Do you need to study grammar? | The fastest way to learn English

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2020
  • In today's video I will be answering three common questions: Do you need to study grammar? Is grammar important for fluent English? What is the best way to study English grammar? To answer these questions we will take a journey from the definition of grammar, to the origin of language, to what science tells us about the difference between what's in your grammar book and what people actually use in natural conversation.
    You will discover if language can exist without grammar and if it's possible to get fluent in English with no grammar study. See you in class!
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Komentáře • 340

  • @Canguroenglish
    @Canguroenglish  Před 3 lety +81

    Join the Canguro English newsletter: canguroenglish.com/newsletter
    I’m sorry I don’t have time to reply to all of your comments but I read them all and I am eternally grateful for your love and support.

    • @jojozain4506
      @jojozain4506 Před 3 lety +5

      Hi
      I am really addicted to you so much. I consider your videos extremely beneficial

    • @user-vw9ps4um1w
      @user-vw9ps4um1w Před 3 lety +1

      @@jojozain4506 I'm agree.

    • @luisaruiz6643
      @luisaruiz6643 Před 3 lety +1

      Pajaritos por aqui pajaritos por alla lalalalá

    • @joseantoniocastro1486
      @joseantoniocastro1486 Před 3 lety +6

      I´ve learned english the way a child do. Listening, listening, listening and more listening for about 3 years and when you know how the music of the language works you can start to speak, read and finally write. It took me 4 5 years the whole language adquisition process.

    • @ricardosanchezmedina1552
      @ricardosanchezmedina1552 Před 3 lety +2

      Thats is thrue really really thrue

  • @joseantoniocastro1486
    @joseantoniocastro1486 Před 3 lety +21

    I´ve learned english the way a child do. Listening, listening, listening and more listening for about 3 years and when you know how the music of the language works you can start to speak, read and finally write. It took me 4 5 years the whole language adquisition process.

  • @qlango
    @qlango Před 5 měsíci +5

    Children of 10 can speak languages perfectly but don't know what grammar is (but know subconsciously how to use it). So they've learned it with listening and repeating and creating their own sentences using the phrases they heard for so many times. This methord of learning a new language actually works. For adults even better than for children. We need much less time than chindren need, because our knowledge of our own language is much better which helps us learn other languages (depends of language family of course).

  • @beppobarrendero74
    @beppobarrendero74 Před 3 lety +32

    The answer to that question is easy: grammar is necesary, of course, but we don't have to study grammar... we have to "learn" grammar. Can you see the diference? 😉

    • @WigantX
      @WigantX Před 3 lety +3

      Exactly! It's like riding a bike, you learn it by actually riding it

    • @zeroisalive758
      @zeroisalive758 Před 4 měsíci +6

      I don't agree this absolutely.I think it's true when you want to learn a language that has a similar logic to a language you already speak, but if you want to learn a language that has a logic totally different from any language you speak I think you should to learn some grammar. I will do an analogy, imagine you have a musical instrument, you don't need to learn musical theory for playing a music, you can learn how to play any music without learning musical theory, but if you want to compose a music? If you don't know musical theory enough to compose the excerpt you are imagining, so you can only combine other excerpts you already know to form this, but does something secure you are imagining an excerpt that is a combination of excerpts you already know? The same thing happens if you are learning a language totally different from any language you know, you can only combine structures that you already know to form new structures, but nothing secures the structure you are imagining is a combination of structures you already know, because of this I think learning grammar is important when you learning a language totally different from any language you already speak.
      Pardon for my English, I'm learning, and I writed this coment without the helping of the translator.

  • @teklahuszar6603
    @teklahuszar6603 Před 3 lety +8

    Hi, Everone. My husband has learned Hungarian (!!!) in one year just by listening others speaking it. Without grammar. Now he speaks as a native, still without knowing any grammar. If you have such a talent for languages, you don't need grammar. But it can be a great help though!!!

    • @anfisaignatova
      @anfisaignatova Před 4 měsíci

      Hello! That's really interesting! Can I ask how many other languages he speaks, and what is his first language? I would be very grateful for your answer 🤗

    • @teklahuszar6603
      @teklahuszar6603 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@anfisaignatova Hi, he has Russian parents, but he was born on the territory of Ukraine during the CCCP. He also learned English at school, and Hungarian after settling here 28 years ago.
      He speaks 4 languages (Russian, Ukrainian, English, Hungarian) perfectly.
      I am Hungarian and I speak Russian and English.
      We recently started learning Spanish. I like to see logic, connections patterns in language and between languages. He can't relate to that, he just learns from his gut. 😁

    • @anfisaignatova
      @anfisaignatova Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@teklahuszar6603 very interesting! Thank you for sharing! :))

    • @jozsefviragh9191
      @jozsefviragh9191 Před měsícem

      ​@@teklahuszar6603There is data showing that Hungarian is easy to learn. Maybe his way of learning doesn't work so well in other languages with an adult brain. I learn English in Spain for 20 years with his method and I speak it so so.

  • @zdenekbobek1719
    @zdenekbobek1719 Před 3 lety +4

    Grammar is a logic description of the elements, relationships among the elements, and the structure of a language.

  • @Astro-Markus
    @Astro-Markus Před 3 lety +11

    In my view, grammar is what produces meaning when putting together words. Or in other words: grammar is the link between vocabulary and communication.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před 3 lety

      True, but also you can't quite translate meaning. For example you can say we have to wash the dishes after we eat. Depending on the context of how it's said. It can mean at least three different things. Literally we have to wash the dishes after we eat or expressed in disgust and dislike Or as a question. People sometimes forget it's how you say it to.

    • @Astro-Markus
      @Astro-Markus Před 3 lety

      @@brendon2462 I agree. This is an additional aspect of communication. Perhaps, the weight of the ingredients also differs between languages. For some, the context is very important, while less so in others.

  • @flamar375
    @flamar375 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Grammar is a technical knowledge if you make it explicit, but grammar is also a logic relationship between words that you learn implicitly. See this example that I lived: My husband had to take an exam to demonstrate his level of English for a PhD. He never took courses and he never traveled to an anglo-saxon country, but he always listened to music, watched movies and read scientific articles in English. He went to an English School and took the Michigan without studying or even practicing, he is so self-confident (and so brave to do that)!
    Because of the urgency to start his PhD and because he's not affraid of the people's judgment, he jumped in to it! but my prejudices made me think that he was going to fail embarrassingly.
    He obtained B2 in speaking!🎉!.. But A beginner in grammar!!! (filling the blanks is something he never did before and those broken phrases were a headache for him)... however reading and writing went good. He entered to the PhD program successfully.
    As I teach philosophy of language, in linguistics, this particular case made me confirmed many of the theories of natural learning. I was completely stunned. He doesn't know grammar, but he does.

  • @pavelzhivalov8572
    @pavelzhivalov8572 Před 8 měsíci +3

    You are a philosopher of LANGUAGE,it attracts learners,making them more
    thotfull about the ways of studying .Thank you for thoughts.

  • @anglogerman2287
    @anglogerman2287 Před 3 lety +3

    I certainly learned German "on the street" back in the 70s, as we had no money to pay for lessons or grammar books. Back in those days, people in Germany were not so capable of conversing in English (lucky for me, I guess), so it was either sink or swim. I was fluent wthin the first year. Might not be the best way for everyone, but it worked for me.

  • @annag8596
    @annag8596 Před 3 lety +2

    Once upon the time when there were no accessible translators on the Internet I decided to write a letter in French to my friend in France just to make her astonished and pleased. I new only a few words in French. We always write in English to each other. I took a little Polish-French dictionary and started my work. And then I realized that I need also a little grama to construct sentences. It took me all day to write a letter and I was proud when my friend from France answered that she could understand everything and was so moved by my letter. I is one of this moments when I understood that language is for communication and for expressing friendship to people. Just as you say Christian. You are a great teacher. Kind regards to you from Gdańsk , Poland. Have you visited Poland. Try to write an answer in Polish....of course I am joking.

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 Před 3 lety +3

    A good common-sense conclusion. I really don't know why people make this so complicated. If you hate grammar and are intimidated by it, of course you can learn without it. But learning by deducing language patterns from massive input is slow - it takes children a decade to talk like 10-year-olds. And it's a faculty that declines rapidly with age, so the older you are the harder it gets. On the other hand our ability to read and to reason develops with age. So unless you really actively hate working with grammar patterns, spending a bit of time learning to recognise them and automate them will pay off handsomely in terms of speeding up your progress. Just use it as an aid to your interaction with native language, and not as an end in itself. And that, surely, is about all you need to say about it, despite the oceans of impassioned debate on the CZcams vlogosphere...

  • @SeoulForeigner
    @SeoulForeigner Před 3 lety +7

    Grammar is the glue that holds language and culture together.

  • @vaskodagama3547
    @vaskodagama3547 Před 3 lety +33

    Thank you for this interesting and educational video. Your pronunciation is so clear and understandable . I've got great pleasure listening to you. I think you're a good teacher ! I'm looking forward to see next videos from you! Best regards from Ukraine!👍

  • @lujandiben8475
    @lujandiben8475 Před 3 lety +13

    Grammar is the spinal cord of a language. We need some kind of structure in order to organize a language and, once we learned that, we can use it with confidence. That's also how we get to break the rules if we need it while expressing ourselves. As a matter of fact, grammar and phonology should go hand in hand when acquiring a new language. It's harder to correct the pronunciation than the grammar of a person.

    • @pusatbahasabandung737
      @pusatbahasabandung737 Před 2 lety +1

      You should learn linguistics bro! :) You'll know later what you're talking about. :)

  • @raquelmagalhaesrodrigues623

    I thing that so many people hate grammar is The way that It is teached, as a boring thing. I love grammar beacause i discovered It soon its importance in my life.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před 3 lety

      But I would say for speaking that pronunciation, intonation, stresses, reductions, exc. Are far more important in speaking. Because if you can speak so clearly. Close to a native level. Even if you mess up the grammar some. They will still understand you easily. Besides you can improve your grammar later on. Eventually you will make less mistakes. For example you could say I my dog walk today. Yea grammar wise it'swrong. But if they say it really good. Then you will still easily understand it no problem.

    • @Lucislight
      @Lucislight Před 3 lety +3

      The way that it is taught... not teached.

    • @abrn3395
      @abrn3395 Před 3 lety +1

      I think you really need grammar so that you could learn how not to fall in such mistakes in writing. such as.(I thing, teached, discovered which is the past with the word soon....)

    • @TheMaru666
      @TheMaru666 Před 3 lety

      @@brendon2462 with a good enough pronunciation , and right grammar , it is a lot easier to understand someone than with perfect pronunciation and messy grammar .

  • @rrvalverde
    @rrvalverde Před 3 lety +34

    After 22 minutes we arrive at the answer: “chicken dance.” Hahaha A little bit of this and a little bit of that. The best answer to a very complex question.

  • @marinadeargentina2646
    @marinadeargentina2646 Před 3 lety +24

    The short answer is : yes , a little bit .

  • @jimmykaming
    @jimmykaming Před 3 lety +22

    Cantonese Chinese is my mother and I can speak mandarin Chinese, not very fluently though. if grammar is like what it is in English,,like the English grammar. I would say Chinese is like almost gramnarless. we don't have articles, tenses, and the like in Chinese. I remembered when I started to study English at the age of 17, I opened a pocket dictionary of English, the first thing that baffled me was a, an and the. the lack of tenses in Chinese make Chinese people speak in a way that is confusing . when someone is recounting past events, the timeline in which things happened is not clear, what came first and what came later..the lack of pronouns of he, she and it in spoken Chinese makes it hard for the listener to follow which aforementioned items they refer to. no singular and plural forms of nouns can influence the way one thinks.
    the underdeveloped nature of the Chinese language makes it easy for many native English speakers to learn to be fluent after their failed attempts at other foreign languages like French, German or Spanish.
    as some linguistists have said that Chinese was a baby talk, that's why Chinese civilization can not develop to be a modern civilization, like the western civilization. or the anglo saxon civilization.
    Chinese culture is like an ancient culture.
    edit :Chinese do have parts of speech and word order.
    英國Britain ,英國人a brit,Briton, a British person, an Englishman ,英語English, the language.
    英國人在in英國說speak 英語。
    the British people 人in Britain speak說English.
    the Brits speak English in Britain.
    I can't go on, it is too complicated.

    • @gisellesuarez6893
      @gisellesuarez6893 Před 3 lety +1

      I love Chinese music and I always dance and sing with them!!💙💜For me Chinese go beyond communication! It's pure eternal art!!

    • @eddyevodius
      @eddyevodius Před 3 lety +1

      You remind me with Bahasa Indonesia with no tenses, no mention gender etc like Mandarin

    • @loredanatagliaferri5339
      @loredanatagliaferri5339 Před 3 lety +2

      OMG! So very interesting. Little did I know. Thanks for the explanation..

  • @Elsa.French.teacher
    @Elsa.French.teacher Před 3 lety +9

    Hi Christian, thanks for this video! I would like to add some things :
    As the definition says, grammar is the way we organize words together in a certain logic. > So grammar exists since language exists, with or without books. Books are just one way to transmit this knowledge.
    So when you learn a language you might need/want to know the “secrets” behind the sentences you express or not. Grammar rules are these “secrets” and you don’t NEED them to speak but you might WANT to know them to speed up your learning process.
    Also, in French, we do have respect for the Académie Française, but their power is less and less strong ( they are not so modern people), because we want to let the language evolve a little bit faster (faster than the Académie would like it to evolve sometimes). And this is a long and complex subject. But I would like to finish with this : when we don’t follow the official rules, the ones from the Académie for example, that does not mean we don’t follow any rule, we just follow ANOTHER rule, because a language does not exists without rules, as you shown in the first study you talked about with the children.
    Voilà! A bientôt. Elsa

    • @rinat1985
      @rinat1985 Před 3 lety

      Another interesting fact is that as France is more or less the center of Esperanto language they made analogously Academy of Esperanto to do same stuff :)

  • @skillhub5073
    @skillhub5073 Před 3 lety +2

    Language learning is fun if you teach it. you made it easier for us. love u Christian.

  • @seriyeelizade7746
    @seriyeelizade7746 Před 3 lety +6

    "Language can not exist without grammar". Loved it.

  • @user-tw6oq2kj1g
    @user-tw6oq2kj1g Před měsícem +1

    I enjoyed the Information from this video as well as the others that you have made. Thanks, Chris!😁

  • @worky-gdanjeaofficiel8703

    this is the first time i've seen this video,as a matter in fact i'm truly excited to be here.

  • @igorlilliputten999
    @igorlilliputten999 Před 17 dny +1

    Thanks a lot! That was great!

  • @jimmykaming
    @jimmykaming Před 3 lety +9

    I came here for the best day of the week greeting.

  • @sergeigavrilov2390
    @sergeigavrilov2390 Před 3 lety +8

    God, I love this guy! So much energy!

  • @domingolamelas8500
    @domingolamelas8500 Před 3 lety +3

    You are the best teacher Chistian !!

  • @dmitrykizyanov6577
    @dmitrykizyanov6577 Před 3 lety +9

    I think grammar is always a matter. It is, probably, not necessary to have a deep understanding of grammar in order to learn some basics of English or any other analytic language. It is enough to know the most important structures: how to build a narrative or interrogative sentence, have some understanding of the English tenses system. But if you want to speak or, especially, to write in any language at a sufficiently high level, knowledge of grammar is necessary.
    To learn a synthetic language like Russian, you need to pay attention to grammar from the very beginning. Without knowledge of gender, cases, declensions, etc. it will be often impossible to construct correctly an elementary sentence.
    Or learning Spanish you have to memorize from the very beginning: yo - soy, tu - eres... I suppose this is also a grammar.

    • @egustavps
      @egustavps Před 3 lety +1

      That is not absolutely true, I have been learning the Russian language with Duolingo and can construct some sentences correctly,
      I suppose I have acquired some grammar without studying it. by the way i also learned english with duolingo

    • @curtisfuturemann3679
      @curtisfuturemann3679 Před rokem

      @@egustavps Show us your C2 level certificate in English and Russian.

  • @VasylHerman
    @VasylHerman Před 3 lety +8

    Hey, this is my first comment for about 2 years I have been watching this lovely channel. I have to say Christian, you have been doing a great job, you will have anyone speaking! Thank you from the bottom of my heart. You are amazing Teacher from the capital letter as we say in Ukraine. I hope the society realize your BIG message that you are trying to bring to everyone. You have already deserved a golden memorial for that job, they don't just understand it yet. I pray God to give us power to fight unless we win.

    • @sergeialexeevich6994
      @sergeialexeevich6994 Před rokem

      they say that not only in Ukraine. I am talking about 'the capital letter'.

  • @miotelefonomiotelefono7100

    My grandson has learned english naturally. When he talks, he knows how to use all the main structures correctly. That surprises me and confuses me at the same time. So, not sure about learning grammar anymore.

  • @dilnoza8690
    @dilnoza8690 Před 3 lety +3

    Hello from Uzbekistan))😘😘

  • @junshao5119
    @junshao5119 Před 3 lety +4

    I am a Chinese. Chinese does have grammar! The grammar is just totally different from English. Writing Chinese is more efficient to express meaning. The Chinese version is always the thinnest one among the United Nations' documents, for instance.

  • @XxdrknglxX
    @XxdrknglxX Před 3 lety +4

    It's the same exact thing as "Inside jokes" One word or a phrase can mean many things completely... Good job.

  • @serhiinovos5145
    @serhiinovos5145 Před měsícem

    Мужик ты крутой парень,я приехал из украины в англию,мне нравится твой ресурс.Я в восторге мне интересно учить язык слушая таких как ты

  • @RhenanMartinsRepoem
    @RhenanMartinsRepoem Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you so much!

  • @marcelomadlucmar
    @marcelomadlucmar Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks from amazônia, Brasil

  • @caiquefrancis
    @caiquefrancis Před 11 dny

    amazing content as always! you're just different. thanks for sharing! and just to so you and your audience know, portuguese and spanish, for example, also have an institution which decides "what's right and wrong" in their respective languages.

  • @user-vw9ps4um1w
    @user-vw9ps4um1w Před 3 lety +1

    I like your videos. I'm agree. Grammar is your friend which help you understanding other people. For example, 我爱你。你爱我。The first is "I love you". The second sentence is "You love me". It's grammar too. I won't understand it, if I didn't know grammar. Thank you for your answer. I shared your video.

  • @leonardomotta7800
    @leonardomotta7800 Před 3 lety +31

    Love this amazing guy... thaks Christian...

  • @YunusKazi-xw9hj
    @YunusKazi-xw9hj Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you

  • @annag8596
    @annag8596 Před 3 lety +1

    That's what I have always considered in my mind and you have named it clearly and concisely. That's the word :more "efficient" way of learning languages (when knowing grama ). Thanks.

  • @minaiyanmohammad
    @minaiyanmohammad Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks.I agree with you 100%

  • @hesousa8488
    @hesousa8488 Před 3 lety +1

    Greetings from Brasil. Thank you

  • @cesarbarbieri3912
    @cesarbarbieri3912 Před 3 lety

    You are amazing!!! Thanks Christian...

  • @ButterflyEnglishCoaching

    I just love you and your ways Christian.👏👏👏
    I'm a translator and teacher of English from Argentina

  • @alexandersantos2763
    @alexandersantos2763 Před 3 lety

    Great video, thank you!!!

  • @junshao5119
    @junshao5119 Před 3 lety

    Great video. Thank you very much.

  • @josephbrown3728
    @josephbrown3728 Před 3 lety +1

    thank you so much lovely teacher

  • @oscarmonllor7728
    @oscarmonllor7728 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Christian! Very interesting your explanation.

  • @julenbilbao
    @julenbilbao Před 3 lety +2

    The best teacher ..I'm addicted to his videos and I'm catching up all his live videos since 2016 ...it's kind of serie for me ...I'm fan of his way to teach ..thank you Mr Christian

  • @carlospaulopaulo8855
    @carlospaulopaulo8855 Před 3 lety

    I have been learning english for ten years! I like your lessons very much!

  • @carloscosta922
    @carloscosta922 Před 3 lety +1

    I love all the videos from canguru English, but that's such a great one because talks about science and experiments, testing hipoteses etc.

  • @josevieiradonascimentojuni5934

    Excellent, Professor !

  • @Skellag
    @Skellag Před 3 lety

    It is amazing how obvious you are and still, it is so interesting to watch your videos! Thank's.

  • @stefanveres2301
    @stefanveres2301 Před 3 lety +13

    I can"t resist to sharing my personal experience about the language grammar (from my web site):
    About the grammar.
    While it is very important to string together grammatically correct sentences it isn't important to learn the explicit rules of grammar from language textbooks if you want to learn how to understand and speak your target language well. In fact, the human brain is not capable of using any explicit rules of grammar during the fluent speech of about 3 words per second. Just observe yourself speaking your native language to verify this claim. Once again, mastering your native language can serve as an example. You have learned the explicit rules of grammar only in the school, when you already spoke the language well. By the way, the explicit rules of grammar are only a crude approximation of the natural language, having numerous exceptions. The human brain is creating its own implicit rules of grammar subconsciously, when it is exposed to a language for a sufficiently long time. And then, during the fluent speech, the human brain is subconsciously using those implicit rules of grammar again for formulating grammatically correct sentences. The practical conclusion is that you can safely avoid learning any explicit rules of grammar from any language textbooks without impeding your ability to understand and speak your target language with the native proficiency. You will save plenty of time and effort for more productive activities.

    • @syntax_error6882
      @syntax_error6882 Před 3 lety

      (i'm french) .. grammar is important for talking about something in the line of time
      if something happen before something else .. if you have finish some task etc ect ..
      in french i didn't know any grammar rule, i've no problem when i talk of course , just when i write
      maybie you don't know how french are attached to grammar rule, that's horrific :-))

    • @stefanveres2301
      @stefanveres2301 Před 3 lety +3

      @@syntax_error6882 Some people fail to discriminate between explicit rules of grammar as postulated in the textbooks and implicit, subconscious rules of grammar that every native or skilled speaker has hardwired in his subconscious mind from the process of the language immersion. mostly during childhood.

    • @andrzej1978gda
      @andrzej1978gda Před 3 lety +1

      I totally agree. While speaking there is not enough time to consciously think about grammar rules. According to Stephen Krashen, the only way to learn a language is having a lot of comprehensible input. Not grammar, not memorizing words.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před 3 lety +2

      I mean you're learning grammar indirectly through massive comprehensible input. You might not know the rules. But you instinctively know how to format proper sentences. It's like second nature without thinking about it.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před 3 lety

      Spot on great explanation 👍

  • @MrSerkud
    @MrSerkud Před 3 lety

    You are a great human being! 🙏🏻

  • @brendon2462
    @brendon2462 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm an American and I would say that you can learn grammar indirectly.

  • @antoniosorbino6233
    @antoniosorbino6233 Před 3 lety +8

    Grammar is a thiny part of the all process! We should learn it after an amount of exposure like the children do. They start learning grammar at school, not at home. We are adult and we need some explicit rules to learn a language, but I think that it is only a small piece of the picture. Listening and reading are the key to develop the language inside our brain. We need exposure and less grammar at school.
    I love you videos teacher! Greetings from Italy!

  • @gandrei4155
    @gandrei4155 Před 3 lety

    A great video. Thanks.

  • @margitiabujamra
    @margitiabujamra Před 3 lety +5

    I'm getting.
    It's amazing.
    I'm learning with you.
    Very hard.
    Sound in the ear hears your Voice.🙏

  • @ronlugbill1400
    @ronlugbill1400 Před 2 lety +1

    I think you can learn grammar implicitly, naturally, rather than explicitly with grammar instruction. All the rules of grammar create inhibition in the speaker, which is already a problem, since most people are afraid of speaking a foreign language. Add in the additional fear of breaking the rules of grammar and you have paralysis and inhibition and lack of progress. Maybe once you are an advanced speaker, you could use some grammar study, but for beginners, I think explicit grammar instruction actually discourages language use. Instead, learn through sentences, so you pick up grammar implicitly. You get a feel for the language by seeing it used in context, rather than mathematically trying to follow 1,000 rules of grammar and the exceptions.

  • @evertondouglas9179
    @evertondouglas9179 Před 3 lety

    Amazing teacher!

  • @annag8596
    @annag8596 Před 3 lety

    What a fantastic tutorial !!. That's

  • @TheLigiatube
    @TheLigiatube Před 3 lety

    Christian you are awesome ! Thank you !

  • @vanessappp5672
    @vanessappp5672 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent! I loved it! Was really good! Thank you so much 🙏

  • @malcowicz
    @malcowicz Před 3 lety

    Always impressed watching your videos

  • @massimomazzuoccolo2715

    thank you so much ... great advice ... also good in explained :-)

  • @divyapandey1750
    @divyapandey1750 Před 3 lety +1

    When I watch your video I get happy it is easy to understand

  • @norbertosansotorre8718
    @norbertosansotorre8718 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi, want to mention that i love your videos , example :reverse thinking , that make impact in our self confidence when approach english, sometimes doesnt care attitude is the clue.

  • @m.bilgincakmaciftci
    @m.bilgincakmaciftci Před 3 lety

    I loved the video so much...thanks a lot Christian...

  • @user-cv5lw2xm2c
    @user-cv5lw2xm2c Před 3 lety +2

    Thank for a very useful information!)

  • @anv.4614
    @anv.4614 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, Christian. I am looking forward to your next video.

  • @huuducpham722
    @huuducpham722 Před 3 lety

    Thanks

  • @user-db2xr4oy5e
    @user-db2xr4oy5e Před 4 měsíci +1

    It's so interesting to listen to You! The information is so alternative and alive(not sure if the words are properly used)) Thank you so much!❤

  • @thomasanderson621
    @thomasanderson621 Před 3 lety

    Learning a language is enjoying the language.

  • @danielfernandez6721
    @danielfernandez6721 Před 3 lety

    We need grammar, of course, but studying English through grammar is too boring and I don't think it's the best way. I enjoyed this video. Thanks Christian.

  • @nimmy6020
    @nimmy6020 Před 3 lety

    Sir. It's very wonderful classes. Thank u very much

  • @ahmat974
    @ahmat974 Před 3 lety

    Great teacher

  • @MrLunithy
    @MrLunithy Před 3 lety +1

    The kind of teacher you wish you had and hope kids get today.

  • @Dushyant149
    @Dushyant149 Před 3 lety

    You're just amazing.

  • @federiconaranjo9715
    @federiconaranjo9715 Před 3 lety +1

    THANK YOU AGAIN!

  • @josemariaperezfresno9243
    @josemariaperezfresno9243 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic video Richard, thanks. I play guitar and a bit piano but I don't know music. I just know the staff and how the notes are placed, but for me is enough. I use imitation to learn accords and new songs. However, I think it is important that there are musical rules, which is finally same to what happens with grammar and language.
    Language must understand grammar and grammar must understand that people learn a new language have a priority "communication" before complying with the rules 100%.
    Thanks Richard for your motivation in this journy!

  • @irenprof9854
    @irenprof9854 Před 3 lety

    You are amazing teacher Thank you for you explanation 👍

  • @alejandrobulaciourologo3302
    @alejandrobulaciourologo3302 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank You for Your reaserch. I understood perfectly.
    I’m from Argentina.
    I have lucky to discovered your channel

  • @vijayaranilakshmikanthan4980

    A FABULOUS SPEAKER AND TEACHER

  • @luciamelodesousa6371
    @luciamelodesousa6371 Před 3 lety

    Christian: more one great lesson. Thanks, guy! God bless you.

  • @malberalves
    @malberalves Před 3 lety

    Best teacher ever!!

  • @helciovilelajardim4493
    @helciovilelajardim4493 Před 3 lety +4

    Hi Christian. Man, It mustn’t there be someone who doesn’t love your lecture and comments. It actually, is an explanation of how a language, an oral communication system comes up, develops, and works. It’s really amazing!

  • @dueavocato2663
    @dueavocato2663 Před 2 lety

    hi Chris. you exploded it in my face! I am 64 an Arabic native-speaker , who is claiming to change and eliminate some old fashion Arabic grammar topics in my short stories ( they reuse to the publisher of course ). For example , we have 2 males and 2 females in grammar which are not used in real people daily life ( you have only singular and plural ) that make it very difficult when we study and write . But it is a deep and secret issue related directly to Muslims holy book . Anyway,thanks to face it .

  • @sandrita2014
    @sandrita2014 Před 3 lety

    philosophizing about the language.. Un abrazo desde Venezuela!

  • @davidmorasanchez2001
    @davidmorasanchez2001 Před 3 lety

    Thanks teacher, your style to teach is unique...

  • @DanielHowardIRE
    @DanielHowardIRE Před rokem +1

    Good video. The whole concept of prescriptive grammar is an issue because certain authorities in the case of French being an official one and in the case of English being non-official but with a high reputation such as Oxford don't necessarily reflect how the language actually is. I used to work as an EFL teacher and remember teaching grammar rules such as "fewer" for countable nouns and "less" for uncountable nouns yet the reality is most English speakers just use "less" for both noun classes like how "more" is used in the same way. Or take the time like certain verbs sásta static and can't be used in a progressive form such as "like", "love", "remember" and "forget" yet it's now become common to hear phrases like "I'm really liking this party". The point is languages evolve to respond to certain needs. Maybe using less in the same way as more actually makes sense. Maybe the emergence of new progressive forms of certain verbs brings in a new way to convey an idea like "I'm remembering that situation" which means like "I'm coming to remember something that I'd previously forgotten".

  • @hugosalazar9682
    @hugosalazar9682 Před 3 lety

    Amazing video man, you make a complex sequence of reasoning to express an idea look simple as a wheather daily conversation.
    I'll wait the next video!!

  • @lahsenrhourna2945
    @lahsenrhourna2945 Před 3 lety +1

    I always enjoy your videos so thanks

  • @ble3619
    @ble3619 Před 3 lety +1

    I love grammars 😍 French , English, German, Spanish ... don't mean I master them at all but it is interesting to understand the way people express things in a different way you would in your language, it's fascinating 🤗. Also pleaaaaase, lazy gits, stop saying you don't like it because your teachers ( because all of them, right ?) taught it the boring way 🤦

  • @Fordika1
    @Fordika1 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello Chrys you are absolutely right. I am waiting for your videos all days, Please make videos more frequently

  • @Rongelio
    @Rongelio Před 3 lety

    It is as Dr Maturana said "language builds a reality"

  • @iryna7934
    @iryna7934 Před 3 lety

    Thank you🤓🌷

  • @marcialealramos7786
    @marcialealramos7786 Před 3 lety

    Yesssss,I need!