Lýdia Machová - Ten things polyglots do differently [EN] - PG 2017

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  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2024
  • There seems to be a gap between the way polyglots learn languages and the way they are taught in most language courses. Why is that? And what exactly makes polyglots’ ways of learning languages different?
    Lýdia’s mission as a language mentor (www.languagementoring.com) is to help people learn languages more effectively by applying learning strategies that polyglots use. In this talk, she provides a few insights on where the methods of polyglots and of foreign language teachers seem to differ. She’s helped thousands of Slovaks change their approach to learning foreign languages by applying polyglots’ principles in practice. Lýdia's also one of two head organizers of Polyglot Gathering 2017 and 2018 in Bratislava.
    Do you like Lýdia Machová's way of learning languages? Then you're going to love her webinar that you can watch for free here bit.ly/34SEoyr Find out how to learn to speak a foreign language - once and for all!
    Want more tips on learning like a polyglot? Then visit:
    💙 Lýdia's FB page where she regularly adds useful language-learning tips: / languagementoring
    📸 Lýdia's Instagram @languagementoring to get motivation for your learning
    🔗 Lýdia's website where you can learn all about her online courses and latest blog posts about events in the language-learning world bit.ly/3mKq15h
    💌 Sign up for her newsletter here: bit.ly/2GmpNSa and get fresh news in your inbox every month
    This video was recorded at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava 2017 (www.polyglotgathering.com/).

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @mgspunk
    @mgspunk Před 6 lety +2706

    1.Polyglots don't have a special talent! 15:07
    2.Every polyglot has their own method 16:34
    3.Polyglots learn languages mostly by themselves 17:08
    4.Polyglots create their own language material 18:31
    5.Polyglots learn one language at a time 19:12
    6.Polyglots spend much more time listening and speaking 20:32
    7.Polyglots are not afraid to make mistakes 23:12
    8.Polyglots have mastered the art of simplification 24:50
    9.Polyglots learn in small chunks 26:20
    10.Polyglots enjoy learning languages 27:10

    • @Aritul
      @Aritul Před 6 lety +20

      mgspunk Thank you!!

    • @sharkrec2155
      @sharkrec2155 Před 6 lety +15

      thank you

    • @narata1541
      @narata1541 Před 6 lety +9

      mgspunk Merci beaucoup! :-)

    • @massimilianosarto6472
      @massimilianosarto6472 Před 6 lety +39

      Thank you, saved me 40 minutes

    • @LiborSupcik
      @LiborSupcik Před 5 lety +8

      Is not the polyglots' gathering an instance of paralel-multi-lingual learning when her focus jumps among her tongues? It is about focus favoritism. Naturally one tongue is the winner of that focus. The BS is in her excluding learning using methods, materials and contents among or between our L2 to Ln tongues where L1 is the tongue of the environment. Also No 6. has its mavericks such as Emanuele Marini who when beginning a new tongue, habituates himself with passive methods' boost.

  • @diegoferreira6556
    @diegoferreira6556 Před 4 lety +129

    Every time when I feel tired of learning another language, I try to watch polyglots. And I get energy and I change the way I am learning. It's work. Thanks for sharing.

    • @Languagementoring
      @Languagementoring Před 3 lety +1

      Happy to help!

    • @kishanchali8752
      @kishanchali8752 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Languagementoring Most of those so-called polyglot aren't polyglots at all. They're just attention seekers who are trying to show off as a kind of special breed.

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před rokem

      @@kishanchali8752 That’s true but Lydia is a real one

    • @FaysalElAddouti
      @FaysalElAddouti Před 22 dny +1

      You want to know a language that will give you depth whereby you'll be able to figure out hidden meanings? Classical Arabic. Arabic has diacritics and dots, but in the past, they used to write Arabic without diacritics and dots. If you learn Arabic, then learn it first with dots and diacritics, but if you're done, then go to the next level by understanding Arabic without diacritics and dots. This way you will maximize your depth. Your contextual comprehension will become better. Why is this? For example; without dots, the Arabic B, T and TH look exactly the same. So if you read without dots, you'll have to figure out the context by digging. It's like a code language. A secret language. Lots of letters will resemble each other without dots in Arabic. Classical Arabic without dots makes you dig, and this is good for creativity.

  • @gregtomkins5938
    @gregtomkins5938 Před 5 lety +636

    Language skills aside, she is a superb public speaker!

    • @Tina-wk2pr
      @Tina-wk2pr Před 4 lety +27

      Agree! I love listening to her! She's self-confident, skilled with a positive and pleasent presence. 👍👍👍

    • @letsgomario
      @letsgomario Před 4 lety +18

      @@Tina-wk2pr How odd. I found her to be condescending, not engaging and a little full of herself. I speak 4 languages and I was looking forward to this talk but as much as I wanted to, I just couldn't watch the whole thing. English was the first language I learned and it is the language that I use everyday. It is true that you have to make the process fun. Music has been a huge way for me to get involved in a language.

    • @nikolaia7893
      @nikolaia7893 Před 4 lety +7

      @@letsgomario I know, right?! I agree with your opinion about the speaker. She also seems to be more concerned with quantity over quality. My native tongue is English. My language-learning goal is communication, but also for the purpose of understanding nuance, culture, idioms, expression of emotion, etc. Music is helpful for me, as well. Pictures also help me. I often label items in my home to help with natural identification of characters instead of letters.

    • @lenorewiggins1823
      @lenorewiggins1823 Před 3 lety +22

      @@laraspecter5653 she had a ton of examples of different styles different people use, as opposed to most presenters who just relate what works for them as if its self-evident that it should work for everybody. Even if her style was unappealing to me (which it wasn't), I would have wanted to watch the whole thing. I think maybe some people are threatened by such a confident Eastern European female.

    • @briribalta3698
      @briribalta3698 Před 3 lety +9

      I agree! I like her self confidence. This is my third time watching this video.

  • @syedalifahadzaidi
    @syedalifahadzaidi Před 6 lety +79

    Not just language, if you want to learn anything you cannot depend on a tutor or a class. Ones dedication to the learning is what matters most.

  • @andreismolko9935
    @andreismolko9935 Před 6 lety +99

    Languages cannot be taught, they can only be learned. That's true! I liked her speech a lot.

  • @StalkAlexHere
    @StalkAlexHere Před 4 lety +49

    My biggest key to learning a language is to find a way to communicate an idea with the vocabulary you have.... even if it is not how you “properly say something”, the key is simply finding a way to express your feelings and ideas, and NOT FEAR THE MISTAKES. 👍🏼

  • @njabulob373
    @njabulob373 Před 3 lety +17

    I love her accent. She has a calm, soothing voice.

  • @Xx-xk7xu
    @Xx-xk7xu Před 6 lety +408

    I read fanfics 😂😂😂
    I have this guilty pleasure of reading fanfiction, and it helps me learning languages.
    Today, after six years of reading fanfics, I can read them in five different languages :)

    • @sofisoria4569
      @sofisoria4569 Před 6 lety +13

      AWESOME

    • @rebbecachunn
      @rebbecachunn Před 5 lety +12

      Do you have suggestions for fanfic sites?

    • @brittany810
      @brittany810 Před 4 lety +3

      Rebbeca Chunn watpad

    • @sal_strazzullo
      @sal_strazzullo Před 4 lety +2

      Hi, what is fan fiction? (I'm too lazy to google it)

    • @salem1585
      @salem1585 Před 4 lety +2

      How?Do u learn vocabulary with writing down them somewhere?Can u explain it, please?)

  • @msaali3179
    @msaali3179 Před 6 lety +454

    *Summary*
    Initial Insights
    - Polyglots manage quality of time, rather than quantity
    - Polyglots have personalised system, though have common traits
    e.g. of systems
    - Speak from day 1(bennie)
    - Material (Steve kaufman)
    - High frequency words (Lucas)
    - Flashcard system w/o translation
    - Robin McFernon (dissection)
    - David James (Re-write vocab list)
    - Phrases *then* fun, material, consistency, priorities (Lydia)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1. No special talent
    2. No one-size-fits all method
    3. Independent learners
    4. Create own material
    5. One language at a time
    * 6. Polyglots spend MUCH MORE speaking and listening
    7. Polyglots love to make mistakes
    8. Art of simplification (e.g. Lucas' High Frequency method)
    9. Diligently consistent
    10. Polyglots MAKE language learning their addiction (key: find material YOU find important for native speakers)
    *Personal approach is what matters, so try to add and revise your systems*
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Quotes:
    -'Whether you think you can or you can't, you're right'
    -'If you do what you've always done, you will get what you've always got'

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před 6 lety +10

      thanks, that's a good summary!

    • @meusisto
      @meusisto Před 6 lety +3

      Gratias ago!

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před 6 lety +1

      +meusisto Latine scio?!?! Optime! Nostrorum non multi sunt.

    • @meusisto
      @meusisto Před 6 lety +1

      Ita est, rex Keegster, latine loqueris! Latine etiam ego loquor. Magnam laetitiam mihi dat scire te latine loqui posse.

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před 6 lety +1

      perquam bene! :)
      Obiter, si mecum Latine loqui uellis me offendere possis in Discord aut Skype.

  • @ricardoshillyshally1741
    @ricardoshillyshally1741 Před rokem +16

    My first French language teacher was from a Ivory Coast. He could speak German and English (so, he claimed, at least) but not Spanish. So, the first month he spoke French only to us. Some students quit. I learnt French big time thanks to him and never forgot what I learnt.

  • @bemdav
    @bemdav Před 6 lety +330

    I was born in Slovakia. When I was 15, I moved to Ireland and I had to do the Irish equivalent of secondary school graduation in 2 years time. As my second language in school (third for me, English was my second) I had chosen German, starting from scratch. Compared to other students who had 5-6 years to learn it, I knew I was up for a challenge, but I believed I could do it.
    I spent time in school, doing assigned homework, writing essays, etc., after about 1.5 years I noticed this was not good enough and at this pace I wouldn't be able to graduate well. My writing skills were okay, but 50% of the final grade were based on a 10 minute spoken conversation with the examiner. I wasn't great at that.
    I had decided to move in with my aunt who speaks German very well as she has lived in Germany for 7 years (and met her, now husband, there. Whose first language is Spanish). She also has 2 children who speak German a little bit, mainly from watching cartoons or from listening to their parents' conversations (Even though they speak Slovak/Spanish to the children). I lived with them for 2 weeks and all we did was speak German. Every day, whether it was regular chat, getting groceries in the store, or me babysitting the kids. My aunt refused to speak any Slovak in front of her children. I have to say, this was the best spent 2 weeks I ever could. I learned way more German than I would have during the 2 years in school. When I returned to school, some of my classmates thought I was German. I graduated with a B!

    • @rolfw2336
      @rolfw2336 Před 6 lety +6

      Great story :-)

    • @23gregorius
      @23gregorius Před 6 lety +11

      very courageous ! Why did you not apply for a grant or a scholarship with the German DAAD ? The problem with the crucial German language lies in its history and the dialects. The only persons who speak well German are the teachers and professors. I taught to Thai administrators German and used the method which no German teaching course entails: old songs (Volkslieder). Singing gives you a feeling of a language's melody. Each has got one - more or less articulate. In the USA there is a program to teach children born with grave brain damage. They never learn to read and write, but by singing a text memory is created and that helps in the long run to speak.
      In my long career I came to Tehran and observed that there are groups with no academic background, mostly selling food and goods. They all speak fabulously 5 to 8 languages. So, I guess, there are genetic patterns which help learning a language. I wait for a respective genetic infusion letting me speak 30 languages without any accent.

    • @Aritul
      @Aritul Před 6 lety +1

      bemdav Great!

    • @Karl_with_a_K
      @Karl_with_a_K Před 5 lety +2

      Maith an fear! ;)

    • @renierbonthuyzen9703
      @renierbonthuyzen9703 Před 4 lety +4

      Well done. Are you and your family still living in Ireland? We are blessed to have such a beautiful country.

  • @petrophilip2279
    @petrophilip2279 Před 4 lety +29

    First off all, besides being a polyglot, Lydia is an amazing and an effective public speaker. Listening to her speech is a pleasant experience. I am going to listen to as many of her speeches as I can.
    Secondly she is an inspiring person. She has inspired me to learn what I have been trying to learn for professional development. These methods of learning can be applied to learning different skills or habits such as public speaking, playing the piano, programming or working out. Just do it consistently.

  • @tiborikk
    @tiborikk Před 6 lety +269

    Absolutely brilliant attitude towards language learning. That's exactly what I needed to hear. A lot of polyglots on CZcams presentatinons try to push forward their own methods as if everything else was not good enough. This lady put it right - everything is good as far it is enjoyable.

    • @dragonswordmountain2908
      @dragonswordmountain2908 Před 4 lety +2

      +Tibo Rikk Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, good taste is in the tongue of the beholder, fun is in the eye of the beholder. What is your trash is my treasure.

    • @chrismicho2684
      @chrismicho2684 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/zVjlRMGVV74/video.html

  • @wozitoyadude138
    @wozitoyadude138 Před 5 lety +703

    How many languages requirements to be a polyglot. I speak Cantonese and mandarin Chinese, English, Spanish, Japanese and French. I know most of the polyglots learned the languages at their early age. But, I am old at age of 70. Can I still learn and mastery of these five languages in a year or two ! Please, wish me good luck and let me join the polyglots society.

    • @beatricei.gardiner13
      @beatricei.gardiner13 Před 5 lety +86

      Wozitoya Dude it is so wonderful and encouraging to me that you are seventy years young and still want to improve the languages you speak and I believe you will improve. All the best to you.

    • @beatricemukiri2415
      @beatricemukiri2415 Před 5 lety +76

      Wozitoya Dude, I'm a 17 yrs old Kenyan girl and wish to tell you that we have a similar goal. So far I'm conversant with 4 languages but still thirsty for more e.g. this language I'm typing with, I learnt it. It is not my mother tongue. Success!!!!!!!👍

    • @neuropakho
      @neuropakho Před 5 lety +60

      My rule of thumb: polyglots are those who speak 4 or more languages.

    • @patrickrusso8881
      @patrickrusso8881 Před 5 lety +18

      I applaud you! I am several years older than you and have had a challenge in learning only Spanish well (I am a native English speaker). The older you get the worse your short term memory becomes. So eventually you will forget as much as you learn. At that point you will be at a Mexican standoff thereby going one step forward and one step back. Good luck!

    • @erturtemirbaev5207
      @erturtemirbaev5207 Před 5 lety +1

      all the best

  • @namjuok7203
    @namjuok7203 Před 4 lety +7

    Her voice is too good, soft, melodic to just ignore. Such a powerful ability to make others concentrate! The contents she presented were also wonderful. Inspiring speech indeed.

  • @polyglot8
    @polyglot8 Před 4 lety +175

    If there were a tenth circle of Hell in Dante's "Inferno", it might include watching reruns of "Friends" in six languages.

    • @wadepatton2433
      @wadepatton2433 Před 4 lety +2

      Ha!

    • @ExShaker
      @ExShaker Před 3 lety +2

      Jajajajaja

    • @briribalta3698
      @briribalta3698 Před 3 lety +12

      😂😂😂 I'm laughing in 3 languages.

    • @WhyYoutubeWhy
      @WhyYoutubeWhy Před 3 lety +5

      ROFL nice one! Seriously, i barely could bare watching it once...

    • @Anastasia-vm4te
      @Anastasia-vm4te Před 3 lety +3

      I've watched friends 9 times in english (and I didn't even know english, that's how I learned it), and now I'm planning to watch it in german. all people have different tastes, can you guys believe it? for me 10th circle of hell is "game of thrones"

  • @sealand000
    @sealand000 Před 5 lety +47

    Not every native speaker of a language is blessed with a special talent, so you don't need a special talent to learn a new language. But you need exposure to the language, and motivation.

  • @MovieRiotHD
    @MovieRiotHD Před 5 lety +19

    Her point of listening is key: The french I was taught in school was completely different from what actually is being spoken in France.

    • @korana6308
      @korana6308 Před 2 lety +2

      Same for other countries. There's a huge underlying problem in the languages that are taught in schools around the world, because majority of them are "taught by the book" and do not represent real world languages. And sometimes even mistranslating things , because of missed cultural contexts. As a native Russian and English speaker it pains me every time listening to those translations , even at the highest levels (Putin translations are also very vague and are contextually wrong alot of the times ) they miss alot of stuff... There's also this famous Russian evening show called "Vecherniy Urgant" and I will never forget how some "professional" translator from that show translated one of the most famous Arnold S. quotes "get to da choppa" as "get to the chapel" in Russian, I was facepalming so hard🤦‍♂️...

  • @lfmb4real
    @lfmb4real Před 6 lety +171

    what worked for me was to build a very basic vocabulary, such as I want, I need, I have. then learn the second person such as can you? do you? would you?. and if you do not know the rest, just point to the object in question and the other person will name It, after that it gets easier, as you learn to add, the " he, she, we, they", and some of the structure. when you are pointing you are hearing the pronunciation aplicable locally. language is such a beautiful concept, I have seen a lot of different children, playing together, each speaking their own language and all understanding eachother, it was wonderful, there was, no color, no language barriers, no preconceptions. we as adults can learn so much from the children. and you are right!. each has to find what works for them. and do not be afraid to make mistakes, practice makes perfect.

    • @dragonswordmountain2908
      @dragonswordmountain2908 Před 4 lety +5

      +lfmb4real Tim Ferriss style, "Give me the apple, i want the apple, he ate the apple, she has the apple, they gave me the apple, we have the apple, who has the apple?, it is my apple".

    • @truvy_5544
      @truvy_5544 Před 4 lety +3

      I should've did this!!!!! My method was treating other languages like it's English and adding it to my English vocabulary so I'll learn 10 words a day and I'll put it in a sentence (I only do that with nouns & verbs) overtime it gotten stressful. Im definitely doing this method

    • @WhyYoutubeWhy
      @WhyYoutubeWhy Před 3 lety

      @Jonas Felipe Modena de morais The thing with those is that they are not really spoken, but written.

  • @antigen4
    @antigen4 Před 6 lety +42

    the 'timekeepers' are those who learn a language in school without actual immersion. I was a 'timekeeper' for a LONG time - did several years of french but couldn't really figure out how to speak it because i wasnt' really expose to real french - not in a 'working' environment anyway- but then on a lark i moved to germany and was forced to learn german 'on the street' - this completely 'upped' my game a LOT. Not only did i learn functional german within a year or so - but actually i figured out how to 'do' french afterward ... you really have to reach out and thrust yourself in a functional linguistic environment IMO ...! ok good luck

    • @highstandards6226
      @highstandards6226 Před 4 lety +2

      Funnily enough, so was I. 7 years of french and I still can't carry a simple conversation without a great deal of effort and concentration! Yet my accent fools most into believing I'm a native speaker, which gets me in WAY over my head, TOO OFTEN!!😳🤦‍♀️

    • @katarzynanowak9017
      @katarzynanowak9017 Před 3 lety

      I think learning a language in school most of the time doesn't achieve great results. I did French for 5 years and Irish for 10 and I am still at only beginner level. The difference is that in school you have like 8 different subjects with homework from each so time and brain energy is scarce. I was never introduced to things like Duolingo or encouraged to use resources other than my books. Now I am doing my masters so only have 2 subjects at a time and much less homework. I am learning German for the past few months because I want to get a job in Germany when i graduate (bf is German). Now I have huge motivation and I already know more German than the other 2 languages. Being fluent in Polish helps also because some words are similar.

  • @noblelies
    @noblelies Před 6 lety +122

    One of the best speeches I have ever heard. Very useful.

  • @faithbwire9164
    @faithbwire9164 Před 3 lety +5

    When you réalisé she's your age mate that A-ha moment kicks in... Don't you just love her.. She speaks graciously and with authority... This is what I call goals🇰🇪🇰🇪🇰🇪 and she learnt Swahili

  • @jeanjaz
    @jeanjaz Před 3 lety +22

    The internet has made learning a language SO much easier. I wish there had been the variety that's on the internet now for my first 3 decades of life!

    • @vampoftrance
      @vampoftrance Před 3 lety

      I learned a lot of Bengali online and in chatrooms for two years

  • @irodanosirova6489
    @irodanosirova6489 Před 5 lety +1

    Perfect presentation....!!! Thank you so much...

  • @istvanzoltanmelegh4345
    @istvanzoltanmelegh4345 Před 6 lety +201

    The best presentation I've ever seen

    • @i4004
      @i4004 Před 6 lety +3

      do you really think she can teach anyone any lang. as she seems to think?

    • @frenchimp
      @frenchimp Před 6 lety +11

      She doesn't teach.

    • @saltycrotchwhiff3946
      @saltycrotchwhiff3946 Před 6 lety +2

      She is just a show off

    • @VRWarehouse
      @VRWarehouse Před 5 lety +1

      he's not wrong

    • @SleepyCity0001
      @SleepyCity0001 Před 4 lety +3

      if I knew a ton of languages I'd be a show off too

  • @JudgeHill
    @JudgeHill Před 6 lety +72

    great speech: clever and insightful

  • @anastasiiaromanova7521
    @anastasiiaromanova7521 Před 5 lety +2

    Brilliant! Thanks for such an inspirational talk!

  • @luiz11340
    @luiz11340 Před 6 lety +19

    Hi! I am from Brazil. When I writte I can to learn English much more. I AM 60 years old and I AM almost fluente in English. I hope I' ll be fluent this year.

    • @bobbymidha3901
      @bobbymidha3901 Před 6 lety +2

      Luiz Carlos Sá excellent. You are an inspiration to do that at your age. I'm naturally no good with languages

    • @chicoti3
      @chicoti3 Před 5 lety

      Bom trabalho na força de vontade, eu ainda consigo ver muitos erros na tua escrita e com todo respeito acredito que tu estejas um tanto quanto distante da fluencia, não falo isso como forma de te desmotivar, mas como a Lydia mesmo falou no video: "Poliglotas não tem medo de errar porque é corrigindo-os que ficamos fluentes". Não deixe que te digam que está velho demais pra aprender, não existe essa de gente mais velha ter mais dificuldade, todo mundo tem dificuldade principalmente quando estão aprendendo a primeira lingua estrangeira. Está aí Steve Kauffmann para provar, ele tem 65 anos, salvo engano, e é um dos maiores poliglotas, inclusive aprendeu russo aos 60 anos para acabar quebrar esse paradigma. Um abraço e boa sorte aprendendo Ingles.

    • @Correctrix
      @Correctrix Před 5 lety

      Parabéns. É bom continuar apesar da edade.

    • @bobbymidha3901
      @bobbymidha3901 Před 5 lety +1

      do you really think I will take the time to make my youtube posts grammatically correct?

    • @mep6302
      @mep6302 Před 5 lety +3

      I'll just correct you to help you (I'm a non-native speaker). *I can learn (after can you don't need "to" for the infinitive). *fluent. Good job. Keep going! Your English is very good. I'm sure you're going to be fluent very soon.

  • @ngocanhnguyen5293
    @ngocanhnguyen5293 Před 6 lety +16

    Thank you! Your videos motivate me alot!

  • @BPCost
    @BPCost Před 6 lety +8

    Super lecture - such great advice!
    Thanks
    Brendan

  • @Psimbolo
    @Psimbolo Před 6 lety +2

    What an amazing lecture!👏🇧🇷

  • @Karla4404
    @Karla4404 Před 6 lety

    Lydia siempre tiene consejos y conferencias increíbles.

  • @Nostalgia-pc6hb
    @Nostalgia-pc6hb Před 6 lety +14

    I speak Portuguese, Spanish, English, Italian, French. I have knowledge of German and Swedish and now I am learning Romanian. I use everything she said.

    • @danielblue4460
      @danielblue4460 Před 3 lety +3

      If you speak a Romance language, it will be easy to learn its siblings.

    • @Nostalgia-pc6hb
      @Nostalgia-pc6hb Před 3 lety +2

      @@danielblue4460 Definitely.

  • @cupakm
    @cupakm Před 6 lety +76

    I'd say the same principles apply to learning in general. Not only languages. Playing an instrument, for example, too. Or just anything that requires some skill(s).

    • @aprasovsky
      @aprasovsky Před 6 lety +10

      Marek Cupák By the way, learning a language is very similar to learning playing a musical instrument, there are many common points.

    • @LiborSupcik
      @LiborSupcik Před 5 lety +2

      I was learning piano and guitar both without any structured focus at the same time ... which she says the polyglots do not do

    • @tsenavi7389
      @tsenavi7389 Před 5 lety +3

      well some people may learn 2 languages at once but it'll definitely slow down your progress

    • @PizzaManager101
      @PizzaManager101 Před 5 lety +1

      Libor Supcik kaufman and lucia do, but the others at the conference don’t

    • @pythonatearubyonrails3541
      @pythonatearubyonrails3541 Před 4 lety +2

      Io parlo italiano e spagnolo
      Yo hablo italiano y español
      I learned Italian and Spanish at the same time, Italian took me a year only and I can converse. It just depends on your method and preferences

  • @renren4m802
    @renren4m802 Před 4 lety +2

    This was really inspirational. Thanks for making learning the possibility of learning multiple languages seem approachable!

  • @rodionraskolnikov4374
    @rodionraskolnikov4374 Před 6 lety

    What a wonderful speaker she is! Thank you!

  • @fernandoleon2321
    @fernandoleon2321 Před 4 lety +9

    Great presentation. Thank you for your inspiration. From Chile.

  • @ramapatitiwari3927
    @ramapatitiwari3927 Před 5 lety +5

    Very practical and applicable..
    Thank you Lydia.

  • @eon6595
    @eon6595 Před 6 lety

    Really an inspiration! I have been following her talks a fee months now and always learning new things. Thanks!

  • @SDW90808
    @SDW90808 Před 4 lety

    Brilliant! Exactly what I was looking for. Thank you!

  • @ahmedguid
    @ahmedguid Před 4 lety +3

    A gorgeous lady giving an outstanding presentation. Thanks a lot lady !

  • @randymartens1823
    @randymartens1823 Před 6 lety +28

    This presentation is absolutely riveting and 𝘩𝘪𝘨𝘩𝘭𝘺 motivating for those trying to learn a language totally new to them.

  • @manueliniguez8440
    @manueliniguez8440 Před 3 lety

    Una de las mejores charlas que he visto sobre el tema. Muy motivadora. ¡Muchas gracias!

  • @Berserk137
    @Berserk137 Před 6 lety +2

    This speech is really insightful!
    Lýdia, thank you so much!

  • @solidus784
    @solidus784 Před 4 lety +4

    Beautiful accent and a beautiful mind I could listen to her speak all day.

  • @captopilot
    @captopilot Před 6 lety +8

    Yes. Those of you who have hit on this already, correct. Any form of education -- langauge learning or mathematics or economics -- is only learned to mastery by an individual who personally pursues it. Education in anything is not an inoculation that someone shoots into your arm after you pay them a fee. You can't go to a "teacher" and say, "Educate me to proficiency." You must go get it. You must ply yourself at it. Or ... it never comes. Learning is not something you receive, it's something you go SEIZE.

    • @grtxgrtx
      @grtxgrtx Před 4 lety

      My parents pounded a few things into my head!

  • @englishamerican-style6673

    Great presentation and excellent advise!!!

  • @pcesaruema
    @pcesaruema Před 5 lety +1

    Beautiful. I loved your speech.

  • @kristinegrazu162
    @kristinegrazu162 Před 4 lety +3

    This was very educational! Thank you so much❤

  • @chiregio58
    @chiregio58 Před 5 lety +13

    A very very,,,, MOTIVATING video !!! Thumbs up from Mexico,,, ;)

  • @markie9739
    @markie9739 Před 6 lety

    AMAZING and so inspiring! Thank you so much.

  • @RussianLanguagePodcast

    Great tips! Thank you Lydia!

  • @billywade7794
    @billywade7794 Před 6 lety +63

    I'm almost 54. I'm now learning French again for the 4th time.
    9am I too old to start?
    Your seminar was amazing. I still dream of being a polyglot even though I don't speak any other language fluent yet.

    • @magorzatamargaret294
      @magorzatamargaret294 Před 4 lety +11

      Don't mind your age. It doesn't matter so much.
      Most important things in learning in general are:
      be fascinated about what you learn and want to know it at every price (feel it)
      Learn when you relaxed and rested.
      Drink a lot of water. Eat light, nutritional food.
      Don't distract yourself with thinking about some other stuff during learning (concentrate on your learning).
      Have a fresh air (open window from time to time).
      Think in a language you learn, talk to yourself in that language.
      During learning listen to music that synchronize brain's lobes - when your lobes are in perfect balance you absorb everything much faster.
      Enjoy :)))

    • @billykranberry6077
      @billykranberry6077 Před 4 lety +4

      I apologize in advance grandpa, you're old, not dead. That dude Lucas learned a language in one hour!

    • @magorzatamargaret294
      @magorzatamargaret294 Před 4 lety +9

      @@billykranberry6077 - he is not old, ok ?
      I modern society many people in their 50-ties look and are in better condition than those in their 20ties and 30ties :P

    • @magorzatamargaret294
      @magorzatamargaret294 Před 4 lety +1

      @@billykranberry6077 - typical answer of pseudoscientist, like you.
      Real scientist is open-minded - you are not. I am not going to waste my time as you have no the foggiest idea what I am taking about but you necessarily want to be right. Ego.
      And you are not the first person with such an attitude, so again - I am not going to waste my time with you anymore.

    • @ellenjackson356
      @ellenjackson356 Před 3 lety +6

      @@billykranberry6077 I'm 77 and I'm learning French and loving it. I took it in school years ago, but I really understand it now. Listening to podcasts and practicing with DELF exam material has helped. Has my rate of learning slowed down? Yep. But it's certainly possible. You can do it.

  • @eduardmitioglo4288
    @eduardmitioglo4288 Před 5 lety +7

    I like you're clear speech,
    nice job 👍👍👍

  • @mayflau1998
    @mayflau1998 Před 6 lety

    Thank you so much, you just a opened my mind! Best presentation ever!

  • @vilmar9820
    @vilmar9820 Před 4 lety

    I thank you a lot for such wonderful lecture!
    Congrats.

  • @adrianmoisa2281
    @adrianmoisa2281 Před 6 lety +40

    I have learned english by gaming a lot on the home PC around 5th grade. Up to that point I knew almost no English despite continuous effort from teachers and relatives. I simply despised school methods. Zero attention span... What seemed like a massive problem (gaming) later saved my carrer. I finished school with subpar grades and severe knowledge gaps. My math and my French are trainwrecks. However I was always curious about stuff. Slowly this habbit of consuming desirable content accreted in my solid programming skills that I posses today. Almost all knowledge that makes me successful today was gathered outside of school environment. I am deeply saddened to have discovered that school made me hate learning and only after finishing school I finally found the right environment to study hard and have a good time while at it. Seems ridiculous what I am saying but it fits so well with all the points that have been expressed in this video. I fully endorse the methods described. Currently I am learning German at a rapid pace after stalling for two years with classical methods. The secret was watching the entire Star Trek TNG series on Netflix with german dubbing and english subtitles. First 2 seasons were totally white noise at first glance. By the forth season some words started making sense. At the end of it I could understand 70% of the dialogue. Currently I am at 90% level of comprehension without subtitles. Already able to understand native conversations in the office and formulate replies. All in just 4 months. Curently I am planning to go for French and Italian, which is quite convenient while being in Switzerland. By the way, I have zero grammar knowledge. So... immersion really works! Find whatever feels fun, and expose yourself to that activity daily. Results will happen fast! Und jetzt, muss ich zu den deutschen CZcams kanälen gehen! Viel spass!

  • @areruben10
    @areruben10 Před 5 lety +9

    Salam/ Hallo! Mistakes are proof that we are working. Great job!!! Warm regards from Mexico

  • @periclesdasilva4069
    @periclesdasilva4069 Před 3 lety

    Impressive! Thank you. May God continue to bless you and your team.

  • @carlosedurios
    @carlosedurios Před rokem

    I can only thank you for the motivation you are proving to all of us with this presentation!

  • @tromboneJTS
    @tromboneJTS Před 5 lety +6

    Her accent becomes more and more prominent during the lecture. Go "all in" and try to speak more like a native is one of my primary goals.

    • @Tanerion
      @Tanerion Před 4 lety +6

      I actually find that listening to people speaking with accents is a good way to learn a language though. For example; if you listen to a native Japanese speaker and you aren't very familiar with the language it can be incredibly difficult to decipher what they're saying and figure out where a word ends and another one begins. If you speak English and hear native English speaker speak Japanese with an accent it's suddenly a lot easier to relate to because they'll typically speak slower and clearer and pronounce words in a way you're more used to.
      Which is not to say that you shouldn't try to sound like a native but learn the language first. I don't mind accents myself though.

    • @kangaroo9816
      @kangaroo9816 Před 3 lety +2

      If you want to sound like a native, that's great! Definitely a valid goal. But for me, personally, it's primarily about understanding and being (easily) understood; everything else I consider expendable, unless you're a spy or something and need to blend in lest you end up killed. :p

  • @arein9716
    @arein9716 Před 3 lety +4

    She is amazing, i love the way she is speaking in public

    • @danielac8497
      @danielac8497 Před 3 lety

      It's all about self-confidence. When you are self-confident you seem cleverer than you really are.

  • @luciamoir2641
    @luciamoir2641 Před 6 lety

    Thank you. This presentation on its own is encouraging !

  • @BTCMAN
    @BTCMAN Před 3 lety

    Super! great conference! Danke!

  • @wordwords762
    @wordwords762 Před 4 lety +3

    Public speaking at its best ... superb presentation

  • @jmurphy4975
    @jmurphy4975 Před rokem +3

    This video is 5 years old and yet, it's eternal! Well done, Lýdia!

  • @liquorupfrontpokerinrear7930

    Very informative. You have encouraged me to restart learning today!

  • @richard135b7
    @richard135b7 Před 6 lety

    Excellent information and insight.

  • @dreanki
    @dreanki Před 6 lety +190

    How i learn (starting) is very young children's cartoons and children's books. Words that stick out i look up in a dictionary. I build my vocabulary this way, learning as a native child would.
    This is really similar to how i learned my native language.

    • @keegster7167
      @keegster7167 Před 6 lety +34

      The problem with that method is that you might spend too long on easy material, tho, and it can be very boring, because what interests a child is not what interests an adult.

    • @AlecBrady
      @AlecBrady Před 6 lety +15

      King Keegster That's true, but you should progress as fast as you can - I've done this, moving on to older children's books and teenage books. But you need other material, too, like newspapers and television.

    • @dreanki
      @dreanki Před 6 lety +19

      It's not isolated to just that, children's books are just a starting point. I watch children's tv, listen to the radio, talk to people in the bar, watch other tv shows that look interesting. I just said i felt it was a good starting place. It's helpful to get examples of proper grammar early.

    • @meusisto
      @meusisto Před 6 lety

      Excuse me, does that take you much time?

    • @dreanki
      @dreanki Před 6 lety +6

      I didn't feel that it took much time, while i was in the native country i was able to learn rapidly and had no problem communicating with people. I got to 6 year old speaking level in about 4 weeks. I'm actually going back there next week for 3 months. I'm hoping to get some level of fluency this time.

  • @ethanoyamawang
    @ethanoyamawang Před 5 lety +7

    Totally agreed! The foundation of a language pyramid should be listening and speaking. Writing/Reading system takes each civilization thousand of years.

  • @Veronica-wg2zt
    @Veronica-wg2zt Před 6 lety

    Excellente vidéo !!!👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

  • @principiosbiblicos123
    @principiosbiblicos123 Před 3 lety +1

    I really loved this lecture and meet her. What a great inspiration! I didn't know her but now I love her.

  • @ericnolle5195
    @ericnolle5195 Před 4 lety +8

    Her point about taking a class and expecting to learn is so true. I've made that mistake.

  • @brunileshi
    @brunileshi Před 6 lety +23

    The 10 tips are listed at 30m38s

  • @alexandraisabelabatistasen1364

    Congratulations! I loved everything that I listened. Thanks for share your knowledges!

  • @jeff3741
    @jeff3741 Před 6 lety +85

    She has an amazing ability to concentrate. Excellent presentation. (How many ways can you translate "Obtrusive photographers?")

    • @raccoon6072
      @raccoon6072 Před 6 lety +2

      J Babb or "can you give me your flashlight for moment? ", in Slovakian

    • @AndyQuintana1
      @AndyQuintana1 Před 4 lety +5

      :D I think the photographer couldn't understand English and was bored to death!

    • @tonyfletcher150
      @tonyfletcher150 Před 3 lety +1

      Jeff most unprofessional photographer I’ve ever seen.

  • @marckdan2508
    @marckdan2508 Před 3 lety +11

    There's no mention of imitation in learning a foreign language -- taking on the persona of a speaker of the target language, and imitating their pitch pauses, expressions, etc. I guess it would be called 'Modelling'. It's worked for me.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes . But not everyone has that
      talent / ability . You probably have
      good music learning skill too.?
      It's a gift .

    • @HanifCarroll
      @HanifCarroll Před 3 lety

      Audio CDs do wonders here. I started learning Spanish a month ago, and the very first learning I did was using Michel Thomas' Spanish courses. In those courses, he stresses pronunciation heavily, so I tried my best to model my speech exactly as how he instructed. I really enjoy his method for getting an overall feeling of the language, but I believe that pretty much any audio CD where you listen and repeat can be used to achieve the goal you mention. Then, you can practice your pronunciation more by reading out loud in your target language.

  • @samuidesune
    @samuidesune Před 3 lety

    Excellent presentation - very inspiring and sound, practical advice.

  • @pk-fi1ok
    @pk-fi1ok Před 4 lety

    Excellent speech! Thank you for it, Lydia! Ďakujem pekne :)

  • @rajbahdoorbaba
    @rajbahdoorbaba Před 5 lety +16

    Mellifluous voice, marvelous speech modulation and wonderful presentation. I would love to watch all of Lydia's videos.

    • @wadepatton2433
      @wadepatton2433 Před 4 lety

      IN all her languages no?

    • @languagewitch6442
      @languagewitch6442 Před 4 lety +1

      I am a native English speaker and a teacher who works in bilingual teaching environments. Honestly, she needs to work on her English enunciation. A lot of her syllables are garbled. It's a common problem with many polyglots who follow the "one language at a time" approach. They learn a language up to a point where they are confident in it and then don't maintain it very well, even if they use it all the time.

    • @bertsanders7517
      @bertsanders7517 Před 3 lety +3

      @@languagewitch6442 A pretty harsh assessment! Compared with a lot of native English speakers who have gabbled through presentations at conferences I've attended she speaks English very clearly, with hardly any syllables that could be called 'garbled'. I imagine you would be very happy if you could give such a clearly enunciated talk in a language which is not your mother tongue.

    • @user-kc9yi3ro6n
      @user-kc9yi3ro6n Před 3 lety +1

      @language witch she speaks English fine. Better then a lot of native English speakers I know. She just has an accent, and accents and dialects in different languages are valid. Everyone can understand her, and that’s what’s important.

    • @user-kc9yi3ro6n
      @user-kc9yi3ro6n Před 3 lety

      You act like you are the god of English, you’re English isn’t perfect either, no one’s is. “Garbled”. 😂 lol wtf she’s speaking English fluently without grammar mistakes. You’re critiquing accent, which isn’t a valid critique when it comes to LANGUAGE. Stfuuuuuuuuuu 🥰

  • @alexeysilver3139
    @alexeysilver3139 Před 4 lety +5

    what an accurate accent, I am enjoying listening to it :)

    • @vliegendehollander
      @vliegendehollander Před 4 lety

      Алексей Сильверов. Her pronunciation is accurate, but the accent isn’t perfect.

  • @hannofranz7973
    @hannofranz7973 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant presentation in all regards.

  • @SamB2112
    @SamB2112 Před 6 lety

    Great lecture, very useful and motivating. Thank you.

  • @foreverdreamwithinadream6871

    This probably why I feel I am learning more French as a beginner than I did with Japanese and Spanish. With those two languages, I took classes and mainly did the work I was supposed to do and that was it which results in forgetting a lot. Now with French, I am learning on my own and discovering tips that I was never told back then. Once I feel fluent enough, I will retry learning the other languages applying what I know know-read, writing and speaking it out loud recording it, listen to songs, clips from movies, etc....using apps and programs. Before I didn't do any of this as I thought I needed to understand the languages really well first; but I think that was partly what held me back.

  • @katiepetersen4929
    @katiepetersen4929 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you. This was very motivating. I have been learning Spanish at home and have just now started going to an academy to help to have someone to practice with. I have learned a lot but putting 1 - 1 1/2 hours aside to practice everyday I think will lead me to my breakthrough. I do it with my fitness program and so I will apply the same dedication to my language learning.

    • @rachidlasfar9653
      @rachidlasfar9653 Před 6 měsíci

      Great rey try to get a Spanish speaker wants to learn English
      Language exchange method helped me a lot

  • @milagrosramos3696
    @milagrosramos3696 Před 4 lety

    Wow It's so amazing this presentation. I loved it. Thank you a lot.

  • @charlescampista9384
    @charlescampista9384 Před 5 lety +1

    That was definitely a great speech!

  • @abegailamandoron3815
    @abegailamandoron3815 Před 4 lety +3

    I just started learning Spanish French,English and soon Polish wish to learn it well.Very encouraging video and now I am motivated to do so.

    • @augustosantos6003
      @augustosantos6003 Před 4 lety +1

      I speak Portuguese(my native language), Spanish, English, a little bit of Italian(much more I understand than I speak), and I try to learn Arabic language now. At moment, It's my biggest challenge. :D

  • @skylarlim4181
    @skylarlim4181 Před 3 lety +4

    Amazing presentation which just about summarises and reinforces everything I've come to learn about language learning. I just managed to obtain my DELF B2 in French following Steve Kaufmann's method and I'm looking forward to advancing in Italian. My only regret is not watching this video earlier. Thank you.

    • @adamnugroho7496
      @adamnugroho7496 Před 3 lety

      Hi @Skylar Lim..Did you teach yourself to obtain DELF B2 or you took a "traditional" course?

    • @skylarlim4181
      @skylarlim4181 Před 3 lety

      @@adamnugroho7496 hey! I basically did 8 months of self study mostly reading and watching authentic French content to absorb the language then I took private lessons for about 4-5 months which is when I started to speak more and solidify my grammar and pronunciation!

  • @robertoenrique3162
    @robertoenrique3162 Před 3 lety +1

    Muy buena disertacion, gracias!

  • @dannyboy8625
    @dannyboy8625 Před 3 lety

    Hermosa lecture, merci beaucoup!!!

  • @piedadlorenserrano196
    @piedadlorenserrano196 Před 6 lety +3

    I like so much her tips to learn a language, I have been learning English language every day, I practice my listening, speaking, reading and wreating skills every day, also I listen to audio with video in English language and repeat over and over in order to improve my listening and speaking skills the above it's very important for improving our pronunciation.

    • @OlekW
      @OlekW Před 5 lety +1

      Piedad Loren Serrano American or British pronunciation?

    • @piedadlorenserrano196
      @piedadlorenserrano196 Před 5 lety

      Olek Walczy POMOC DLA OLKA, I have bee learning American English however, I have learning some words in Brithis English, I think that if a person Learning American English can understand Brithis English, I know that there are some difference between American and Brithis English asociated with the pronunciation and some words written. However a person who have learnd American English can unserstand the UK English. :) Regards.

    • @sandy-un8qy
      @sandy-un8qy Před 5 lety

      I noticed that you are commented on so many lydia machova video.✌
      I'm learning English by myself. Can you give me some tips on sources/apps to improve my Speaking, Writing, Reading and Listening

  • @jaimecarrillo4755
    @jaimecarrillo4755 Před 6 lety +16

    In my experience and in my personal opinion, I believe that in order to become highly fluent in a different language, first you must have thorough and complete knowledge of at least one language . A kid cannot keep jumping languages if she or he still has undeveloped knowledge of his first , parent's native language.

    • @Maria-jt7hu
      @Maria-jt7hu Před 5 lety

      Everyone has enough mastery of his own native language

    • @nana-ld4cr
      @nana-ld4cr Před 4 lety

      ​@@Maria-jt7hu you would be surprised, but where I'm from, a lot of people make mistakes when writing or speaking our own language haha

    • @magorzatamargaret294
      @magorzatamargaret294 Před 4 lety

      @@Maria-jt7hu - no, not children who can't speak well yet.
      And many of people of modern generation who don't read the books they are very poor at their own language....what a pity.

  • @cs-op8td
    @cs-op8td Před 6 lety

    Great talk, and right approach to learn / do anything.

  • @mariaalvarengaalvarengs492

    You are great Lydia thank you for your tips

  • @EspinmcBlogspotMN
    @EspinmcBlogspotMN Před 6 lety +5

    Traditional methods combine meanings=translation with text.
    Nontraditional methods turn the meanings itself into sound-voice.
    The former is just a translation, but the latter is highly versatile.
    Great video. Thank you Lýdia.

    • @LiamPorterFilms
      @LiamPorterFilms Před 6 lety +2

      NeuralNetworks but where does the meaning first get learned, if not through translation?

    • @EspinmcBlogspotMN
      @EspinmcBlogspotMN Před 6 lety +1

      In some way, we also could learn the meaning through translation.
      But meanings is the accumulation of our experiences, and usually the translation skips the process of it.
      In my opinion, if we try not to skip the process of accumulation as much as possible, the meaning can be learned from the composition of the experiences.

    • @LiamPorterFilms
      @LiamPorterFilms Před 6 lety +1

      NeuralNetworks that’s a beautiful phrase! I must say I’m thinking more of the first stages of learning, when you don’t have any experience and wouldn’t be able to cope with it if you could get it. At an advanced level, you can learn meanings from contexts or rephrasing easily, it’s undeniably a better way to gain vocabulary than dictionary work. However I’m dead against the notion of “learning like a child” since I’ve never met anyone good at a language, learned as an adult, who HADn’t learned their first 5000 words through honest toil, learning the translation of each word.

    • @gabrielfigueiredo8757
      @gabrielfigueiredo8757 Před 6 lety +3

      a quick translation , in my opinion, is the best aproach when you see the word for the first time

    • @AlecBrady
      @AlecBrady Před 6 lety +1

      Retinend When I was learning German in school, nearly fifty years ago, or teacher had us write our noun lists in a notebook alongside a picture of the thing. So, yes, he'd tell us what (say) "Wagen" means in translation, but we would then write the word in our notebook and draw a picture of a truck next to it. His intention was that we would connect the German word directly to the thing, rather than going via an English word. So, there's nothing wrong with getting the meaning from a translation the first time, but you shouldn't make that the basis of your practice.

  • @johndillon5290
    @johndillon5290 Před 4 lety +4

    I'm a time keeper, been trying to learn Italian for years but just cant retain the information. I've been working in Holland for some time and have been inspired by the ease which the Dutch can jump from one language to another with confidence. I keep looking for a formula to accelerate my learning. I will look into some of the suggestions on this video. Thanks for posting.

  • @joosttijsen3559
    @joosttijsen3559 Před 6 lety +1

    Good speech lydia, well done.

  • @shirshachakraborty4558
    @shirshachakraborty4558 Před 4 lety +1

    I enjoy listening and watching your speeches! I agree with most of the points you said. ☺

  • @marcdb9974
    @marcdb9974 Před 5 lety +32

    i was told by a German that I may not be Sprachbegabt, as my command of German grammar is good, but not great ... that may or may not be true, but I function comfortably in several languages by bumping along despite the mistakes I might make, so I ignore the comment and continue to bump along. I don't need to be perfect, just understood.

    • @almirrafaeldearruda9053
      @almirrafaeldearruda9053 Před 5 lety +5

      It was a German saying that lol

    • @bilbohob7179
      @bilbohob7179 Před 4 lety +1

      Germen grammar ist a nightmare like English pronuntiation.

    • @highstandards6226
      @highstandards6226 Před 4 lety

      @@bilbohob7179 pronunciation. Spelling is worse!😁🤷‍♀️💞

    • @bilbohob7179
      @bilbohob7179 Před 4 lety

      @@highstandards6226 yeah In English it is the another face of the SAME coin (pronuntiation-spelling) because both differ a lot between them

    • @UlanKG
      @UlanKG Před 3 lety

      4 is not a lot