How to Succeed in the First 3 Months of Learning a Language

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  • Опубликовано: 26 июл 2024
  • 🔥 Learn languages like I do with LingQ: bit.ly/3TEoL4k
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    When you start in a language, nothing is comprehensible. So then how do we get a toehold? Some advice for the key first three months.
    0:00 Nothing is comprehensible in the beginning, so here's how I get a toehold in a new language.
    2:06 With enough time spent with the language and sustained motivation you will learn.
    2:58 The content I always start with when learning a new language.
    5:04 Listen before reading langauge learning content.
    6:52 Repetitive listening is key in the first few months of learning a new language.
    ___
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    #languagelearning #languages #polyglot

Комментарии • 177

  • @erosburastero8205
    @erosburastero8205 Год назад +88

    Not only you provide us the knowledge to be more productive in language learning, but also you transmit us a strong energy, pasion, and motivation to us.
    It's a pleasure to hear you again Steve.
    Greets from Argentina

  • @danieltorres3662
    @danieltorres3662 Год назад +51

    Thank you Steve. Your videos motivate me to keep going.

  • @constancechan7748
    @constancechan7748 Год назад +32

    Steve is right! Listening before reading! I started to listen Japanese stories for kids ,even though I wasn’t able to recognize all the Hiragana and katakana alphabet ! Now I do another uphill journey-grammar😅

    • @ardentdfender4116
      @ardentdfender4116 Год назад

      I happen to come upon your comments just reading through and see if i found anything helpful. I used to know both Hiragana and Katakana which are the two easiest of the three Japanese Alphabet. While i don't remember them as much as i had learned them over 20 years ago while i was in the U.S. Navy stationed in Yokosuka Japan. While i did take Japanese-speaking classes for 2 semesters on base back then I didn't learn much that way. But i did have a Japanese GF at the time who spoke also fluent English and was quite good. She ended up teaching me Japanese slowly, daily and it was how i learned to speak Japanese where i could get by going places or doing things. My GF taught me one at a time Hiragana and Katakana which aren't that extensive alphabetically just starting with writing out the characters as they can be easy to identify looking at words as they do not look like Kanji which looks complicated in all their strokes.
      What i then used to do everyday when i spent 2 hrs each time on the train going back and forth to Tokyo to visit my JN GF was to just try to practice reading signs and advertising on the train to help me remember seeing the alphabet over and over and trying to determine what the sign said with the few words characters i could identify. It was a lot of practice, but that helped me to learn both those alphabets and slowly get better at Japanese. Maybe my experience can help you gain some confidence in learning Hiragana and Katakana. I only wished i had continued to keep learning what i had learned back then. But it was in the 90s and before the internet became what it is today. Today, I'm slowly relearning Japanese and Spanish, both of which i have history having learned it in the past. I still remember many words in both languages, but some fun relearning and i do still have real-life Japanese friends for aid, just not close by. But you can and will make it learning if you keep at it.
      I would like to know though where and what books did you find as Japanese stories for kids for reading.

    • @constancechan7748
      @constancechan7748 Год назад +1

      @@ardentdfender4116 www.youtube.com/@kidstube_ch
      www.youtube.com/@punapuchi_channel1107
      The two links are my fav sources of Japanese stories for kinds ,and I do hope they are helpful for you!
      I write down the transcripts first , when I listen to the story, I imitate their pronounciation ,although I don't understand the content fully. This is how I learnt the Japanese alphabet!

  • @simonsmatthew
    @simonsmatthew Год назад +27

    My first serious attempt at a foreign language was Japanese. I lived with a Japanese family for six months which was so much fun. People in intensive courses in Japanese could not understand why I was so good; I could not understand why they could not understand what I thought were very basic things. Mind you they were much better at Kanji and reading than me. Later in life I went back to Japan as a researcher. It was a very different experience as I was on my own a lot. I did not feel my language was getting much better. I used to read Japanese a lot for my work, but much less often spoke it, and very rarely wrote in it. But after a long plateau I got to a level where I was more than happy with my level. I realised I knew enough to do achieve my immediate objectives. I finished my project and I found out what I needed to know and I did need Japanese to do that. To go deeper into the subject (and believe me there is no end to that) it would take another level of commitment in the language and more years working on the subject in Japan. But I was happy with what I achieved and wished to try something else not related to Japan..
    I am now in France. Funnily I have found acquiring French more difficult than Japanese, even though Japanese is supposed to be much harder for me (a native English speaker). I went about learning French pretty much the way I went about learning Japanese in the beginning, working through a basic text book. Why the difference. I think it is because the reasons I had to learn Japanese and the environment was different. First I had the homestay, but secondly, and very importantly, when I went back it was very specific what I needed Japanese for. And I simply focussed on that. I don't need French, except in a very general way eg shopping or asking questions at the local tax office.

    • @NewCastleIndiana
      @NewCastleIndiana Год назад +1

      I’ve been picking up French on my own often on for probably two years total. I never had any formal French classes. I never had any foreign language classes in high school. I found French to be extremely challenging, especially because I can only get it in dribs and drabs. But lately it’s starting to click a lot more, and that is rewarding. I’ve yet to have a single French conversation, this is all watching videos essentially. But I’m picking it up better and better.

    • @simonsmatthew
      @simonsmatthew Год назад

      @@NewCastleIndiana For French I would really recommend the CCube Academy short videos on youtube.

  • @nancyagrimes
    @nancyagrimes Год назад +12

    Thank you, this was very helpful. I am working on German independently and I remember when I first started listening to it and it was one big, giant, garbled mess that just ran together. I knew I was making progress when I noticed that I could differentiate separate words and it didn’t just run together! I might not know what the words meant, but I could differentiate them as individual words. Small steps that help you to understand that although the learning is slow, you are making progress.

    • @joseph3225
      @joseph3225 Год назад

      Same here.

    • @RJ-ku2mh
      @RJ-ku2mh 7 месяцев назад

      Same here, German is very daunting at first with so many unrecognizable words.

  • @franciscosantosaraujojunio2846
    @franciscosantosaraujojunio2846 Год назад +10

    Hello, Steve! I'm from Brasil (Bacabal-MA). Your knowledge and your wisdom in learning languages are very huge. For sake of milions of students around the world, you need to write a book about this theme. Think about this and toast us with your written wisdom, please. Think about it fondly. Thank you for all!

  • @fimashavin
    @fimashavin Год назад +8

    I keep going to learn a language. Steve, you're an influencer and instigator to this. Thank you for this.

  • @user-bd1ii9ir5j
    @user-bd1ii9ir5j Год назад +20

    Hello, Mr. Steve. I am from Ukraine, from Kharkov. When I lived at home i learned English of myself. Your video help me very much too. Now i am in Cheh because of war. When i came here I am be able to understand much and could speak at first. I thought that all people in EU can speak English but not. I live in the town where nobody almost knows English. I start to learn Cheh. From the first I learned on my own and then with the help of your system LingQ- thank you very much. Then despair came to me because new language have erased my English from my head almost at all. I have lost it. And I don't know what to do. I can read but can't speak.

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад +24

      Marina, I once attended a polyglot conference in Bratislava. To prepare, I put a lot of effort into learning Slovak. At the conference there were some Ukrainians. I just couldn't remember any Ukrainian, although my Ukrainian was in fact much stronger than my Slovak. However, when I started reading and listening in Ukrainian again, the language came back stronger than ever. This is normal. Right now you have a greater need for Czech. Continue learning and using Czech and do the occasional lesson on LingQ in English. Do the mini-stories to reinforce the key verbs and patterns. When you go to speak English you will struggle at first but then it will come back stronger than ever. Trust me.

    • @user-bd1ii9ir5j
      @user-bd1ii9ir5j Год назад +16

      Thank you for answering me. I will try to. I will hope to.

    • @gerardopc1
      @gerardopc1 3 месяца назад +1

      by myself*

    • @gerardopc1
      @gerardopc1 3 месяца назад +1

      Czech*

  • @sniya
    @sniya Год назад +7

    Thank you. I needed this today.

  • @johannaartiles
    @johannaartiles Год назад +133

    Me watching a video in English to know how to succeed learning English in the next 3 months:

    • @danieltorres3662
      @danieltorres3662 Год назад +4

      x2

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 Год назад

      Actually most natives speak like 💩

    • @johannaartiles
      @johannaartiles Год назад +1

      @@mcmerry2846 omg really?

    • @sk8_bort
      @sk8_bort Год назад +23

      You're listening to a native speaker and you've posted a comment in almost perfect English, so if you really are in your first three months of learning, I'd say you're doing well lol

    • @johannaartiles
      @johannaartiles Год назад +21

      @@sk8_bort oh no, I’m not on my first three months but I still watched it because I wanna keep learning English and improving it, I’m barely English B1 (plus I’m interested on learning more languages than just English yk)

  • @carlosherrera2
    @carlosherrera2 Год назад +1

    Great tips! Thank you Steve!

  • @noname28282
    @noname28282 Год назад +3

    Thank you Steve!
    As always you gave big piece of motivation. I really pleased that I've learned much in English through listening your regular video/audio.
    Wish you endless curiosity and health for aquaring new knowledge ✌️🙂

  • @jeepershangouts2043
    @jeepershangouts2043 Год назад +6

    This guy accidentally found the fountain of youth: Learning languages.

  • @TheGhostPlanet
    @TheGhostPlanet Год назад

    Great advice! Thank you for sharing

  • @thuynguyenthithu9808
    @thuynguyenthithu9808 Год назад +1

    you piqued my interest in learning languages, many thanks!

  • @renanem5976
    @renanem5976 Год назад +4

    Pretty Good. one thing that i do, I like to listen while I'm sleeping, to me it works. I know many people dont believe, so Why sleeping, cause you are deep relaxing sure you need to study when you wake too. Thanks. peace for all From Brazil!

  • @akazawayuki984
    @akazawayuki984 Год назад +1

    The ending was so BEAUTIFUL

  • @piperlau4309
    @piperlau4309 Год назад +6

    Thank you ,Mr Kaufmann .I am a Chinese. I just started learning Japanese a week ago on Linq . Your video today does give me a lot of cknfidence and motivation. Good luck to my New language journey.😁

  • @acquirearabicbylistening
    @acquirearabicbylistening Год назад +1

    These tips are very valuable, thank you very much

  • @ravinair6195
    @ravinair6195 10 месяцев назад

    Your videos are very motivating and they are super helpful - i learnt Spanish due to your videos and now I am learning Italian - and as you said - Italian was such a jumble of words and now 3 months later the Jig Saw starts falling in to place - Thank you immensely

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 Год назад +1

    I intend to start learning Spanish as my third language, in about one year's time. I'll come back to this video for future reference!

  • @makayagloryck9516
    @makayagloryck9516 Год назад

    I don't how to congratulate you. It's always a great to hear you. I wanna be like you M. Kaufmann😊 After English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Arabic, Swahili now I'm trying to learn indic languages. U're my inspiration sir.

  • @Thelinguist
    @Thelinguist  Год назад +3

    The app I use to learn languages -> bit.ly/3TEoL4k
    My 10 FREE secrets to language learning -> www.thelinguist.com
    What is your strategy for getting started in a new language?

  • @minilucky1886
    @minilucky1886 Год назад +12

    Thank you every much! This lesson is superior, I've been learning English for 3 months now. Your suggestion suits me perfectly, and I'll follow your lessons on RUclips in the future. 😄

    • @joseph3225
      @joseph3225 Год назад

      I know this comes 8 months later but as a native speaker of English let me just say your English is amazing from what I see based off of this one comment. I almost don’t want to believe you. Lol

    • @minilucky1886
      @minilucky1886 Год назад

      @@joseph3225 haha, I learned basic English at school about 20 years ago. And I began to learn English again from last year .

    • @joseph3225
      @joseph3225 Год назад

      @@minilucky1886 Oh okay, lol. Good luck in your future studies of the English language and other languages if you are learning more.

    • @minilucky1886
      @minilucky1886 Год назад

      @@joseph3225 thank you very much🤞

  • @jtl535
    @jtl535 Год назад

    您说的很对,完全同意!我在学习西班牙语,您介绍的方法很有帮助,谢谢!

  • @BrunoHenrique0156
    @BrunoHenrique0156 Месяц назад

    Thank you so much. I have been doing this: i have been believe it's possible for me, i make many repetitions and i listen before read.

  • @Nova0970
    @Nova0970 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for your video ☺️
    It's been 3 years iam learning English and know i can understand your video, iam not fluent but , iam so happy about it and know want to start learning Korean.

  • @mygreekteacher483
    @mygreekteacher483 Год назад

    You are my paradigm sir...thank you..

  • @songthanh896
    @songthanh896 Год назад +8

    Thank you very much, Steve! I’m Vietnamese and I’m living in Japan for my graduate school, so I’m learning Japanese. It’s hard but interesting for me, and I really admire that you can speak so many languages so fluently, including Japanese. Thanks so much for your advice! ありがとうございます! Cảm ơn ông rất nhiều!

    • @duyentran5554
      @duyentran5554 Год назад +1

      Hello, I’m Daisy( my English name). I’m from Việt Nam, am living in Japan and learning German. It’s was nice to see a VietNamese person here

    • @songthanh896
      @songthanh896 Год назад

      @@duyentran5554 hello

  • @rafaelribeiro4297
    @rafaelribeiro4297 Год назад +3

    Muito Obrigado também Steve por disponibilizar a legenda no seu vídeo

  • @chineseteachingvideos
    @chineseteachingvideos Год назад +2

    thank you very much

  • @Farah-ov3rw
    @Farah-ov3rw Год назад +2

    Thank you Steve for again all your precious advices. I have a question : May you do a video of what you do or at least of what you advice to do after this three-month period in the language learning process ? Thank you very much !! Goodbye from France 👋🏼🇫🇷

  • @user-wi2jv8mg5n
    @user-wi2jv8mg5n 6 месяцев назад +1

    Actually l started by watching movies in the first l understand 10 or 20 percentage but when l continue with watching movies for 1 month l noticed my comprehension become better than before and become understand 30 to 40 percentage of this movies and that gave me more motivation

    • @user-tz7sw5yk4i
      @user-tz7sw5yk4i 2 месяца назад

      Hello!! May I ask how you’re going ? I’m starting this week and kinda in the same exact position , I can barely understand what’s being said but i feel like im evolving

  • @PolyglotSecrets
    @PolyglotSecrets Год назад +6

    There's a very interesting comment you made - how when you don't understand lesson 1, you move on to lesson 2. I recently witnessed someone refusing to do that and repeating lesson 1 until they get it. Well, still no luck and they keep repeating it. It's so important to move on. That is a very valuable message that you shared, Steve. Eventually, it will all click - but it can't, if you keep pushing yourself too hard.

    • @georgebender7519
      @georgebender7519 Год назад +1

      That’s been my problem, pushing to hard and thinking that in three months of learning I should be able to say sentences. I’m at the three month mark and frustrated I can’t speak sentences. This was good timing in hearing this. Thank you for your wisdom.

    • @alessandrorocci1416
      @alessandrorocci1416 Год назад

      @@georgebender7519 There is actually another of his videos that focus on that aspect. If I remember correctly the title should be something about the impossibility to master the basics (or something similar). I don't know if you still need it, but anyway...
      Good luck with learnings languages

    • @georgebender7519
      @georgebender7519 Год назад

      @@alessandrorocci1416 I do!

  • @austinlang6946
    @austinlang6946 Год назад +5

    I think that starter book comment is the key here. If you get some overview of the grammar before you jump into mini-stories “which are fantastic” you’re going to pick up so much more so much faster. I’m not saying learn grammar first. Like with Spanish knowing okay when I see hablé/aste/ó…it’s this, when I see hablaba/abas….it’s this etc. So if you’re brain already has some idea of the patterns it’s going to see it’s obviously going to recognize them faster and will be able to distinguish a little more nuance…..but the deep reality is if your goal is to be “fluent” meaning you can turn on whatever movie or take a class or listen to your favorite books, it’s going to take thousands of hours. But also important to realize, conversations with ppl come a good bit before those other things I mentioned. Just keep going and don’t quit and if you do that there is a you somewhere in the future that has the language skills you currently want. It’ll change your life.

    • @derwalter866
      @derwalter866 Год назад +2

      Yeah +1 to the starter book idea. In my case I started learning German because I watched a German dubbed anime episode as a joke and then shortly thereafter i began to learn German. I read through a book on basic German phrases and grammar and after I was done then I started rewatching the thing and realized that I could pick up words and even sentences, whereas before it was a complete gibberish that made 0 sense. I feel without getting a slight feel for the structure and basic vocabulary it makes it tough to get started.

    • @austinlang6946
      @austinlang6946 Год назад +1

      @@derwalter866 exactly. It’s better to start inside parameters then expand those parameters as you go than to start with no real parameters and then try to figure out what they are.

  • @AlexCruceruPhotography
    @AlexCruceruPhotography 9 месяцев назад

    All I can say is that it is really hard to get good material in my mother tongue (Romanian) needed to learn harder languages. Many times I’ve used the English language apps as a mother tongues, but it has its limitations. For example, not like English, we do have the letter î which is - in Korean. Sometimes it is frustrating not to have a direct linkage between your mother tongue and the new one. But hey, I have to adapt. Love your work and videos, always inspiring!

  • @nurulhasan3953
    @nurulhasan3953 Год назад

    Yes. I'm about to begin my Japan class by Monday for a 4-month learning long

  • @knowledgevoyage8828
    @knowledgevoyage8828 Год назад +3

    I would always say keep a diary: it helps you be realistic. If you get down and say I don't seem to be getting anywhere, when you check you've only studied 3 hours this week.

    • @PresCalvinCoolidge
      @PresCalvinCoolidge 5 месяцев назад

      what do you write in the diary, vocabulary? grammar?

  • @thenaturalyogi5934
    @thenaturalyogi5934 Год назад +1

    It does make sense first three months. I might experiment with German in 2023 and listen to all the mini stories on Lingq and just listen and read and not speak at all. I didn't do that with Portuguese and Russian because I got excited and wanted to speak right away. 🤣 Either way Im getting better at both.

  • @edwardlayton684
    @edwardlayton684 Год назад +4

    Thanks Steve!! Started reading and listening 5 months ago now, probably listened to mini stories 10x each to begin with and now reading and listening to some intermediate content. However I do feel had I stuck to the mini stories more that would have helped me now more, rather than moving to tougher more interesting content. Do you think it is better now to re-go over the mini stories and ‘grin and bear it’ as can get a bit boring….or just stick to the intermediate content and keep moving ahead? Thanks for the content! Always really good

  • @WhyNot-WhyNott
    @WhyNot-WhyNott 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @gocetodorovski2633
    @gocetodorovski2633 Год назад

    thanks you are the best

  • @lucianluca7059
    @lucianluca7059 5 месяцев назад

    Please adopt me! 🙈😂 Looking forward to renewing my subscription. 💪

  • @ingjuanpablofrancolozada6303
    @ingjuanpablofrancolozada6303 Год назад +2

    I Love you best channel Men thanck you excelent Class.

  • @speakrussian6779
    @speakrussian6779 Год назад +1

    First, what you have to do, is to develop your own learning strategy and a timing plan. Just open any textbook for beginners and study the context. When you determine your steps, set you the timeline for all steps. Good luck!

  • @undeadblizzard
    @undeadblizzard Год назад +2

    Thank you Language Grand Pa.

  • @joseezilei742
    @joseezilei742 Год назад

    I Just loved the picture of curiosity

  • @faooqazam100
    @faooqazam100 7 месяцев назад +1

    Brilliant video, exactly what I wanted. And secondly, do you have any video on what to do after the 3 months period? Or can someone please share the link or title with me to look for? Thanks in advance

  • @yadurajdas532
    @yadurajdas532 Год назад +1

    Hello, thank you so much for the valuable information.
    Do you have material for learning Sanskrit in linkQ ?

  • @youssefjr4470
    @youssefjr4470 Год назад +1

    As i saw you learning the arabic language throughout the qurân

  • @SteveW67
    @SteveW67 Год назад +2

    Don't look at where you are, look at where you were.

  • @jennyg5426
    @jennyg5426 Год назад

    Mars Curiosity. Hahaha. Love it.

  • @gamingwithpurg3anarchy157
    @gamingwithpurg3anarchy157 11 месяцев назад

    I remember when I was first learning Portuguese (I'm at a year and a half now but just discovered lingQ a week ago. Already learned a lot btw) but the first year and especially the first 6-8 months I remember being soooo tired from beating a new language into my brain (I only speak English). Wish I had known about lingQ this whole time.. I started with Duolingo and then found Pimsleur and decided to try that and then went "wow Duolingo suuuucked" now being at a year and a half I still don't really understand much.. but I can read a little..I probably can't speak.. although if I tried maybe.. it would be ugly.. but I maybe could.. I write to Brazilians every day and they understand me and I somewhat understand them. Not every word but I get the idea of what they're saying. Very hard when it's a room of 29 natives that speak how they normally speak so there's lots of abbreviations and slang 😂 but I hope this immersion helps my reading and I hope lingQ helps everything. i feel like I have the edges of a puzzle complete and maybe some pieces right inside the edge but now It's time to fill it in. 😊

  • @DWRWC
    @DWRWC Год назад

    Es bueno que me gusta armar rompecabezas. Pero los idiomas son mucho más utíl, y mucho más divertido también. Llevo más de 2 años aprendiendo español.

  • @yasmeenbegum9967
    @yasmeenbegum9967 Год назад +2

    I would like to learn English language and Arabic language.

  • @haroondabbagh2869
    @haroondabbagh2869 Год назад +1

    Steve kaufman .
    The Arabic pic you put up .
    The wording means
    “ a book with has absolutely no doubt “
    It’s from Quran

  • @calmpeace9726
    @calmpeace9726 Год назад

    I am dare to say that Mr.Kaufmann is one of the precious treasure in human history.

  • @rdknyvr
    @rdknyvr Год назад +2

    Different writing systems -- "or like Punjabi, gurmukhi script." Steve, any sense of when Punjabi will be added? Lots of potential in the Lower Mainland. Thanks :)

  • @lucywang5223
    @lucywang5223 Год назад +1

    目前在lingQ學習西班牙文己經快兩個月了,的確一些學習過的mini story 仍然忘了是很
    沮喪,聽了老師的建議又提起信心,希望再過十個月可以去墨西哥旅遊?

  • @user-nx3qk1tk9c
    @user-nx3qk1tk9c 6 месяцев назад +1

    Hello, Steve
    I have been learning Arabic on my own for 6 weeks.
    I am watching some RUclips channels about Arabic.
    I don't have a starter book.
    I am s Japanese and I live in countryside , Japan.
    Book store in my town doesn't have Arabic starter books.
    Could you recommend the starter books for Japanese , please ?

  • @cestmoitkt527
    @cestmoitkt527 Год назад +2

    I understand Arabic language and French but I want understand English language well cause I want be a translator sometimes I watch movies I understand sentences my but is to improve my English level

  • @ronyislam5929
    @ronyislam5929 9 месяцев назад

    Hello, Mr Steve. I have recognised you by AJ Hoge. You and AJ are keeping fantastic role in language learning 😊. I want to be an English coach in my country could you please give me some suggestion about that?
    Regards
    Rony Bangladesh

  • @Ghanshyam00000
    @Ghanshyam00000 Год назад

    I agree with you but the extent that you told that repetition is the most important thing in language learning would be vocabulary, phrases it's ok we can remember and we used in a sentence but when it comes to actually speaking then we forget because we mostly learn the conservative way I think we have to learn realized the situation like water move this corner to another corner just flow however people generally learn a lot list of vocabulary but it doesn't sence rather than the situation native never use one word again and again they understand the situation what words should I use they have network prefixes and suffixes

  • @jameshanson94
    @jameshanson94 Год назад +4

    Hey Steve, what is your opinion on writing words and phrases to learn them? In your videos, you usually mention reading and listening but not writing.

    • @beedle556
      @beedle556 Год назад

      From my experience do it and don’t stop, it’s like speaking, u gotta drag it out of your brain

    • @coconutpineapple2489
      @coconutpineapple2489 Год назад

      When you have conversation, you need to make sentences quickly, but when it comes to writing, you can look up unknown words and expressions, so I recommend it.

  • @derekgreen7319
    @derekgreen7319 Год назад +1

    Those first few weeks are pretty tough . You have to acquire enough words to be able to do some reading.

    • @putinisakiller8093
      @putinisakiller8093 Год назад

      It's just because the reading is unproper. Even a hundred words are enough to many mini stories.

  • @andyharpist2938
    @andyharpist2938 Год назад +1

    Theres only two rules for learning a language.
    You start and
    You dont stop.
    And thats all. If there are other rules I would only add: "It' not a race or competition". And "enjoy the journey above all "

  • @dgmario
    @dgmario Год назад +3

    Hi there, here mario. Coming a mindful topic for your chanel: i understand 90% of words in medias, but i don't retain the ideas, what to do? Thky Steve.

  • @AQJ_JAILANI
    @AQJ_JAILANI Год назад +1

    Oke steve i'm still study speak languages..

  • @PresCalvinCoolidge
    @PresCalvinCoolidge 5 месяцев назад +1

    Steve, can you give a rough estimate of how many hours per day you are spending in those first 3 months? is 5 minutes a day typical?

  • @dacracking5768
    @dacracking5768 Год назад

    I can’t imagine you learning Japanese like this

  • @holliswilliams8426
    @holliswilliams8426 Год назад +1

    I think it depends on language, 3 months of learning Spanish and I was already able to visit Spain and start having conversations with people, I've been learning Arabic for a few months and not even close to that.

    • @putinisakiller8093
      @putinisakiller8093 Год назад

      Because some languages are relatives to each other while others are not. For example I can understand almost everything in some language though I didn't learn it at all. :)
      Both English and Spanish have many Latin and Greek words. :)

  • @brig791
    @brig791 Год назад +1

    For the Arabic is it better to learn the words or the arabic caligraphy? Because i went to your app for arabic and i had difficulty understansing i.e it was only tge caligraphy.

    • @brig791
      @brig791 11 месяцев назад

      @@nhltrk words**

  • @razorrabone4098
    @razorrabone4098 Год назад +2

    Steve, at what stage does the intermediate plateau start? Is it between B2 and C1 ? Or does it start from B1 ?

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад +6

      B1. You have finished the early climb from not understanding anything to being able to say a few things. Now the long road begins.

  • @marilupopoca9437
    @marilupopoca9437 Год назад

    Hello Steve, I would like to improve my English speaking skills , how can I develop more confidence in my self. Have a great day!!

  • @Nathan00at78Uuiu
    @Nathan00at78Uuiu 3 месяца назад

    what is a good starter book for Spanish?

  • @D_hadi
    @D_hadi Год назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @harrycslau
    @harrycslau Год назад +4

    I am learning a new language. My teacher asked me to understand at least 75% of one video material (with subtitle) before moving to the next one, which is quite hard to achieve and boring in my opinion. However, I also understand that if I just run through it without any repetition and understanding, it just lost so easily.
    How to make a balance between repetition and curiosity?

  • @AelfricsAdventures
    @AelfricsAdventures Год назад +2

    You reference LingQ and the features available in the app often in your advice on language learning. Do you have any advice - or how would you modify your existing advice - for people wanting to learn a language that is not in regular use anymore (and not in the apps) such as Old English?

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад

      The principles are the same, lots of listening and reading. Depends on what is available for Old English.

    • @putinisakiller8093
      @putinisakiller8093 Год назад

      @@Thelinguist
      Where can one get proper audios for rare or dead languages?

  • @TheRealRaygor
    @TheRealRaygor Год назад

    Geez 10 languages after 60....so inspiring!

  • @abdulrahmanabdulghani8833
    @abdulrahmanabdulghani8833 Год назад

    Terima kasih

  • @jonathanarguedas6832
    @jonathanarguedas6832 Год назад +3

    Hi Steve I don't see that you have any video how effective is Learn with music.

    • @pauld3327
      @pauld3327 Год назад

      I remember him saying in one of his videos that he doesn't like the idea of learning a language with music because there is too much poetry.

    • @jonathanarguedas6832
      @jonathanarguedas6832 Год назад

      @@pauld3327 👌🏻

  • @msmaria5039
    @msmaria5039 Год назад

    Question, I get headaches when I study too much in Spanish. Like watching a Spanish RUclips video.
    How do I prevent that?

  • @Mr_Kirk_
    @Mr_Kirk_ Год назад +1

    Aren't the stories the same in each language? Are they still effective if you know the story already from the other language you're learning? I'm learning Portuguese and Norwegian and would like to be sure I can use the same stories in each language. Thank you!

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад +2

      The fact that the stories are the same is an advantage. When you learn something new, it is helpful to have as much familiar stuff around to help you. You can focus on the language. It works, believe me.

    • @Mr_Kirk_
      @Mr_Kirk_ Год назад

      @@Thelinguist Thanks for the response Steve! I believe you :)

    • @kawanrezende5753
      @kawanrezende5753 Год назад

      Hi, just in case you need someone to practice portuguese, I would be glad to help

  • @JM-mj9ig
    @JM-mj9ig Год назад

    👍

  • @Dileepkumar-zt9ef
    @Dileepkumar-zt9ef Год назад

    👌❤❤❤❤

  • @user-mp7bp2dn2d
    @user-mp7bp2dn2d Год назад

    for some reason I can clearly understand when polyglots speak in their native english, and it's much more difficult to comprehend when non polyglots speak. why so, whether it because polyglots got more poor native language after learning so much languages, or on the contrary they use native language more right? or they just trying speak not too hard?

  • @GeorgeDeCarlo
    @GeorgeDeCarlo 7 месяцев назад

    After 12 years and a few months of grammar with many books then storytelling over 1,500 hours I failed. I added LingQ and was devoted with the daily streaks. What happened? Failure once again.

  • @user-ud9oq5uh5w
    @user-ud9oq5uh5w 9 месяцев назад

    I watch this video to learn how can i speak English fluently in three months 😅

  • @norabalogh5910
    @norabalogh5910 Год назад

    Why do you recommend initially listening to the audio a text with only limited understanding? I don’t enjoy reading or listening if don’t fully understand. My natural tendency is to read first looking up all words and expressions that I don’t know and also sticking the sentence in Deepl or Google-Translate if I have the slightest doubt about the meaning. Only then do I listen (repetitively)

    • @putinisakiller8093
      @putinisakiller8093 Год назад

      What language do you study? There is a huge difference in pronunciation of languages. So some of them don't demand much listening though others do. If you can pronounce a word correctly you may not listen to it a lot.

    • @norabalogh5910
      @norabalogh5910 Год назад

      The second languages I've learned to a good level have been: French, Spanish, German and Hungarian. The pronunciation of Hungarian is quite different than English... but I'm not sure what this has to do with the recommendation that one initially listen to the audio associated with a text straight through without stopping, even if one doesn't understand it fully, and only afterwards look things up. I always have the impulse to look up everything I don't understand the first time I go through a text/audio recording, in Hungarian as in my other languages.
      I find it frustrating and not enjoyable to initially listen to the audio without looking things up, and given that I don't really understand the point of it, I'm not motivated to force myself to do it.....but if I understood the reason for this extremely popular recommendation a bit better, maybe I'd try harder at it! @@putinisakiller8093

  • @0815Snickersboy
    @0815Snickersboy Год назад +2

    ok going back 30 to 40 times is a lot. But don't you run at the risk of marking words as known that you only know because of that story and it's context ?

    • @rocky57614
      @rocky57614 Год назад +1

      Well, if you see it again and you don't understand it then, mark it as unknown again. It's like a ping pong match.

  • @admervalschlichcta7728
    @admervalschlichcta7728 Год назад

    Talk about hungarian , please !
    the impregnable language 😮

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад

      I now next to noting about Hungarian, unfortunately.

  • @solucoesb2g996
    @solucoesb2g996 Год назад +1

    B1 ENGLISH, ESPANISH B1, FRENCH, A2, ITALIAN, B1, KOREAN A1, JAPANESE, A1 , MANDARIM ZERO AND GERMANY ZERO.

  • @ricardor7578
    @ricardor7578 Год назад

    🤣 Steve repetitively said "repetitive" 8 times in the video. 🤣

  • @michelvandepol1485
    @michelvandepol1485 Год назад +1

    To learn a language, you need the correct material. There are many books out there but most of them are crap, well intended but not effective. I am a 62 year old man who studies every day. save trouble, buy Berlitz. Their language material is above all

  • @mcmerry2846
    @mcmerry2846 Год назад

    I have a lot of words I know how to pronounce, write and Understand from the listening...but do I Know the meaning??? Clearly not. 😂

  • @avoiceacrosstheworld1943
    @avoiceacrosstheworld1943 Год назад +2

    First

  • @Jayinjapanese
    @Jayinjapanese 4 месяца назад

    You don’t need to believe in yourself to learn

  • @Bepatient866
    @Bepatient866 6 месяцев назад

    is there anything for beginners 😑

  • @Ravikant-oz1lp
    @Ravikant-oz1lp Год назад

    Can you speak hindi? Steve

    • @Thelinguist
      @Thelinguist  Год назад +1

      Not yet

    • @Ravikant-oz1lp
      @Ravikant-oz1lp Год назад

      @@Thelinguist if you want to learn hindi i can teach you because i am a native speaker in this language 😊😊😊

  • @Hilushenka
    @Hilushenka Год назад

    WOW,,,you are 77?! You are like 56 or so