How I learn and REMEMBER vocabulary in 5+ languages đ°
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 13. 05. 2024
- You learn words, but forget them after a week. How do we fix that? It's simpler than you think.
Learn vocab in 8 languages with LingoPie: learn.lingopie.com/elysse
00:00 - 00:39 let's talk vocabulary
00:40 - 1:46 study in context, always
1:47 - 2:28 see it & hear it
2:29 - 3:26 LingoPie!
3:27 - 4:59 study IN your target language
5:00 - 6:25 output, ASAP
6:26 - 7:38 switch to ACTIVE recall
7:39 - 8:16 look at my new cat Garbanzo.
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đ My language learning resources and templates:
elyssespeaks.gumroad.com/
âïž buy me a coffee (if you are so inclined!)
ko-fi.com/elyssespeaks
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đ social media:
đ· instagram:
/ elyssedavega
đ„ twitter:
/ elyssedavega
đ” spotify w/ english, german, spanish, and portuguese playlists
open.spotify.com/user/elysse....
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đ about me: my name is Elysse, I'm 22 years old from the southern U.S. I've been learning languages for about 8 years, and I speak English (native), Spanish (C2), German (B2/C1), Portuguese (B2), French (B1/B2), American Sign Language (advanced), and Turkish (A1). I'm interested in learning Hebrew, Chinese, Georgian, and maybe NĂĄhuatl as well :)
a portion of this video is sponsored by LingoPie. thanks, LingoPie!
#languagelearning #polyglot #learngerman
Yâall can improve your vocab in 8 languages with LingoPie! learn.lingopie.com/elysse
Hello
â@@digitschoool I what to improve my English speaking
please please please comment on what i said
No we canât.
No you don't. They only accepting CC and not everyone has a CC. I'm preferring to use debit.
I agree with you so much with the 'study *IN* your target language' section. One of the best pieces of advice from back in my IB Spanish days was to use a monolingual dictionary, even if you still have to use a translation dictionary occasionally. And I was so grateful that my Spanish teacher taught the class 100% in Spanish. (I had the same teacher 10th-12th grade.) I learned all of my advanced grammar points in Spanish, to the point where I didn't know the English names for some grammatical features. As I relied less and less on English, I felt my Spanish improve faster and faster.
*IB Spanish trauma* LOL but yesss I agree!! itâs so much more efficient once you get to an advanced lefek
I did the same with English! Now I'm trying to improve my English and learn a little bit of Spanish
How when you dont understand the definition
@@shinzo5744 It's probably not something you'd do as an early beginner, but over time as you acquire more words the target language definitions will start to make sense. But even as a beginner I wouldn't recommend going immediately to the bilingual dictionary. Try searching for the word in Google Images in that language or Wikipedia article in that language. The great thing about not relying on your native language is that it trains your brain to get meaning from something even if you don't understand every single word. Of course, if you try these and you still are confused, absolutely go to a bilingual dictionary or translator.
@@aafrophonee I dont mine not knowing 100% meaning of a sentence, phrase or even a whole page of text. Why beat yourself up with uncommon words you might not even see, hear or speak for months or even years. I don't mine forgetting words in foreign languages. That means they are not used frequently in my opinion.
I think an important tip is don't just burn through words as fast as possible, without thinking much. Pay attention to etymology and history, as well as related words. Words don't appear randomly, they have roots and origins. For example, I have never studied French, but I assumed Penser was to think because it looks like a verb in Spanish with the er ending, and I know the English word "pensive" which I assume shares the root with Penser. Another well known story is the Japanese word for buffet is ăă€ăăłă° (Viking), which seems really random until you learn that it refers to the Scandinavian smörgĂ„sbord, as in a Viking style meal.
I 100% agree!
This sounds overly complicated no offense
@@Izzyjeanyoure just very slow
â@@Izzyjeanyou've got chatgpt, bard and Google now. You've got no excuse. It's time to up your vocabulary game đȘ
I can learn the origin and history from where? I am learning English by myself
I'm not quite ready for the "study your target language IN your target language" concept yet because I'm still pre-intermediate, but once I move up a level I'm planning to do that more!
Of course! thatâs why i gave the heads up that itâs more for upper levels, maybe somewhere between B2-C1.. but everyoneâs different!
@@elyssespeaks Oh! I hope it didn't come across as a criticism - it's more that I'm really excited to be able to try that soon! :)
IF you move up. Good luck with that.
@@LesserMoffHootkins why would you say "if" I move up? I'm doing quite well in my current level and I don't expect to have any problems with the final exam. Once I pass that, I will move into the lower intermediate level. It's very weird to say that to me.
@@SherryOsborne
đ
Iâm a native French and wow she prononce french so good itâs incredible âšđ
Indeed although i have yet to see the sentence « quâest-ce que tu penses? » said in any context. Weâd rather say « Ă quoi tu penses? » or « quâest-ce que tâen penses? »
#gnagnagna #çapinaillegrave
@@iansmirna5183 Agreed! That was my thought exactly. Lol Oh well, her prononciation is good. I was told I have a Parisian accent (1 yr in Paris, 4 in the South of France lol).
@@wendyinparis8939 apart from extreme south east, south west or top north, there are not so many accents in France compare to many surrounding countries such as Spain or UK. The « parisian » accent is actually the most common, for french people it is considered flat, like not even an accent.
Even in south nowadays it seems like the youngsters donât have accent anymore. Accents are pointed at, very few people on TVor radio with an accent, France is very normalized.
Her pronounciation is ok-ish, calm down lol
You are a native french speaker, or you are a french person. Saying you are a french is incorrect. The Gigachad person says soneone is a french, but heâs deliberately using bad English. Hop you donât mind a correction.
I cannot agree more. This is exactly how I teach Polish đ”đ±. You have to learn words in sentences!
Awesome! đ€
@Weronika - Learn Polish Online
Teech mee polski ogorki
Szytck zdonzcyk spiewak warsow stalingrad cvieti
đ·đ
Polish? Jeez it's such a challenge, Im polish and I can't speak it properly
@@mabrys__spef4794 Me too đ
You're so correct about learning words in context! I took both French and Spanish in school in the USA where we had to memorize lists of new words every week. I didn't learn the language that way and in fact never wanted to go near a foreign language ever again. That is until I relocated to Europe. I began learning my first language in context and it went so quickly! I was amazed. I've since learned 4 additional languages, all in context.
So listen to this woman. She knows what she's talking about!
I about DIED at the duolingo part, your editing is hilarious! Thanks for the extra tips, things I haven't thought of before :)
HAHAH no shade đč thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed đ
i can be so lazy when it comes to making flashcards because it's a lot easier and faster to put the english translation on the other side instead of using my target language for both sides. thanks for these tips!
yeah, like i said i really only recommend that for advanced learners!! iâm not sure where youâre at with your TLs but
@@elyssespeaks i'm intermediate/advanced so i have no excuse lmaooo
The 'study words in context' seems such a logic thing but I understood it like six whole years into my japanese learning journey, i don't know why. great video btw, i'm going to incorporate a couple of things i'm not doing right now, thank you
It's definitely something that solves that "what's missing" feeling when you get to an advanced level! Cheers, i'm glad you liked the video
This was so helpful! Thank you so much :D and that kitten is the cutest thing! đ
As a Taiwanese who is picking up English, I feel like not doing translations into my native languages is kinda helpful for being able to truly understand the sentence that Iâm learning cuz the word order of the language differ from country to country so I just tend to comprehend the meaning of the sentence instead of reordering the structure of it cuz itâs unnecessary to do a proper, perfect translation unless youâre a interpreter or what. On the other hand, since stop sticking to memorize the translation, it actually highly boosts my spoken English as I have a deeper and more thorough awareness of the vocab itself instead of just memorizing the words literally. Because I have started learning English by memorizing the chunks of the words and the definition as well, most importantly I get rid of learning vocab individually, I can feel Iâm getting more familiar with English.
Do you need a language partner ?? Haha
Great advice! I make a list of all my passive vocabulary for each language and every now and then go down the list to see what I remember. When the words become active I move them to another list.
I am definitely a "see it and hear it" person. When coming across new words, especially in conversation, I always ask if they can write the word or phrase down and say it again. I just remember it better that way. I think it also helps me to hear how it's naturally said VS how it sounds on the computer VS how the teacher pronounces it.
Studying words in context... I'm agree with you.
Before I didn't can learn words easily, but now when i ready a book, I can memorizing words in context.
Ey very nice video! Love watching your stuff, it's very motivating to see you keeping up with your languages
thanks so much! iâm glad â€ïž
These are really good tips Elysse. I especially love the last two. I will definitely implement using output immediately & active recall starting with your native language â€â€
I'm glad you enjoyed it, I hope they work for you if you use them :)
Glad I came across this vid. Currently studying Italian and always looking for new tips to help me on this journey. So inspirational so thanks for sharing.
I love your videos, thank you so much for this videoâ€ïž
You are a genius I really found studying in context and by using our senses so much beneficial than just memorizing single words with their translations. Also, writing the words in the native language and produce the word in the target language is really a clever way to practice the output đđ» gonna try these with my korean study thank u so much
Always studying in context...Best piece of advice ever!!! 110% agree with you!!!
This video is worth taking notes. Brilliant just brilliant!
Yo thanks a lot you are doing a service to a lot of people. I am glad i found this video! i wish you you good fortune and many blessing
girl where have you beeeen this is hands down the best advice thank you so much!!! also your french is incredible keep it up :)
Thank you so much for your tips! They sound really useful!! I'll give it a try đ
This was a super helpful video! What you said with flash cards, with saying to put words in context and not alone. Subscribed!
Awesome! Thank you!
thank you so much for giving these tips! it's so hard when you've been learning a language at school, and now you don't have a teacher or a students' book, just your mind and the whole internet. it's so confusing - thinking where to start.
I always use Do and Say wherever possible. This the best kind of learning in context
Danke schön ĂlysĂ©e du hast mich so sehr geholfen im mein Sprachen lernen
This is super helpful thankyou Elysse!
Outstanding explanation Ely! Thanks for making learning easy and the tiny kitten i just love it.
my pleasure đ thanks for watching hehehheeeee
@@elyssespeaks your content deserves to be watched, i'm so excited one day you're going to learn arabic too hehehehe
Such a superb presentation, Elysse! Huge thanks.
iâm glad you enjoyed it! hope it helps~
Thanks for the tips it will help me exceed within the two languages I'm currently learn
Just found your channel and I absolutely love your personality!!!
Thatâs so sweet! iâm so glad
Those tips seems to be a really helpful. Im grateful to hear of them. Some of them are obvious though they not are used by me in everyday life so thanks
bekledigim videođ€© cok tesekkurler elysee âšïž
izlediÄin için teĆekkĂŒrler!! :)
This is the first time I've watched one of our videos before. Some good learning tips there.
Welcome to the channel!! i'm glad you liked it :)
Various creative ways to immerse oneself. A long way from the tedious ALM-French I started with WAY back in the day.
I vouch for this! This is what I'm doing for Mandarin! And will do for Russian & Korean. hehe ^^
Some personal notes/tips/reminders for the future:
00:00 - 00:39 let's talk vocabulary
00:40 - 1:46 *study in context, always:* Instead of "memorizing" individual words, learn them integrated in small texts, dialogues.
1:47 - 2:28 *see it & hear it:* Subtitles & the way natives express that sentence (context learning) will help you remember the word. Repeating it aloud helps a lot! Put that acting into it. ^^
2:29 - 3:26 LingoPie! *Master interactive subtitles website*
3:27 - 4:59 *study IN your target language:* prioritize storing the TL text/word in your brain as it is, detach yourself from translating it into your NL.
5:00 - 6:25 *output, ASAP:* Repeat the words/sentence aloud; create simple kid-like sentences with those words.
6:26 - 7:38 *switch to ACTIVE recall:* Recall in TL, instead of NT. Use the voc/sentences you already have to create new ones. Simple daily stuff or make it up.
7:39 - 8:16 look at my new cat Garbanzo. *Meow!*
Gracias por este video realmente estoy tratando de aprender japones pero aun ni siquiera puedo entender el Hiragana y Katakana aun estoy en eso pero este video me sirve muchas gracias por subir este video! : D
Thank you for this video â€
Haha I love your funny reactions in your videos&ig stories & ig posts đâš
Hi there! Thank you very much for the video. I've posted it to my students, and I'm sure they'll benefit from watching it.
Yaaaas Ms. Diazdeneira spreading the good word đ so glad to hear that!
I totally agree with you... I am learning french by myself (my 4th language) 2 months ago now is was so difficult but nowadays I am getting much better (I am studying almost 12 hours per day) but I learnt how to do this with the best teacher or youtuber: A.J. HOGE (with him I learnt English in 5 months). I am teaching to my niece English in the same way.... we are gonna get it!!! muchas gracias, thanks, merci... ItÂŽs a great video.
i wish you both luck!!:) â€ïž
Hey! Can you tell me how did you learn English in 5 months? Some tpis
12 hours a day,....uh huh...
@@TheStrataminor c'est comme ca!!! et maintenant j'ai déjà des conversations avec mes collÚgues!!!
I NEED this video. Can you tell us how to know if youâre a B2 or a higher level video? (P.S. Iâm doing good today).
Iâm glad i could help! And i put your suggestion on my list, thanks :)
@@elyssespeaks no thank you! Iâve been watching your videos for a while and theyâre all really helpful!
another tip I recommend is know what kind of learner you are and learn the word mostly using those methods :) love this video btwđ«
For sure!! I guess that kinda just went over my head since I forget stuff that seems normal/obvious to me now đ
Well, learn primarily by that method but actually try to occasionally incorporate different methods as well. I'm a text-based learner in general, and translations and definitions are the best ways for me to remember vocabulary, contrary to visual learning, but I occasionally try to visualize a concept or two.
And translation in general works best for me for remembering both vocabulary and information, it was even a technique I did for preparing for my exams (I'm a linguistics and foreign languages major) - if there was a key point I couldn't remember I translated it into English in my head, or into another language
@@safia9536 look up learning styles. And Veritassium has an interesting video that actually suggests the concept is a myth. Im my learning and teaching experience, the point in Veritassium's video "you are not a visual learner" is actually valid, though, but I wouldn't say learning styles are entirely a myth
@@elyssespeaks What do you mean by 'obvious things go over your head'
omg two videos in one week weve been blessed đ
More to come! :))
When I moved to NL in the 90s I found myself with limited channels on my TV but would watch the few anglophone shows as a relief. In NL they don't overdub so if in english, thee are subtitles. It was noticing the recurring patterns and their potential usage with a change in tone of voice for social interaction that gave me what I call "icebreaker Dutch" where I could at least make a strong effort in using Dutch before it all eventually reverted to english. It helped me "internalise" the words.
A great tip that works.
thatâs awesome! i learned smth about netherlands that i didnât know before hahaha
Also, one of my favorite things personally. Once you get to a high enough level where you can read fairly well, like every word isn't new to you, or whenever you feel comfortable, really, start reading Wikipedia articles. I actually did it cold turkey with Polish once knowing barley any and it honestly went pretty well. More frustrating than having a solid foundation, but not bad.
From the beginning start writing down/making quizlets and learning the words that you don't know, go over them until you can read that part of the article and none of the words seem foreign. Pick them apart, look at the prefixes and suffixes and such in the context they're used in in the words. Maybe write a summary of that part without looking at the article using some of the words you just learned.
You'll start seeing less and less words you don't know as you go, and since they're on one topic, you'll see the same words used in different contexts and in different forms in a natural way. If you read an entire article, especially a long one, take your time, like literally maybe days focusing on learning the words in it, you will go back at the end and be able to reread it pretty fluently and go "Wow, I didn't know this word a week ago? I feel like I've seen it 100 times" and you're not likely to forget it.
Wikis will also use words that are not going to be in a normal conversation, but can still be useful to know. Especially if you're studying in another country/want to study in another country, reading things in a "academic" format will help you.
You can also go down a rabbithole with this, once you're done with one article, go to a similar one that will have some of the same words, learn the few words that are new, and keep moving through related articles like that, and its actually amazing when you get to a topic barley related to your original one and you can understand a lot of it. Now this isn't going to take like two days or something, that will never happen learning a language, but depending on your ability to learn languages and the difficulty of the language from your native language, you'll be amazed at how effective this can be.
Woww, thank you for your tips đ
I am doing well thank you for asking. Also, thank you for making this video. I hope all is well with you.
Thank you for the great advice â€
This is so helpful! Great video đđđ
glad i could help
Thank you very much for this wonderful and important video đđđâ€
it was a pleasure to make it for ya!! glad it helped.
@@elyssespeaks Thanks again, this video helped me as well as the Notion video đđ
thank youu so much so helpful đđ
Iâll take these advices now that Iâm doing my internship as a translator/interpreterish!! Thanks!
Congrats! I hope these come in handy for yaaaa
Imagine a minha felicidade quando eu descobri meses atrĂĄs que aprender vocabulĂĄrio nĂŁo era simplesmente pegar uma palavra aleatĂłria, decorar e nunca mais esquecer, lol. Sempre quis aprender outra lĂngua mas por muito e muito tempo eu achava que era simplesmente fazer isso, e no fundo era algo chato demais, por isso sempre desistia dias depois. VocabulĂĄrio Ă© a base de tudo, acho que saber como estudar isso da forma mais eficiente possĂvel Ă© a coisa nĂșmero um mais importante pra aprender um idioma c: Eu uso um mĂ©todo que Ă© basicamente pegar algum texto que me interesse, daĂ vou lendo e colocando a palavra que desconheço num dicionĂĄrio conforme leio (AliĂĄs, oq seria de mim se vocĂȘ nĂŁo tivesse me apresentado Linguee), e depois traduzo a frase inteira ou sĂł um pedaço dela que nĂŁo entendi muito bem (NĂO com Google tradutor, Ă© outro đ) e entĂŁo vou dissecando o texto e tentando ou pesquisando alguma nuance que ainda nĂŁo entendi totalmente. Ă algo bem lento realmente, dizem que entender totalmente o texto de uma sĂł vez nĂŁo Ă© algo necessĂĄrio, que seria mais importante se expĂŽr Ă mais palavras desconhecidas do que ficar se prendendo Ă uma frase sĂł, mas ao menos pra mim sinto que Ă© bem eficiente. AlĂ©m de que sempre dĂĄ pra ajustar isso pra: tentar entender TUDO, inclusive a gramĂĄtica da sentença, ou apenas tentar entender sĂł as palavras que desconheço.
Essa tĂ©cnica Ă© muito boa, ainda mais se vocĂȘ estudar a estrutura gramatical junto. Se sua lĂngua escolhida for o inglĂȘs te recomendo a extensĂŁo Wordology, vocĂȘ basicamente vai add as palavras que vocĂȘ jĂĄ sabe, e tem a chance de pesquisar as que nĂŁo sabe, ele vai salvar as que vocĂȘ jĂĄ colocou em verde, as que nĂŁo salvou em vermelho e as que precisam ser melhoradas em azul, entĂŁo quanto mais vocĂȘ usa mais vocĂȘ vai ver os sites com textos todos verdes, daĂ vocĂȘ vai ter mais noção de como seu vocabulĂĄrio estĂĄ.
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i have task for polyglot people and youâre my task subject so thank you đ
Very helpful and excellent tips. Thank you
Great tips! Thanks for sharing them.
always! :) glad you enjoyed the video
These are great tips!
Really good content! I'm glad I found your channel.
Iâm glad you found me!
@@elyssespeaks me too! Have a good Thanksgiving!
love itâ€ïž
This is really great video like always
thank youuuu! more to come!
Thank you very much for the much needed tip, memorizing tons of words and sentences is really taxing and irritating when you can't retrieve it when needed đ
You earned my subscription đ§Ą
Hi dear professor.
Thank you so much for your help and advice.
I really appreciate your job. I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity.
All the best.
Have a good time.
Your follower from Algeria not Nigeria
Your enunciation is great!, I donât have to strain to understand what your saying. Thanks.
Interesting. Got to try that. ( try in context)
Thank you for your advice!
hey, thanks for watching! đ
this is something iâve been struggling with, so this is really helpful!
I'm glad I could help out! good luck with your learning :)
I have been using LingQ for a while now and it is great! I just read and watch Netflix generally and then have conversations in the language. So far I am C1 in Spanish, B2 German, can understand Catalan and can speak more and more each day and Iâm learning Italian (hopefully going to study there next year). However, this video has kind of made me realise that I really need to immerse myself more and start using monolingual dictionaries etc. Also the flash card function on Lingopie looks awesome! Having them automatically created makes it much easier because generally spending so much time making flaschards feels like a waste and a drag. I will definitely incorporate these tips into my language learning journey and continue learning more language and making more connections to the wonderful people of the world! Muchas gracias por este video!
This video was awesome! Very unique from any other language learning advice video Iâve seen đ thank you!
aww that's so sweet :') i'm glad it helped!!
Thank you for this video, i was on my 120 day streak on duolingo but now switched to Busuu. So much better hahah. I was wondering why after 4 month i could still not have a conversation in spanish. Also lingopie looks really nice.
Lingopie was a game changer for me. I plan to watch it way more in 2023. I need to cut back paying for all these streaming services lol đ . ХпаŃĐžĐ±ĐŸ Đ±ĐŸĐ»ŃŃĐŸĐ” Đ·Đ° ĐČĐžĐŽĐ”ĐŸ đđŸ
HAHAH yeah i hate managing subscriptions but itâs honestly so worth it
Have you also used FluentU and can compare them? Pros or cons fo either/both? ^_^
I feel so bad because I was learning languages and was really into it, my native language is spanish but i also speak english and italian and was learning french, but my mother got sick plus i was un the last months of highschool meaning so much homework and tests so i had to put away my journey of learning languages and haven't gotten back to it, but i know i will since i love it so much.
all fantastic tips!
glad you think so!
Amazing, thank you very much.
Iâm gonna try to follow this video! I always memorize German words and sentences but I forget them within a week! Iâll try out your methods, thanks for the video!:)
æŹćœă«ç¶șéșïŒ
Stephen Krashen is absolutely correct. Frank Smith as well! Thanks for the video
One thing I have found helpful is to look up words in a monolingual dictionary of your target language. Of course, you will often find other words in the definition that you f
donât know so you look them up and if you still canât understand then as a last resort. I have several but one that I donât have with me now also has an example of how each word is used in a sentence. That is very helpful. Sometimes the names of certain things like names of plants you might need pictures to fully understand exactly what it is. You might not know what it is with just a definition.
You are so sweet! Thank you!
The Active recall tip is very valuable
Glad you think so!! it's something I don't see people talk about much
Merci beaucoup! trĂšs utile đ€
De riennnn â€ïž
Very useful insights!
glad you think so Alex ~
Hi elysse great to see your videos! I'm still new to your channel. Curious to know what languages you speak or currently study? And could you make a video about why you decided to learn those particular ones, why do you identify with them? Thanks :)
Just started this video and I can already tell itâs probably going to be good and I should subscribe because the author appears to be a fellow left-hander.
HA thatâs good, hello my brother
Have you ever tried LingQ? I've subscribed there recently and have been using it to learn Spanish. It's completely based around the idea that learning words and learning them in context is the key (to getting fluent), and it's been very helpful.
With that said output is definitely my weakest side of language learning. It's way too comfortable to just stick to reading and listeningđEven the flashcards which I despise I know would help things progress a lot smoother but I can't force myself to make them.
Iâve tried it here and there, but never for longer periods of time! Glad it works for you ~
If you practice just input, you'll have trouble speaking.
@@Edgar2023ES What do you mean, exactly? Very likely your pronunciation will not be great and you'll not feel as comfortable speaking, but you'll not have much trouble understanding what's being said to you (up to a reasonable level) and figuring out how to respond.
Si quieres practicar español podemos hablar đ Iâm learning English đ„č
My first impression of you was not that great to be honest. But as I heard your voice, OH HOLLY LIKE IT and your talking is also so good. I see you're so interested in the thing you talk about, I see you know a lot about it and so educational 'phrases' and thoughts are being told by you. You speak so friendly and this makes your video's mood so high. I like it! after 10secs of your video, vibe went up so much I just kept watching.
I'm not on the level to study in my target language yet but when I read a word in my target language, instead of thinking of the English word for it I like to engage my senses. For example, for the french word "fleur" instead of thinking of the word "flower" I think of an actual flower and its touch/smell/feeling associated with it. I think it helps me retain its meaning and even if I forget when I gloss through that word in a sentence I almost always guess what it means
If you have problems with consistency (like međą) when it comes to language learning what I do is I made duolingo a widget in my phone it shows me my streaks and Iâm more motivated to save the streak because itâs right in front of me . This also insures me that I get at least a little bit of my target language into my brain everyday no matter how busy I am. Iâm at a 30 day streak right now and thatâs really the longest Iâve ever payed attention to any foreign language
I use duolingo as well. I think it is ok to use if you don't have much time. I write down any sentences that I found hard to translate and study them.
if your having issues figuring out how to learn new words or wanting to in general, it might be a good idea to translate your favorite pieces of media in the language your trying to learn (with a translator if you donât feel confident/donât know many words). youâll probably remember at least a few words when doing this.
yes itz exactly works!! i did it a few years ago and now im pre intermediate. plus i made a lot of online friends and chatted w em, improved my speaking and grammar.
I've put my whole phone in spanish... that's quite an experience, especially when you are navigating your options menu or reading something in a game, you have to learn how to read in it and you are exposes to it so much more often. I also like to set my social media to follow any sort of tags (like maybe Tumblr or twitter or instagram) that are in my target language, so I see both more often.
Hi Elysse, nice tips! :) Maybe you meant "A quoi tu penses ?" or "Qu'est-ce que tu en penses ?" (Qu'est-ce que tu penses de ...)? I think it'd be also a good thing if you used "dissimuler" in a sentence, as you explained at the beginning, cause there's a lot of contexts where "cacher" and "dissimuler" are not interchangeable... For example "Je me suis bien caché !". Oh, also, a friend recommended "Youglish" to me, instead of Forvo that I use a lot - or as a complement for it - and it's really sweet because words appear in context and in real speech ^^ Cheers!
The way you write is really cool..đ I'm left handed too.
Hahaha iâm glad you think so, sometimes ppl hate on lefties đč
I switched my phone language to German (the language Iâm learning) itâs helped significantly. I have a language notebook and it was very unorganised. Your advice has helped! Danke schön:)
Viel GlĂŒck beim Lernen! đ
I find the tips useful and I'll make sure to use them whenever I can. Do you have any tips on how to learn 100+ words a day? I know that it's not ideal to learn this many but my German teacher doesn't really give me an option...
I like your handwriting!
love youâ€
Lâapproche est certainement trĂšs intĂ©ressante⊠đ
Merci pour les conseils Elysse ! Ăa a l'air sympa Lingopie .
P.S. Ton chaton est derriĂšre toi. De rien.