How I would learn Spanish (if I could start over)

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2024
  • Try out Soundbites and start learning REAL, natural-spoken Spanish on Jiveworld 🌟 go.jw.app/elyssespeaks
    i'm fluent in spanish now, but in my opinion, i did it all wrong. here's how i'd go about it if i had another shot. spanish was the first foreign language i learned, so looking back i really had no idea HOW to learn languages! as a seasoned language learner, i've not only learned the languages themselves, but also how to learn them more efficiently. (believe it or not, this polyglot thing gets easier the more you learn.) thanks for watching :)
    00:00 i have no idea how i learned Spanish.
    00:48 speak from day one! (yes you can.)
    1:53 speak even to yourself
    2:10 record your progress!
    2:50 don't be scared to speak with natives
    3:38 stick to a specific dialect!
    5:36 learn spanish through stories
    6:10 learn REAL Spanish on Jiveworld
    8:00 STOP obsessing over grammar
    8:41 the grammar you NEED to know:
    9:30 don't try to learn EVERY new word
    11:00 learn vocabulary by topics
    11:41 studying in school is a trap
    13:08 comment your Spanish trauma down below
    -----
    📚 My language learning resources and templates:
    elyssespeaks.gumroad.com/
    ☕️ buy me a coffee (if you are so inclined!)
    ko-fi.com/elyssespeaks
    -----
    💌 social media:
    📷 instagram:
    / elyssedavega
    🐥 twitter:
    / elyssedavega
    🎵 spotify w/ english, german, spanish, and portuguese playlists
    open.spotify.com/user/elysse....
    -----
    💌 about me: my name is Elysse, I'm 23 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), French (C1), Portuguese (B2), American Sign Language (advanced), and Turkish (A1). I'm interested in learning Hebrew, Chinese, Georgian, and maybe Náhuatl as well :)
    #polyglot #languagelearning #learnspanish

Komentáře • 321

  • @elyssespeaks
    @elyssespeaks  Před 7 měsíci +30

    Try out Soundbites and start learning REAL, natural-spoken Spanish on Jiveworld 🌟 go.jw.app/elyssespeaks

  • @loirinff1531
    @loirinff1531 Před 7 měsíci +355

    I’m learning english and I’m pretty happy that i could understood 90% of the video❤❤❤

    • @StudyingIsFun
      @StudyingIsFun Před 3 měsíci +11

      Congratulations!!!

    • @dari0073
      @dari0073 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Congrats :)

    • @loganjohnson4642
      @loganjohnson4642 Před 3 měsíci +17

      Hey just to help you it would be “could understand”. Once the first verb is conjugated then the next one doesn’t need to be.

    • @jimmyyeates5260
      @jimmyyeates5260 Před 2 měsíci +6

      ​@loganjohnson4642 or take the could out and have "I understood" to be fair I didn't even notice till I read your comment

    • @loganjohnson4642
      @loganjohnson4642 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@jimmyyeates5260 Yeah but I figured he wanted to express the can part. I only mentioned it because it’s a common thing I see with English as a second language speakers. My friend will say stuff like “did you went to the store” instead of “did you go to the store”

  • @amauriherrera6022
    @amauriherrera6022 Před 7 měsíci +297

    As a native Mexican I tell people to imagine Lego blocks.
    You have your core blocks in the sentences and you just change the end or the beginning of your block sequence. Change colors, mix and match and so on as you get better in the language.
    The most basic structure in all Spanish is always: Who? What? When/Where/Why?
    Subject, Verb, Context-in case it wasn't clear above.
    Spanish is hard to learn for people with language background where there is no articles (particle users are fine) and verb placements don't have defined gender, tenses or placement structures.

    • @successbassey6675
      @successbassey6675 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Gracias amigo.

    • @arthouston7361
      @arthouston7361 Před 9 dny

      Many decades after a failed attempt to learn Spanish in high school, I am 15 days into duo lingo, and I have already leaned some 300 words, and I am starting to grasp gender, which is memorization and recognition of making the gender agree, such as in, "una nina." Another tip is to listen to the way the words are spoken, and imitating the accent. This is particularly important with French, because the French speakers "throw away" so many of the letters when speaking. To an American ear they sound lazy, but that's what it sounds like, so you have to just go with it. Making yourself sound like a native speaker is definitely important, and not worrying about being an accurate reader of letters on a page.

  • @patersr
    @patersr Před 7 měsíci +322

    I've been learning Spanish for 6 years, but in the last year I've made a huge jump in my comprehension levels.... and I think it's because I finally realised that learning a language isn't an intellecutal exercise... it's much more like learning to drive a car... when you first start to learn to drive it's so awkward... and you have to think of everything and none of it works... but after you've done a lot of driving you can suddenly drive, while listening to a podcast, arguing with your partner and texting your friend that you're going to be late... you learn to drive by doing a lot of driving... every day... a year ago I encountered "Story Learning" or Input-based learning and it just clicked... you learn a language by hearing it and reading it... that's how we got good at our own native language... but I do agree with Elysse that you should start speaking as soon as possible... until you've tried to force your 30k word vocab out of your mouth through your 500 word Spanish vocab you haven't really learned anything....

    • @oumietouray9476
      @oumietouray9476 Před 5 měsíci +4

      What can I read as a beginner

    • @Nehauon
      @Nehauon Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@oumietouray9476search up
      Spanish comprehensible input

    • @seochangbinsarms
      @seochangbinsarms Před 2 měsíci

      @@oumietouray9476honestly you could read Spanish children’s stories, or watch Spanish cartoons, those usually have simple language so as a beginner it would be good for listening and comprehension

    • @FireAndLightning
      @FireAndLightning Před měsícem +1

      That's a great comparison!

    • @dabreadwinna80
      @dabreadwinna80 Před měsícem

      Makes sense

  • @nataliewritesplans
    @nataliewritesplans Před 4 měsíci +93

    I'm Mexican-American. Both sets of grandparents spoke Spanish, but never taught it to my parents since they weren't allowed to speak it in school growing up. I wish I would've tried to learn Spanish from them before they passed. One of my biggest insecurities is not knowing Spanish. Going to give it a go. Thank you for your videos!

    • @kunlea228
      @kunlea228 Před 2 měsíci

      Wishing you the best on your learning journey! I’m starting as well! god bless.

    • @l0vsrat
      @l0vsrat Před 2 měsíci +1

      i am in the same position as you. wishing us both luck!

    • @sherryjackson8474
      @sherryjackson8474 Před měsícem

      My boss gets upset whenever me or other coworkers speak Spanish.

    • @michaelwiegand451
      @michaelwiegand451 Před měsícem

      So I’m 61, and I bet I’m your parents age. My father was German and 50/60 years ago they felt it was detrimental to learn 2 languages at once. BIG MISTAKE. My father always said it was his biggest regret not to teach me German.

  • @aliceinwonderland1120
    @aliceinwonderland1120 Před 7 měsíci +232

    High school Spanish was the best experience of my life. One year of Spanish in my senior year gave me a foundation that has lasted for decades. And la Senora Choplin gave me insights into Mexican culture and etiquette that have served me so well.

  • @georgezee5173
    @georgezee5173 Před 4 měsíci +43

    The "talking to yourself" advice is actually a very good one I've done myself both with a couple of languages (one of them being English). It helps strengthening your "brain muscle" by getting used to construct more complex sentences on the fly and practicing pronounciation with a more elaborated context (not just repeating isolated words or groups of words).

  • @blankb.2277
    @blankb.2277 Před 7 měsíci +362

    I don't think it matters that much when you start speaking. It's not that I think it's harmful at the beginning, I just think it's a waste of time. Some people find it motivating to speak right away and some find it motivating to wait until they have at least some instincts on how to self-correct. I definitely waited, but it wasn't an anti-social or psychological thing, I just wanted to use my time effectively.

    • @user-po4jc2mm4z
      @user-po4jc2mm4z Před 7 měsíci +46

      I totally agree with ur standpoint, for me start talking at the very beginning it's pointless. Cuz at that phase of ur Journey u have no words to articulate urself well. So if I'll start talking at that time I would repeating the same statments over and over again.if I'll talk at the very beginning it would be benefical in one case if ur trying to practice ur pronouncation. Otherwise u need to exploit this phase to work on assemble ur vocab. and to not brood way too much over when ur gonna talk!

    • @diederdas27
      @diederdas27 Před 7 měsíci +14

      Okay but that’s just your opinion. Other people’s brains work differently, and neither options are better or worse than one another

    • @blankb.2277
      @blankb.2277 Před 7 měsíci +57

      @@diederdas27 Okay? I literally said in my post that it's different for everyone and not to stress too much about when you start speaking. It was the woman in this video who presented her opinion as a broadly applying fact. I think the idea that people who wait are just waiting the "perfect moment" so they don't have to deal with social embarrassment is just a small group in the language learning community and most people are just waiting until they have a few hundred hours of exposure under their belt so the time they do speak is more effective.

    • @amskaylen6847
      @amskaylen6847 Před 7 měsíci +13

      @@diederdas27 of course, but if youre a complete beginner theres literally no point in trying to speak unless youve learned some basic vocab first. Im currently trying to juggle korean and spanish, its hard to speak if you dont know words lol. The best thing to do is get your vocab up and then its more encouraging when you actually try speaking, i remember trying to speak korean really early on and it just made me feel bad because i couldnt properly form a sentence when i didnt have enough words.

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 7 měsíci +43

      i definitely find it motivating especially when paired with native input!

  • @fabian1019
    @fabian1019 Před 7 měsíci +58

    I'm a native Spanish speaker, but I think these tips are gonna be useful to learn other languages as well.

  • @577zkerr
    @577zkerr Před 7 měsíci +7

    Preach! I got onto my fourth language before this started to hit home and I took this advice seriously.

  • @why9886
    @why9886 Před 7 měsíci +15

    Useful video and great tips. Thank you, Elysse. After two months of hiatus, thank you from the heart🙏

  • @janelle.loves.languages
    @janelle.loves.languages Před 7 měsíci +39

    Yeah I took 6 years of middle school/high school Spanish…I got straight As and I’d still say I really started to learn Spanish when I started immersing with Netflix haha

    • @yourtypeofpeople7705
      @yourtypeofpeople7705 Před 2 měsíci +1

      my exact situation!

    • @dabreadwinna80
      @dabreadwinna80 Před měsícem +1

      How did you do it? Can you break it down ...like a show you like or how you actually learned from Netflix for a beginner?

    • @janelle.loves.languages
      @janelle.loves.languages Před měsícem

      @@dabreadwinna80 I watch shows for adults in Spanish like La Casa De Papel but I wouldn’t recommend that to a beginner. It will be quite painful because you will have to stop every two seconds to look up words.
      I recommend starting with very easy content to listen to that’s made for beginners in Spanish (think Dreaming Spanish CZcams channel or even mp3s of graded readers or even use an app like Speechify to have graded readers read out loud to you in Spanish)
      Then you can work your way up after that to kids shows in Spanish on Netflix that have less complicated vocabulary and speak slower (annunciate more) and then finally you will be ready to enjoy adult shows in Spanish on Netflix with very little stress.
      Hope that helps!

  • @rosiey4710
    @rosiey4710 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Your advice makes so much sense. I have the same takeaways looking back how I learned English.

  • @daviddaytona
    @daviddaytona Před 3 měsíci +3

    I could not agree more over the uphill battle Spanish 101 in school was. I'd not thought of this until now, but even English grammar classes in school made me feel like I may as well be learning Latin. There are so many excellent points in this video and I'm so happy to have found it. Thank you for posting Elysse!

  • @hannina.studies
    @hannina.studies Před 7 měsíci +17

    I watched this video before school today and I was so happy you posted again. I kept refreshing my feed everyday and this morning I finally saw a new video :) I love watching your videos, thank you so much! Your advice is so helpful to me, as I’m currently learning French and Spanish. Viele Grüße aus Deutschland!

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 7 měsíci +4

      that’s wonderful 🫶 thanks for looking out for my videos 😇

  • @NatariMirumura
    @NatariMirumura Před 6 měsíci +10

    This was so helpful! Your tips helped me center myself on where to begin. I took Spanish classes years ago in school, and want to get back into the swing of things to learn Spanish fluently. But I was having such a hard time feeling overwhelmed, and not really knowing where to effectively start. Now I feel like I can develop more of a routine. Thank you so much for sharing!!!

    • @GlobalSpanishPortuguese
      @GlobalSpanishPortuguese Před 5 měsíci

      We can help you to learn Spanish fluently, we offer conversational courses with amazing native teachers! :)

  • @ilovej0rts
    @ilovej0rts Před 7 měsíci +28

    Thank you sm!! I've been studying spanish for awhile now but i feel like i've been making zero progress. Definitely going to try speaking to myself more often.

  • @jacobaeden
    @jacobaeden Před 7 měsíci +23

    i took 4 spanish classes in uni (which is equivalent to B1), it was productive but stressful. whatever ive learnt, i can still remember most of it including conjugation and the speaking practice in class was enjoyable but the listening/written/oral tests were so stressful

  • @jdanielbby
    @jdanielbby Před 5 měsíci +38

    ¡Gracias por todo! Esto es muy útil. Estoy aprendiendo español ahora y a veces me siento asustado y frustrado con mi camino para hablar español con fluidez, pero este video me da paz!

    • @medpoclvr
      @medpoclvr Před 4 měsíci +6

      Soy hablante nativa del español y déjame decirte que lo estás haciendo muy bien, mucha suerte! 😊❤

    • @chriswyatt9869
      @chriswyatt9869 Před měsícem

      Bit of a weird reply but having only just started learning, I’m pleasantly surprised and happy that I understood your comment

  • @AngelaRPierce
    @AngelaRPierce Před 6 měsíci +4

    Great tips. You have vocalized some of the things I have thought about not overwhelming your brain. I will narrow my study to learn what is most useful, for the time being.

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Thanks for the tip about Jiveworld, I'll check it out. I only started learning Spanish 4 months ago. I've already learnt another language to fluency as an adult, so I'm an experienced language learner. However, I'm always on the look out for good Spanish content.

  • @siphomlambo9534
    @siphomlambo9534 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I think this is wonderful advice. I am very early in my journey and can already agree with some of the stuff that you are saying, like not going grammar crazy. I do grammar and when I am tiered of it I leave it and do something else like listen to stories and then come back to grammar. I have started talking to myself and have planned a month from now to start doing meetups no matter what - so that it is motivating and as a target and will also stop me from keep delaying due to fear of embarrassment.
    I really agree about learning in context and also about dialect. I now only study Spanish from Spain because that is where I want to live and being in London Spain is accessible to me.
    I am going to give Jiveworld a go.

  • @magdaelenalozoya3093
    @magdaelenalozoya3093 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Muy buen video! Como maestra de Español me ayudó mucho ver tu punto de vista y tu experiencia. Gracias!😘

  • @fal8458
    @fal8458 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I took two college classes of Spanish and they helped me a lot I basically started learning seriously 4 years ago. I stopped taking Spanish to focus on my degree but really “upped” my Spanish speaking in day to day life which made my progress any rocket
    Yo quería aprender la lengua porque mis suegros son mexicanos y no saben inglés. Yo no me podía comunicar con ellos y era bien importante a mi para aprender la lengua. Todavía estoy aprendiendo pero cada día me mejoro.
    I wish I could go back and tell myself the subjunctive is a thing (I just found out) and that it’s important. Thankfully it’s actually been very easy for me to just adjust that. I kept feeling stuck and wasn’t sure why until I stumbled across the subjunctive, though I used it and heard it already just wasn’t sure the “why” behind it. I wish I could also tell myself to not be nervous about speaking to strangers in Spanish that people actually (most of the time) appreciate it and are impressed. Talk more, as said in this video. I only made REAL progress when I started speaking in Spanish. Translating at food banks and speaking with my Muñeco’s family.

  • @kiragillett8338
    @kiragillett8338 Před 7 měsíci +15

    También estoy por hablar desde el inicio del aprendizaje. Sólo he estado aprendiendo el español por 3 años, y de estos 3 años, lo hablé por 2/2.5. No estoy segura de que nivel yo alcance hasta ahora. B2 pero no tengo ni idea cuando me debería considerar a mi misma como la que hable con fluidez. Hago voluntario al jardín comunitario como interprete (porque no hay nada que está en juego), pero aún voy mejorando mucho. A veces, encuentro que tengo un vocabulario más amplio que mi colega estadounidense-latina pero ella habla con mucha más naturaleza, incluso cuando comete errores. Opino que puedo decir que hablo el idioma porque manejo la vida cotidiana bastante bien sin el inglés, pero falto el sentido de naturaleza/comodidad. Todavía gasto energía en construir mis pensamientos y ideas en español y en cuanto a ciertos temas me cuestan hablar con rapidez. Así que no pienso que tengo la fluidez en el idioma, pero asimismo mis habilidades de comprensión y la cantidad de temas de cual puedo tener una conversación, son más altas que el intercambio intermedio que me uní y que los recursos hechos para el estudiante. Dado todo esto, quise saber ¿cuando supiste que alcanzaste un nivel avanzado en español? Qué opinas de los exámenes/certificados de fluidez; son utiles o necesarios? Cuales son las señales que te dieron la sabiduría a reconocer cuando dirías alguien habla con fluidez? Al hablar con fluidez, todavía te cuesten ciertos temas o oraciones? Ósea, con respeto al hablar fluidamente, alguna vez has tenido que pensar en como expresarte? O sencillamente la diferencia entre fluidez y no, es de “qué digo” en vez de “cómo se lo dice”? Porfavor quiero escuchar más sobre este tema porque me quedo estancada en el abyss muy ancho entre “se puede hablar español lo suficiente para cualquier propósito” y “se puede hablar con la verdadera fluidez y parece que tiene otra mente que existe por dicho idioma”.

  • @miguelangelmendoza4075
    @miguelangelmendoza4075 Před 6 měsíci

    Tu español es sumamente bueno, cuando vi tus reels en instagram juraba que eras mexicana, im mexican, living in new zealand and trying to learn english, portugues and french

  • @mariasolasef4736
    @mariasolasef4736 Před 5 měsíci +3

    muy interesante lo que comentas. Soy de Argentina y tengo un inglés fluente como tu español. Qué genial escucharte en inglés y responder en español porque sé que vas a entender jajajaja. Claramente lo que decís no me pasó en español, pero sí en el aprendizaje de inglés- Pero nunca lo había visto de ese modo. Ahora que voy a aprender italiano, voy a tener en cuenta tus recomendaciones. Abrazo!

  • @camelbro
    @camelbro Před 5 měsíci +1

    You have super solid content. Thanks!

  • @jasondorsey1357
    @jasondorsey1357 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Good advice in this video, thanks

  • @nfvjgrofgjvoldlkgvlo
    @nfvjgrofgjvoldlkgvlo Před 6 měsíci +2

    needs based is how i decide if I want to bother incorporating a new english word into my native vocabulary as well. If I cant imagine a single scenario where my life/ ability to express myself would improve if I add this word then I let it pass me by but if I think it can enrich me to start using it I will promptly use it in a sentence to myself and thats usually enough to get it into the roster.

  • @user-md2pf8vq3u
    @user-md2pf8vq3u Před 23 dny

    Im 14 and ive been wanting too learn for so long, thanks for the tips :)

  • @languageishard
    @languageishard Před 7 měsíci +28

    If anyone is considering taking any language class in school, ask around and find out how the teachers are. I actually really enjoyed high school Spanish but, in my case, the teachers werent native speakers (they had learnt it as a second language and then got a degree in uni) so they were really passionate and understood the struggle. But my uni German profs were just awful. One of them was born and raised in Germany but got a Ph.D in German in the United States and i will never understand why you would do that 😅 that has nothing to do with her teaching, its just something that bothers me 😂

    • @GlobalSpanishPortuguese
      @GlobalSpanishPortuguese Před 5 měsíci +3

      I agree, we have passionate, friendly and native teachers from Latin America that love teaching.. they can help a lot...

    • @CristinaRodriguez-xb7gh
      @CristinaRodriguez-xb7gh Před 19 dny

      El español es una lengua muy cohesionada. Los hispanohablantes no tienen problemas para entender su lengua hablada o escrita. Lógicamente hay matices según las zonas pero la unidad de la lengua española es impresionante. También dentro de cada país hay matices según las zonas.

  • @BrotherTruthBeTold
    @BrotherTruthBeTold Před měsícem

    I really appreciate the tips you shared especially the one about talking to yourself because I actually do this as a English speaker lol Thanks for the great video.

  • @richardsmith2786
    @richardsmith2786 Před 29 dny

    Thank you for sharing these tips!

  • @sallym3994
    @sallym3994 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for these tips. I first began learning Spanish in High School and my experience was not good. It was just learn vocab and how to translate verbs repeat everyday and listen to a speaker everyday and my Spanish teacher kept right to the book. I couldn't speak sentences just phrases here and there, and I couldn't figure out how to put my own sentence together as well as remembering vocab was difficult and listening to a native speaker I could never keep up at all to respond. I was like, what did you say ? These tips you gave will hopefully help me finally learn Spanish. Its been almost 20 years since High School Spanish for me and I was going to try to learn as I was taught in High School as thats all I knew. However, after I watched your video I feel like I will be able to actually learn it this time and looking forward to doing so more as I wasnt looking forward to repeating how Spanish class went in an unhelpful, unmotivated, boring unindividualized way to learn. I'm extremely excited to try your tips and follow your advice. Thank you. (If you're wondering I had Spanish in USA). Maybe other schools did better, but Im actually learning Spanish because its spoken in the area I live a lot and more people are hired because they speak both English and Spanish. I want to be able to use Spanish in my community and I actually will be focused on Mexican Spanish. I also want to learn it because I want my kids to begin learning it and my husband would benefit from learning it for his work too. I want my small family of four to be able to speak Spanish fluently and understand it. I don't want my kids to struggle like I did in high school, and this way, they will already know Spanish. Thank you for all the advice and suggestions.

  • @NahImGoodChief
    @NahImGoodChief Před 4 měsíci +17

    im venezulan and im trying to lean spanish so i can surprise my grandmother for her 70th lol

  • @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc
    @JorgeGarcia-lw7vc Před 6 měsíci +2

    Love your accent and attitude. One tip is to start learning Spanish and go to Spain for a month, then go back to Mexico or Colombia, and everything will sound in slowmo, and you will just get it super quick! I agree with your so many points, although I tend to learn a lot more dialects when learning a language, in the end, though sticking with one. I m a native Spanish speaker, but learned French and Portuguese in high school. Saludos!

  • @tonyestvlog8502
    @tonyestvlog8502 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I feel like I failed a song on Guitar Hero when a native speaker switches to English with me after attempting to speak Spanish with them

  • @davidmmuench
    @davidmmuench Před 2 měsíci +1

    I'm 54-years-old and I'm just starting to try to learn Spanish. Gotta say so far it's daunting! 😬

  • @sungsookim8453
    @sungsookim8453 Před 28 dny

    Thank you for your tips!

  • @GlobalSpanishPortuguese
    @GlobalSpanishPortuguese Před 5 měsíci +1

    Excellent tips to learn languages, they are very useful, what also helps is the constan interaction in conversational courses..At Global Spanish and Portuguese, students can practise and develop speaking and listening skills by being part of conversations with friendly native teachers :)

  • @aluada2692
    @aluada2692 Před 2 měsíci

    My maternal Language is portuguese, and since um a kid my parents put me on English courses and my process with English was very slowly, this courses take so long and it can be so frustrating. It was a very passive way of learning, once I enter college I ve decided to travel and spent some time in BC. It was revealing for me, my english developed so quickly.
    Mas não foi é uma língua que continuo praticando ativamente, consumo muito conteúdo em inglês mas não escrevo e falo muito pouco.
    Ese año empecé a estudiar español y estoy encantada con esta lengua. Estoy estudiando por conta própria, leyendo mucho, escuchando, es muy similar con portugués pero sus similaridades pueden confundirnos un montón. Pero ese trabajo más activo en que puedo sentir el progresso es tan gratificante. Muchas gracias por las tips !!

  • @eldredsashes
    @eldredsashes Před 7 měsíci +5

    I had to take Spanish for a quarter in seventh grade and it was a horrible experience for me. It was just to get me interested in taking first year Spanish the following year. The teacher taught using immersion and instead of getting me interested, it made me never want to study Spanish ever again. I do see immersion as a valid teaching method for those taking languages for a longer period. C’est la raison que j’ai décidé d’étudier le français au lycée.

  • @JaimeCarrillo-uu9jy
    @JaimeCarrillo-uu9jy Před 7 měsíci +8

    It's surreal how your Spanish pronunciation sounds so native and you sound like a high class Mexican girl. I speak Spanish, I just ran into your video and I got curious.

  • @SpanishLearn2024
    @SpanishLearn2024 Před 5 měsíci +1

    High school Spanish was the best experience of my life.

  • @Fuadstar55
    @Fuadstar55 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Thank you for tips! much appreciated.
    I've been studying Spanish for a while now, and still can't stick to a certain accent/dialect. I'm based in the Middle East which is closer to Spain, but still not sure if I should learn the European or Latin accent :'D

  • @emmylou2269
    @emmylou2269 Před 6 měsíci

    i have to take a spanish class every year in highschool because of a program i'm in. im currently a freshman taking spanish III honors. its not hard because everyone in my program has to take spanish III honors even though most of us havent taken spanish II or anything. so the teacher makes it easier for us. but i think next year its gonna start to get real and junior and senior year we have a test where we have to talk for 10 minutes in spanish about a given topic. so ig im just trying to learn it now while i can 😭. also i go to a school that has a ton of mexican students and learning the language is rlly gonna help me fit in. its rlly good though because since theres a ton of mexican students i hear mexican slang alot so ik how ppl actually talk.

  • @sarahhutchinson8659
    @sarahhutchinson8659 Před měsícem

    Thanks for the tips! I have been studying for a while and I agree with all of these. Although I have a really tough time resisting the urge to look up new vocab right away haha. I am curious what university you studied at to take local classes because i have been wanting to do something similar.

  • @kimochiman
    @kimochiman Před 2 měsíci

    Very cool! Great tips

  • @doc_airsoft
    @doc_airsoft Před 7 měsíci +2

    I absolutely love your language advice! I have some coworkers from Mexico (and now best friends/family) that work abroad at my cousins farm that I work for. They came in 3 years ago and they speak zero English, and I was speaking German at the time. I started learning some broken resemblance of Spanish to communicate with them at work, and I have felt that I make zero progress. I have to say that I absolutely love JiveWorld and LOVE those sound bites! And to immediately need to be speaking in my case, I would say that both speaking on day one and speaking to natives is incredibly helpful. I still freeze sometimes and have some speaking anxiety, but they know me well enough now to say "hey, what were you actually saying before you stopped" and we all work together. Learning Spanish has been one of the most important and enriching and exciting things in my life and I will never regret the day that I become fluent.

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 7 měsíci +1

      ahhh don’t worry you’ll get it! :) and im glad you love JW!!

  • @Manays
    @Manays Před 7 měsíci +9

    As a Mexican, I think I would NEVER pick up Spanish if I wasn’t a native speaker, just like German, I find it to have lots of minute details that can drive one crazy.
    I don’t know how one manages to speak it fluently, but I praise those people heavily.

    • @SWilla00946
      @SWilla00946 Před 6 měsíci +1

      im a Dominican that grew up in the us and didnt speak Spanish growing up. i've had a hard time learning because of all of those small details. they dont stick in my head. all of my life i've been able to understand around an a1/a2 level but i can barely speak. i'm trying to actually learn it again. i've gone through many phases of trying

    • @Manays
      @Manays Před 6 měsíci

      @@SWilla00946 wish you the best! Language learning is a long process, just keep listening and reading and you’ll succeed!

  • @CandidoGuedes123
    @CandidoGuedes123 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Hey!
    I think that a great way to make us practice more our Spanish and other languages is to speak in that language and leave subtitles in English and that specific language. I learn much faster that way and I think you should do it :)

  • @shep_roman
    @shep_roman Před 5 měsíci

    thank you ! 🦋👐🏻

  • @jssmedialangs
    @jssmedialangs Před 7 měsíci +13

    I know when I've heard people say speak from day 1 they literally meant have convos immediately. When I tried that with Mandarin (lang I'm currently restarting), it caused my speaking anxiety to worsen. Add a horrible lang partner and I was afraid to even talk to myself... 😫 But I definitely agree with just saying a few phrases to yourself.
    With the lessons... I was broke broke. 😭 However there ARE ways to learn stuff for the free, you just gotta look for them. And I'm 5 years in, finally decided on Colombian dialect. 😂 But lately I've been intrigued by Peruvian Spanish so who knows--it could change. 🤣
    Great tips!! I'll be sharing!

    • @holi9440
      @holi9440 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Both Colombian and Peruvian are great because they are considered to be the best spanish amoung the other dialects.

    • @kaera11
      @kaera11 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@holi9440by who?😂

  • @breadsalmon
    @breadsalmon Před 6 měsíci

    honestly i'm grateful for my school spanish classes. not that they were good - i've learnt more in six months of (somewhat passive) home study than 3 years of school classes - but i struggle with motivation to start languages. once i'm past the phase where i can barely introduce myself, i'm fine, but the fact that school forced me to get past that really helped

  • @user-tr3qf4pg4d
    @user-tr3qf4pg4d Před měsícem

    Hmm yeah these different situations which were you have really familiar for me because I currently learning Turkish and I sometimes really fear to talk with different people and fear to make different mistakes but that normal so yeah that really wonderful that you have such progress in this language

  • @chocofro3
    @chocofro3 Před 7 měsíci +4

    How would you implement grammar into studying?
    My routine for the last 13 months consisted of most of the things in this video and I was noticing exponential growth up until a few months ago. I feel stuck/limited. When trying to form new sentences in conversation it's clear I don't understand the grammar. Words in context isn't enough. And taking time away from my routine to try and study the grammar seems to have slowed everything down all together. I was just happy that I understood in real time the start of the video without looking at the subtitles. (But who can focus on subtitles with Elysse on the screen😍)

    • @theflypilot
      @theflypilot Před 5 dny

      From where you are you'd benefit from an online tutor. I have one from Preply and she is Colombian and a great person to help me.

  • @alwayslearningmindset
    @alwayslearningmindset Před 5 měsíci +1

    Back in middle school I legit chose French over Spanish (those were the only two choices) because I couldn’t roll my R’s. I then proceeded to learn three other languages before recently getting to Spanish. I figured out how to do the RR, and this is the most fun I’ve had studying a language. Wish I didn’t wait so long to learn Spanish, that’s my regret 😂

  • @starlight_rw
    @starlight_rw Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you!!

  • @amandadavis1111
    @amandadavis1111 Před 28 dny

    So helpful ❤️

  • @Joelluciano345
    @Joelluciano345 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Bro thank you so damn much as a no sabo kid who wants to learn Spanish so bad this video is just what I needed this shit is amazing

    • @EMVelez
      @EMVelez Před měsícem

      “No sabo”? 🤨 you mean “no hablo”?

  • @nanawritesstuff
    @nanawritesstuff Před 5 měsíci +2

    I feel like I'd definitel learnt Spanish better if I just picked another language at school (had to pick something other than English, had Russian, Latin, French and German as options) because it's not just that that kind of learning never worked for me (self-diagnosed ADHD person here) but also my Spanish class was like Harry Potter's defense against dark magic; we had different teachers every second semester because one decided she wants to teach at another school, one beat my classmate up, one couldn't handle the annoying, loud kids (neither could I), so I got a normal, proper teacher who tried to help us prepare for graduation in the year of the graduation (got a 3, or a C if you're American). Got accepted to university but wasn't accpted to the spanish special seminar and so got the language on hold for three years.
    Now I'm a young adult with a BA in English studies, goal is to become a translator, need second language certificate for master's degree, learn Spanish for a year while getting the certificate, tring to undo the damage high school did to my language knowledge xDD i feel like we are destined to suffer if we study Spanish, even though it's a beautiful language

  • @dspursuer
    @dspursuer Před 6 měsíci +2

    wish I could sub to a lesson on any platform as a russian :/ basically learning spanish atm to finally move out of my country for good
    guess I'll try looking for a local offline course, hopefully we still have good teachers who have not fled yet

  • @melaniegrace7707
    @melaniegrace7707 Před 7 měsíci +4

    I definitely count living in Florida as spending time in a Spanish speaking country (some say Florida is great because it’s so close to the U.S) but because the cultures are so blended here I really don’t know what dialogue to pick. I wish there was a course in South Florida Spanish 😂

    • @mars-jr5uu
      @mars-jr5uu Před 7 měsíci

      Hii Melanie

    • @agfhdl239
      @agfhdl239 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I moved to Florida a couple of years ago and feel like I need to learn, that’s why I’m watching this video! I wish I could take South Florida Spanish as well!

  • @kirstenchavez2211
    @kirstenchavez2211 Před 3 měsíci

    I’m married to a Mati e Mexican. We have been together for 13 years and I’m just now learning the language. Our kids only speak English so I’m learning and also teaching them at the same time.

  • @cheweny8029
    @cheweny8029 Před 6 měsíci +1

    not necessarily a trauma, but during high school I went to a real small school. genuinely small, less than 100 students. all our classes were mixed amongst grades so our studies remained at about a freshman level at most. because of this, despite taking three years of spanish, i made essentially no progress. what i did learn and retain was mostly from self study outside of class and even then, not having that in class time to practice with my peers really stunted what could've been actual proficiency.

  • @-nf9vt
    @-nf9vt Před 6 dny

    I would learn a foreign language through Immersive translate over and over again. It is such an incredible app for language learning.

  • @ChichoPlayer1
    @ChichoPlayer1 Před 6 měsíci +1

    ¿No es parecido aprende español que aprender inglés?
    ¿Aprenderte algunos verbos y como formular oraciones?
    Eso es lo basico pero creo que es un buen inicio 😅

  • @asisoylavdd
    @asisoylavdd Před 7 měsíci

    do you suggest devoting more words towards our “daily limit”on the vocab we acquire through stories or through the vocab we learn by category??

  • @Kafka-ez4vz
    @Kafka-ez4vz Před 7 měsíci +2

    do one for french and german pllllls

  • @kansasgoldilocks
    @kansasgoldilocks Před 2 dny

    For me, the hardest thing is I never "specialized" in one region, so my Spanish is a big mix of that from Andalucia (where I first studied), Mexico, Chile, Peru, and Argentina.

  • @Rachel-dt7yt
    @Rachel-dt7yt Před 7 měsíci +1

    I like the font that you use here. I just I'm a reader & designer & teacher now

  • @caivail4614
    @caivail4614 Před 6 měsíci +3

    My Spanish trauma is that I grew up in a predominantly Puerto Rican American neighborhood, went to a bilingual Spanish/English elementary school, took Spanish in middle and high school (including AP Spanish sophomore year) and came out of ALL OF THAT with basically an A2 level of Spanish. The methods and textbooks they used were clearly not the best way, I should’ve been near fluent with all that.
    20 years later, I’m willing to give it another go once I’ve hit B1 in German, seeing as I’ve already got a foundation I’m hoping it’ll be less painful. Plus, Netflix and CZcams and podcasts didn’t exist when I was a teenager. Should be a BIT more approachable this go round.

    • @GlobalSpanishPortuguese
      @GlobalSpanishPortuguese Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, I agree, the methodology is very important. And of course, the influence of teachers that motivate...we can help...

  • @fashionista101kt
    @fashionista101kt Před 6 měsíci +1

    i think you should start speaking once your learn pronunciations! which i learned day 1 (kinda bc i’d already been exposed to spanish before like the LL and J) but i think it’s just important to start pronouncing correctly

  • @janainatemis2298
    @janainatemis2298 Před 3 měsíci

    is the same with me . I learned English so easily that i dont know how to teach others so well

  • @MrCharleswr
    @MrCharleswr Před 15 dny

    Thank you!

  • @TheOnlyTaps
    @TheOnlyTaps Před měsícem

    Thanks for this

  • @carenj1657
    @carenj1657 Před 7 měsíci +8

    Yo estoy aprendiendo español, no es muy difícil para mí, porque hablo portugués y la gramática es parecida. Entonces, cuando leo un libro, comprendo. Tu video tiene valiosos consejos, pero para mí empezar a hablar es el gran desafío, porque comienzo a mezclar portugués con español. Aún así, sigo intentando aprender.:)

    • @jennylim001
      @jennylim001 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I speak Spanish and I can understand 50% portugues

    • @lilacfields
      @lilacfields Před 2 měsíci

      quiero aprender portugués pero tengo miedo de hablar portuñol 😭😭 el portugués brasileño es hermoso ❤️

  • @Okami_gris
    @Okami_gris Před 5 měsíci

    As someone who started to learn Spanish, I hope your tips will help!

    • @shaclo1512
      @shaclo1512 Před 5 měsíci +1

      check out the mini course from the YT channel "spanishwithpaul", it helped me a lot.

    • @theezioazper7650
      @theezioazper7650 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I need to learn English too, if you want, I can help you learning Spanish and u can help me teaching English 🙂

  • @thiagomartinsdacosta6328
    @thiagomartinsdacosta6328 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Amazing! I´m not fluent in Spanish. But Spanish is pretty close to portuguese. So I don´t have a problem to communicate to spanish speakers.
    As a native portuguese speakear I would learn english diferent too. I´m fluent in english. But I had a hard time to understand and pick up some sounds in english.
    If you want to learn a language you should learn the same way you learned your native language.
    First getting used to the sound of the language. That´s hard in the beginning. But with time and dedication you can achieve success.

  • @Eyestosee888
    @Eyestosee888 Před 6 měsíci +1

    NPR is good for learning English so Jiveworld, sounds legitimate!😊

  • @tavish4699
    @tavish4699 Před měsícem

    i more or less learned swedish by just playing with my buddy on the pc
    im german and the language is very similiar to me speaking my south german dialect so that helped

  • @roccoz2231
    @roccoz2231 Před 6 měsíci +4

    @01:42 -- I can top it! Over the summer in Punta Cana, I asked the guy selling cigars on the beach if he had any "perros cubanos" instead of "puros cubanos." 🤭I was very embarazada. 😁

  • @ib3scope
    @ib3scope Před 6 měsíci

    Elysse, how did you train your brain/ears to discern spoken spanish, at conversational speed?

  • @tylerstatham
    @tylerstatham Před 5 měsíci

    Where do you think is the best place to learn Spanish? Im on Duolingo currently but it doesn’t offer a Mexican Spanish (which is what I want to learn) and it is frustrating learning that some of the words I’m learning ate different in Mexican Spanish than what is represented on the app

  • @anqbelle
    @anqbelle Před 2 měsíci +1

    my grandparents speak spanish but they know english too, my parents are also fluent in spanish. My parents didn’t really teach me and my brothers. well sometimes they do but only certain words. me and my brothers always ask them to just speak it in front of us so we learn better but they don’t always do. one of the main reasons they didn’t teach us that much is bc my oldest brother is hard of hearing and they want us to learn ASL so in case we ever need to interrupt for him. i really want to learn spanish since i’ve always wanted to learn it and i wanna be in duo language some ether teachers are really nice and i have so many friends in them. i’m starting off on duolingo but i want to learn spanish from mexico but they only have it from spain. i’m gonna use it for the start but does anyone know if they have it from mexico? i’m committed to learn this

  • @johnnywalker4857
    @johnnywalker4857 Před měsícem

    Thanks for the video. Very helpful. Just a quick question: Is Google translator usually accurate for Spanish? Not sure if you ever use it, just wondering if it can be trusted.

  • @THELORENZOTWINS7
    @THELORENZOTWINS7 Před 6 měsíci

    Girl, I love your nails!❤

  • @user-ly2ud3lk7j
    @user-ly2ud3lk7j Před 2 měsíci

    i'm learning english and i think this is valid advice for english learners too i should've known this when i started my english learning journey on which i have spent 100+ years i can't never go back so i shall stay at a low intermediate level forever

    • @elizabethimperiale2430
      @elizabethimperiale2430 Před 11 dny

      i don't know much about the levels but i feel like you're much higher than a low intermediate (coming from a native english speaker)

    • @ryanorionwotanson4568
      @ryanorionwotanson4568 Před 2 dny

      100+ years?? Lol, what you wrote sounds great to me. Definitely beyond low intermediate.

  • @tandanielle3875
    @tandanielle3875 Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks for the tip about learning verbs! I want to be able to say future plans like "I'm going to eat". so would that just be Voy a comer?

    • @elyssespeaks
      @elyssespeaks  Před 6 měsíci +1

      Exactly! But learning “ir” in the present allows you to unlock a lot of tenses, like the near future “voy a”, I just “acabo de”, etc

    • @theezioazper7650
      @theezioazper7650 Před 5 měsíci

      Hi, I can teach you Spanish if u teach me English, I want to learn too

  • @esraaelsenosy9008
    @esraaelsenosy9008 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I would have added :
    use comprehensive input method from day one it is the most useful thing everrrr
    start listening to native speakers early on so your brain is used to the sounds and the speed of the language ( even if you just understand a word from time to time )
    when you are board try watching movies or listening to music
    just immerse yourself in the language

    • @JohnFisk-OHS-78
      @JohnFisk-OHS-78 Před 5 měsíci

      "... when you are bored, try watching movies..."
      LOL!! My wife caught me watching Peppa Pig en español.... I had LOT of explaining to do. ;-)

    • @esraaelsenosy9008
      @esraaelsenosy9008 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@JohnFisk-OHS-78
      A mí, me gusta bop esponja jajaa

    • @thomasthomasthomas296
      @thomasthomasthomas296 Před 3 měsíci

      comprehensible input method is defined as you knowing most of but not all of what you are hearing, but yes, immersing yourself is useful (but she does a really good job of leading you on without ever giving any input on getting started, so a fraud basically)

  • @williammajeri4329
    @williammajeri4329 Před 4 měsíci

    I would watch shows in original versions with subtitles like telenovelas, or American shows but with the Spanish audio

  • @GeremiasLaterza
    @GeremiasLaterza Před měsícem

    I have been learning English for 5 years in an institute, but it didn't work as much as I wanted but now I am totally fluent in English, but it was because of me! I found a method called cause and effect. If you want to improve your speaking, start immersing yourself in English! Trust me, it'll work because it worked for me. I had my English exam yesterday, and I was a hundred percent sure that it was gonna be easy (it was), I didn't even study for it.
    So in summary, start immersing yourself if you want to be fluent. Or if you want to improve your writing start reading a lot. We call input to what we consume. Those things that your brain keeps, and we call output to our pronounciation, our brain creates learning patterns when we consume the language!

  • @andregardner7185
    @andregardner7185 Před 3 dny

    I manage mexican workers at my job.
    I started just speaking words and phrases from day and when it was super broken and wrong. I didn't care, I just corrected it.
    Anyways, I have no desire to learn spanish, but, I'm going to go for it. Day 10 today.
    I'm understanding
    Esta/es
    Verb endings, spanish seems like it stacks a lot..
    And, about 500 words.
    I did study German pretty intensely but it for only 7 months, 5 years ago.

  • @destinyberg0903
    @destinyberg0903 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I have a Spanish speaking friend and I practice with him

  • @greicykelly7233
    @greicykelly7233 Před 7 měsíci +1

    i feel like i need someone to speak in spanish w me so bad rn, im in a phase of my learning process where idk what to study next/what exact level im in... im brazilian, so it seems easy sometimes, but it isnt... so, i think having contact w spanish speakers to practice would be sooo helpful, but i cant find someone :(

  • @empress240
    @empress240 Před 6 měsíci

    I don't know why but I always struggle with vocab (probably because i really don't like studying) what are some apps or ways to learn spanish vocab anyone recommends?

  • @author.gabrielavrivera
    @author.gabrielavrivera Před 5 měsíci

    2:37 I'm at the intermediate stage with my Spanish and I'm just nodding the whole time here lol. I SHOULD be speaking it but I'm so far behind in my speaking practice but ahead in my understanding practice.

  • @conconcon45
    @conconcon45 Před 5 měsíci

    how did you improve your accent because speaking is the hardest part for me

  • @jhonyermo
    @jhonyermo Před 6 měsíci

    Jacket? In GuateMAYA they say CHUMPA! :-) Great video by the way. Especially the TOPIC TIP !! Great advice.