not speaking in things that make sense to me. I loved how he said something and then backed up his reasoning right after.
But I do wish this was twice as long.
Hi !
I just discovered this channel through CZcams recommendations and I love it so far. I'm not learning Korean (yet) but I love learning languages. I also loved the editing style your videos have!
Tip #1 and I'm already writing down everything he says. So encouraging. I'm preparing to learn Japanese out of passion for language and seeing him at his age still learning is so encouraging. Thanks for this video
I really like Steve, he's so humble and always encouraging people to learn 😁
Also you Nat (mi tocaya 🤭, that's an spanish word for people with the same name) thanks for motivating us to learn korean 😁
This was so incredibly informative!
I was self teaching myself Korean last year but fell out of motivation because of 2020.
I just recently picked back up and was in the process of organizing my study journal when I found this.
I am only just now piecing together that TTMIK and Lingodeer has been teaching me in that Circles/mini-story pattern.
Now that I am consciously aware of the teaching form I plan to utilize it in my own study guide. It'll make holding the grammar so much easier!
Hey 👋 thanks for making this!
I was curious as to how to accelerate the learning of languages, so I found this video, and I'm so happy! I'm excited that such a language platform(Lingq) exists, and you should feel proud for acting as a conduit of growth ✨️
Much love -- keep winning! ❤️
Just did a little bit of Linq and it's honestly something that would be extremely helpful for me given how it's put together
Thank you so much! I've just started learning korean, super helpful video!
I'm glad~! Steve's method is different from the methods my friends and I use to learn languages, so I loved talking to him about it~!
I love the learning with context part. This is something I always made sure to do when learning Japanese. And now, it's been quite a while since learning languages and would like to master Korean and kind of lost track of how to learn languages. When I was at the bookstore, there were so many vocabulary books that I became unsure of myself. This video made me realize the importance of context which I am very grateful for :D Thank you for the wonderful chat! So many good points made and will definitely use them in mastering Korean!! And hopefully French at the same time.
Love that you did this video! It really helped in some ways. I’ve been learning Korean since 2016 on and off. I recognize a lot of words and know the alphabet pretty well yet I still lack since been putting it off. So his words really set my mind straight!
How does ones brain have the capacity for 20 languages I can’t- I’ve been learning Japanese for like 2 weeks and I- I’m just simply bamboozled
really??? 2 weeks and you're already complaining? come back in 6 months.
I agree! It is mind boggling to me as well. Guess we haven't figured out how to unlock our brain's potential. I hope we can soon!
This is really interesting, helpful and inspiring. I'm 18 and have been studying Spanish for 5 years now and I'm only just starting to be more fluent. Last year I started learning Japanese and it was a big difference because it's not on the same language group as Spanish. Sometimes I translate my Japanese work into Spanish and it looks so simple and it really shows me how far I've come in learning Spanish. I'm going on to study both these languages at uni and hopefully learn another on the way :) I'll make sure to use these tips
@Mr.Kakaman my Japanese is very very bad, I took a year break to work before going to university and I haven't studied at all 🥲
Hey guys~ Here is a discount code LingQ gave me!
📖 35% discount on a 1 year LingQ premium membership (affiliate): www.lingq.com/en/natalia/
Well this was so useful and interesting! Thank you for sharing 😍🙌🏽
Great! I didn't know about Linq but it seems very helpful! Thanks Natalia
And it's amazing how your channel is growing! 😊
He sounds like he has every accent combined. Well, he kinda does.
Really thank you for making this video!!!☕️🙆🏻♀️🌧
I really love both of you. Thank you so much for this fantastic video
I have a feeling like every teacher ever who was teaching me anything needs to watch this, because we were always made to memorize the system instead of focusing on use.
Yeah, the language teaching pattern of the school systems are very bad I feel, but there are great teachers, form my experience, my aunt is an English teacher, she born in Canada, and she grow up there, and probably because her native language is english she can teach kids way beteer then a teacher with english as a second language
Yeah, I feel like most people that speak English as a second language learned a major part of it themselves from like the Internet and not from school. I mean, I used have an English teacher that sounded less fluent than me and I was his STUDENT.
Teacher here. Dying to teach with CI methods but thoroughly programmed from childhood with grammar/vocab first. Switching methods to CI or TPRS means a full commitment to stepping off a cliff into the unknown. Student teaching would be the ideal time to learn this under the capable supervision of a co-op and professor, or a dedicated sabbatical to observe and work with an experienced CI teacher. (What a dream!) I keep reading and watching and learning. Experimenting with a CI unit is the best I can do for now.
Yes!!! The type of content the world needs! Keep doing what you’re doing 🖤
This is so interesting! Thank you so much, it has helped me a lot!
This was so encouraging, oh my gosh.
I've watched a lot of Steve's videos, and this is an incredibly concise, perfected version of his usual advice. Thanks for getting him to come on your channel and talk about this. This is perhaps the best Steve video for beginners, intermediates, and anyone trying to start a second language. I subscribed, Natalia!~ ♥️
i’ve been so unmotivated to learn new languages, because i always feel like i’m failing at it so badly. i am fluent in only English and Spanish, those being my main two languages growing up. but i have tried learning Norwegian on my own a while ago, and lost so much hope. i got a couple conversational terms and vocabulary down, but soon forgot all of it :( and lately i’ve been wanting to learn Korean, and your videos have gave me hope. i just want to know so many languages, considering i want to travel all over the world; and i just want to be able to hold conversations with people with their native language. thank you for this video, the conversation with Steve helped a lot !
I really want to translate this to my language and share with my friends or whoever trying to learn languages ..
Thank you for uploading this video
Thats so inspiring and arabic is my mother language and im so exited to see him learn his 20th language!
he has such a kind-looking face. It's so friendly.
This was a great interview, thanks so much!
Thank you so much for this information & educational video!
Thank you so much for this it was really helpful :))
Omg Natalia’s smile is so pretty! I’m working on learning Korean rn but I’m also going to school! ❤️❤️❤️
Living proof that is never too late to do something new. I really like finding people like this, a real inspiration! Also I am goign to start with my third language soon so ...I have a long way to go but I'm going!
Thanks 🥺 This is what I needed. I speak english and german fluently and I always say I love learning languages, but I have been struggling A LOT with Korean. My motivation comes and goes and after months of trying, I don't feel a real improvement... I must admit, though, I haven't committed as I should 🤭 This has inspired me to give the language a second chance!
This was so helpful! Thanks 😊 I’m brushing up on French - can’t wait to travel again !
I am trilingual, meaning i can speak three languages, urdu, Arabic and english. Im learning korean currently cause i want to go to a korean university. And this has helped me a lot cause i become very nervous when i do something wrong
That was really informative, thank you!
Amazing video! Also the twilight series in Korean in the background !!!
I’m a trilingual currently learning my fourth language, in my experience after learning the 3rd language everything just becomes much easier especially if the languages are different from each other. I learnt Romanian and Russian as a kid, then had to move to the UK and learnt English. Now I’m learning Korean, and it’s so much easier to learn since the knowledge from the others allow me to resonate with Korean a lot, even if they’re so drastically different from each other.
I'm a native Vietnamese speaker but I'm not very fluent due to be raised in the English speaking states. (Fluent at english) and I'm learning Spanish along with Japanese, this made me feel motivated! Thank you!
What a great video. I just found your channel and I absolutely love it 😊
I love this guy. I do honestly think he's one of the most inspirational people I've ever seen.
Hi, Natalia I loved your channel, it's great. I really admire Steve Kaufmann, but I didn't know his webpage (thank you for that). "Your brain is a pattern recognizing machine..." I loved listening to him mentioning it (that's a deep truth). It's so good to see people motivated to learn new languages and as for me, I became passionate about doing this too... I know I have a huge journey ahead. Korean is such a beautiful language! 감사합니다!
Wow~ I'm not sure how you found the video when it was unlisted LOL but I'm glad you enjoyed the video~!! He's so right~ Once you get enough input, you catch on to certain patterns, even if you're not sure what they mean haha
@@NataliaGarza I found it probably because I'm obsessed with videos about language learning process 😁 안녕!
I have so much to do but this popped up sooo I'm putting everything aside lol
I just started learning korean, I think your channel will be freeking amazing. Thank you so much!
Ahhh, I'm so happy I found this, im learning arabic and my teacher is wonderful but I really need more listening content as well :)
He's got the voice I can listen to for hours on a radio.
Since the age of 60??
NOT TOO LATE FOR ME THEN
@@lozr666 I have a friend who basically can't learn english. Thankfully I'm almost fluent in english after 8 years, but my friend still can't say more than maybe 3-4 sentences in a row. And he's not stupid, he is better tha me in mathematics, and stuff like that. That's why I started to learn Korean, I feel my future is more in the language side of school than the science. I mean I still learning for myself, to prove myself I'm not a total wreck. (I'm saying it like I learn Korean for about months now but actually I just ' learned ' Hangul today xD
Wow you interviewed Steve Kaufmann, that's big league, way to go Natalia! I find him very interesting and easy to listen to. Will check out LingQ, thank you :D
Ps one of your older viewers here but still new(ish) to self learning :D
You are a really good interviewer! Thanks for this video.
knowing that steve is still learning language to this day, it fills you with determination
It's great that he is learning 20 languages. But I wish he mentioned how many languages he is fluent with. Polyglots should have a high proficiency in at least 5 languages. If he can do this he is in the top 1%. For me you can't say you "speak" the language if you can't have meaningful conversations with a native speaker.
absolutely! It's easy having an A1 level in 20 languages, having a C1 however...
seeing him learning has inspired me to not give up on my learning. language is harder for me to process than most since i'm autistic, but i'm determined!!! i'm only studying japanese right now (my school offers a japanese course), though i hope to branch out to other languages :)
these guys seem like great resources and wise people to follow and subscribe to.❤. love you both.
I'm actually trying to learn Korean and today is my first day learning and I learned so much
Oh my, this video was inspirational
I am currently studying Chinese and I can say learning a new language ain’t always easy, like Steve said at the beginning motivation is really important.
你好我的朋友. I am learning Chinese too. I love the language. What method have you been using to learn?
@@AfroLinguo I practice a lot, I think practice and consistency is key. I also make use of relevant study materials online, that is beside the HSK textbooks.
I make sure to write my characters daily before going to bed, practice my 口语 with the natives, watch movies in chinese...
I basically incorporate a lot of time and energy in my chinese studying..
How about you, how do you get to study or what’s your chinese study routine like?
@@maryjaneoge9280 I have an italki tutor and I have use online resources and I practice speaking with natives. I never really practice writing but I can write with a computer. 😅😅 What level are you at now?
@@AfroLinguo 😁I can understand your situation, most people want to study a language just to be able to communicate with the natives, not necessarily write with it...
I am done with level 6 and recently got a masters degree in teaching chinese to foreigners....yeah!!!!
But the learning doesn’t end here for me, I still get to incorporate myself into the language and culture..
Although am planning on learning Korean next😃😃
How about yourself aside Chinese and English what other language do you speak?
@@maryjaneoge9280 wow. So inspirational. I will be like you one day. 😅😅 I speak French and German as well plus a Language from my home country Cameroon. The language is called „Bafang“. I also wanna learn Korean in the future. 😅😅
Tbh learning languages is one of the best, and most entertaining things you could do, you always have room for improvement and by learning the language you can learn about the culture, i wanna learn multiple languages right now i know spanish and English *native speaker of spanish and had to learn english cuz i moved* and in school im taking french 2, german 1 and trying to learn Japanese by my self
Amazing interview! I really appreciated Steve’s perspective, it makes a lot of sense! I’m learning Japanese and starting to recognise grammar patterns from listening and noticing words that I thought meant one thing but have noticed them being used in different contexts and now I’m questioning the whole word all over again lol. Trying to appreciate my small accomplishments even though I’m struggling right now lol
It was interesting the way I got motivated to study korean seeing this video because I remembered that I started to learn english when I was 7 years old, but I only got interested in learning when I started liking youtube and listening to people actually speaking in their videos, which is very similar to what he said about listening the language
I can't say I started learning english around 12 years old but it's almost like that if you see what i really absorbed (and btw it's not like english at school in my country is that good lol)
Yesss same! I only got better at English when there was actually a fun reason for me to learn it (which was understanding CZcamsrs xD)
I take English lessons since kindergarten but the only way I truly learned it was through social media and memes.
Wow amazing! I recently came across 90 days Korean website and saved it. I also bought some books off Amazon 😅😂. It’s kdramas and inspirational people like you all that inspires me to learn another new language thank you!
I was also told that consuming media (CZcams videos, music, films, tv shows ect) of the language you want to learn between language lessons also helps
@Grand Moff Porkins it does work for speaking and listening but only for some people, I’m dyslexic so the speaking and listening side of language is easier for me than the reading and writing but everyone’s different I guess
I literally learned English listening to music when I was a kid I used to write the lyrics and the translation thank you bruno mars lol
I already speak two languages fluently (English and Spanish), and I hope to learn at least 4 or 5 more. I know it’s possible, I just hope to achieve it someday
hi I want to learn Spanish, I learnt a bit at school but the last time I did anything "spanish" was over a year ago. should I start by going over all my school notes? also I think there is formal and informal Spanish, in school I leant formal, which type do most Spanish speakers actually use ?
I have a really random question lol. If I wanted to say "I'm learning Spanish", would it be estoy aprendiendo español or yo aprendiendo español
@@isabelle441 This is a pretty late response but it would be, “Estoy aprendiendo español.” or “Yo estoy aprendiendo español.” Saying “yo aprendiendo español” translates as “I learning Spanish”, where as estoy or yo estoy means I am
This is amazing, he's extremely inspiring!! 🥺
Thank you Natalia for sharing this video! Super educational and motivating for me 💜 thank you!!
**learns how to learn languages more than learning the languages themseleves**
itseleves* :)
@@am32074 hope yer jokin lol
@@allergictohumansnotanimals5671 no im maram :D
@Chocolate Rain ThEmsElvEs are we happy now 😭
Well this thread got awkward fast haha