I have a strategy that worked out for me very well when it comes down to learning a new language. I take my time to study during the day usually 1 hour a day and write down some important vocabularies and at night before I go to bed I recap those vocabularies alongside with translation that's for beginners that's really effective for me. I'm learning german now and I'm planning a different strategy to see if it works I love learning languages I wanna be able to speak like 15 languages. Of course you have to read a lot in general to improve your memory I recommend at least 7 pages a day. Also you have to keep in touch with the language daily I mean at least do something that has to do with the language you are learning I don't know why but if you do that you will learn faster. I appreciate what you are doing keep it up
@@tulennhataotruykich8722 Hi, I'm American and obviously speak English. You need to between want and speak.I want to speak your language. Failing was spelled wrong. Hope that helps you out. I could understand it just fine. Your English seems decent. Keep it up it'll improve.
"But then again what would I know, I've only learned 8 languages" 😂 so cheeky! Hahahaha. Did you edit this one yourself? Your quality is topnotch Lina 👌🏾🔥 keep up the amazing work.
One tip that is really working with me now in learning Swedish writing the new vocabularies with a red pen they tend to stick more in my head cuz red gives my brain an alert that 🚨”this is something important to remember”
What I find is that sometimes I have days where I’m nervous to learn “what if I don’t understand” or when I’m listening to music I think “imagine if I don’t learn the words in the song” and the worst enemy you’ll find when learning a language is yourself and not any native speaker could... I impressed multiple relatives with how quickly I’ve learned... don’t give up guys trust me
I use mnemonics and color coding the most for my languages, and tailor a different standardized color palette for each language that’s “culturally relevant” (ie, based off a national flag etc). All of my notebooks for Spanish are yellow, because of the Spain and Columbian flag colors, and a lot of my textbooks are in a yellow or orange design. I also mix in green (since I focus on the Mexican dialect) for highlighting masculine nouns and red for feminine. Highlight with yellow for adjectives, verbs etc. For German my books are grey, and I have a system similar to Spanish color coding, only I stick to grey, (can’t highlight in black easily 😂) red, yellow, brown, etc. Norwegian has red books, I highlight with red, grey, blue, brown, etc. Russian gets purple because their flag and culture mentally “feels” more cold and Arctic, and in Russian media that cool purple light at sunset when there’s snow on the ground during a winter sunset triggers getting into a Russian headspace. Plus when you mix blue and red, you get purple 🤓 but the main reason aside from some Russian workbooks having purple themes supporting that color coding, French was my first second language so I reserve a lot of the blue, red, and grey tones for that. It’s amazing how keeping different (even with some overlap because every country ever loves red it seems) color combos helps separate things. I use Drops the most over any app. It’s an easy accessible way to gain vocabulary even if you’re super busy. Even when I have stretches of time where I can’t study how I want, at least Drops is super easy to do anywhere at anytime to do *something*. I find mind mapping to be helpful, but I approach language learning with an etymological bias anyway. I love seeing how languages are related and how it implies cultural interaction historically. Similar to your mindmap, but an example of my first Spanish map was “Oh ‘la cartera’ means ‘wallet’ or sometimes even ‘purse’. They [carry money and other things], just like in English a ‘cart’ [carries goods], or how the ‘cartels’ in the Americas [move contraband]. I see how that’s related to ‘carta’ in Spanish which is ‘card’, and in Norwegian it’s ‘kort’, Russian I know is ‘карта (karta), and cards are typically used to [carry and move around messages or greetings]. That makes me think, despite being a Spanish word in a Romance language, maybe it’s a Nordic word that found Spanish via French when they were dealing with the Normans, or vice versa, but there must be a relationship there as the cultural bridge for these similar rooted words that convey different types and aspects of transportation. ‘Cart’ in English arrived with the context of a shopping cart which [lets one move their purchases around] in a store. Now that I think about it, how about English’s ‘car?’ Cars [move people from place to place] so I’ll look that up too. So I look up the etymology of cartera, card, cart, and car, or any other word relation I’ve extrapolated to confirm my thoughts (or dispute it and take me down another rabbit hole!) and make a word map coming out of original ‘la cartera’. ‘Chariot’ which is super Latin in context hadn’t crossed my mind but it made that much more sense of the meanings of these words when I saw it in the etymological tree of ‘car’. It also points towards Celtic influence on Norman words entering French, thus entering the Romance language arena. Cart’s tree pointed towards Greek influence, which card has a branch in too, from the Greek word for paper or papyrus, which influenced Norse, which points to words and culture’s cyclical influences on one another. So all of these similar sounding words with related meanings and contexts have entangled roots in their history and relations, and imply some form of movement. And the more languages you know/learn/are familiar with, the bigger your contextual web of this etymological pattern recognition gets. The bigger your mind map of vocabulary becomes. Now I don’t do this on paper in my notebooks for every word. I tend to have a similar mental journey for every new vocab word I learn (typically with Drops until I exhaust a course or need to move in to more specific words) but if there’s vocabulary I have a problem remembering, I’ll make an etymology family map like the one above to help me remember it. It’s difficult to explain a visual approach in only words like this, but I employ highlighting key things in my maps, and if this mindset hasn’t occurred to anyone, I hope it helps! Languages are so beautiful and have different personalities and outlooks.
Cafuné me recuerda a asmr lol. Hey i just found your channel and i love it, I've been learning Deutsch for 2 years and i feel so related about the methods you talked about today! Muchas gracias!
After watching half a dozen of your superb videos, I clicked the notification bell. Please keep on with your impressing videos! Thanks for the good hints!
Once o get past the beginning, I don't put any effort into memorizing. Just keep looking up words as I read until I don't have to. That's how I learned english, after all!
Que mulher linda, Meu Deus.. Preciso ir para Germany!! Seu canal é muito lega!! Ganhou um inscrito. Moro em London e agora estou na Itália, perto da Alemanha 😏😏😀😍
Wenn ich ein neues Wort lerne, schriebe ich das Wort und dann sag ich das Wort, ich denke dass Vocab lernen ist total leicht, es ist leicht, neue Wörter zu lernen aber es macht mehr Spaß Grammatik zu lernen
Writing down words in an exercise book does help me remember them. But writing the word down once is enough for me: I don't want to spend my time copying vocabulary lists.
@@ofuturocondutor512 Tem um canal que se chama PROFESSOR KENNY,ele é um canadense casado com uma brasileira ,da uma olhada lá eu achei bem interessante a forma simples que esse professor explica.
I have a strategy that worked out for me very well when it comes down to learning a new language. I take my time to study during the day usually 1 hour a day and write down some important vocabularies and at night before I go to bed I recap those vocabularies alongside with translation that's for beginners that's really effective for me. I'm learning german now and I'm planning a different strategy to see if it works I love learning languages I wanna be able to speak like 15 languages. Of course you have to read a lot in general to improve your memory I recommend at least 7 pages a day. Also you have to keep in touch with the language daily I mean at least do something that has to do with the language you are learning I don't know why but if you do that you will learn faster. I appreciate what you are doing keep it up
I want speak your language. I'm felling so bad with English beaucase I'm Vietnamese. Can you help me learn English. Please
luke lesnar cool! Thanks for sharing. Can you share more tips to improve memory and how u learn language? Thanks
@@tulennhataotruykich8722 Hi, I'm American and obviously speak English. You need to between want and speak.I want to speak your language. Failing was spelled wrong. Hope that helps you out. I could understand it just fine. Your English seems decent. Keep it up it'll improve.
"But then again what would I know, I've only learned 8 languages" 😂 so cheeky! Hahahaha.
Did you edit this one yourself? Your quality is topnotch Lina 👌🏾🔥 keep up the amazing work.
Yes I did indeed! Thank you :D
One tip that is really working with me now in learning Swedish writing the new vocabularies with a red pen they tend to stick more in my head cuz red gives my brain an alert that 🚨”this is something important to remember”
Yes! Exactly :) Colour coding is one of my favourite things!
Gosh, ich liebe deine Channel x
What I find is that sometimes I have days where I’m nervous to learn “what if I don’t understand” or when I’m listening to music I think “imagine if I don’t learn the words in the song” and the worst enemy you’ll find when learning a language is yourself and not any native speaker could... I impressed multiple relatives with how quickly I’ve learned... don’t give up guys trust me
I use mnemonics and color coding the most for my languages, and tailor a different standardized color palette for each language that’s “culturally relevant” (ie, based off a national flag etc). All of my notebooks for Spanish are yellow, because of the Spain and Columbian flag colors, and a lot of my textbooks are in a yellow or orange design. I also mix in green (since I focus on the Mexican dialect) for highlighting masculine nouns and red for feminine. Highlight with yellow for adjectives, verbs etc.
For German my books are grey, and I have a system similar to Spanish color coding, only I stick to grey, (can’t highlight in black easily 😂) red, yellow, brown, etc. Norwegian has red books, I highlight with red, grey, blue, brown, etc. Russian gets purple because their flag and culture mentally “feels” more cold and Arctic, and in Russian media that cool purple light at sunset when there’s snow on the ground during a winter sunset triggers getting into a Russian headspace. Plus when you mix blue and red, you get purple 🤓 but the main reason aside from some Russian workbooks having purple themes supporting that color coding, French was my first second language so I reserve a lot of the blue, red, and grey tones for that. It’s amazing how keeping different (even with some overlap because every country ever loves red it seems) color combos helps separate things.
I use Drops the most over any app. It’s an easy accessible way to gain vocabulary even if you’re super busy. Even when I have stretches of time where I can’t study how I want, at least Drops is super easy to do anywhere at anytime to do *something*.
I find mind mapping to be helpful, but I approach language learning with an etymological bias anyway. I love seeing how languages are related and how it implies cultural interaction historically. Similar to your mindmap, but an example of my first Spanish map was “Oh ‘la cartera’ means ‘wallet’ or sometimes even ‘purse’. They [carry money and other things], just like in English a ‘cart’ [carries goods], or how the ‘cartels’ in the Americas [move contraband]. I see how that’s related to ‘carta’ in Spanish which is ‘card’, and in Norwegian it’s ‘kort’, Russian I know is ‘карта (karta), and cards are typically used to [carry and move around messages or greetings]. That makes me think, despite being a Spanish word in a Romance language, maybe it’s a Nordic word that found Spanish via French when they were dealing with the Normans, or vice versa, but there must be a relationship there as the cultural bridge for these similar rooted words that convey different types and aspects of transportation. ‘Cart’ in English arrived with the context of a shopping cart which [lets one move their purchases around] in a store. Now that I think about it, how about English’s ‘car?’ Cars [move people from place to place] so I’ll look that up too. So I look up the etymology of cartera, card, cart, and car, or any other word relation I’ve extrapolated to confirm my thoughts (or dispute it and take me down another rabbit hole!) and make a word map coming out of original ‘la cartera’. ‘Chariot’ which is super Latin in context hadn’t crossed my mind but it made that much more sense of the meanings of these words when I saw it in the etymological tree of ‘car’. It also points towards Celtic influence on Norman words entering French, thus entering the Romance language arena. Cart’s tree pointed towards Greek influence, which card has a branch in too, from the Greek word for paper or papyrus, which influenced Norse, which points to words and culture’s cyclical influences on one another. So all of these similar sounding words with related meanings and contexts have entangled roots in their history and relations, and imply some form of movement.
And the more languages you know/learn/are familiar with, the bigger your contextual web of this etymological pattern recognition gets. The bigger your mind map of vocabulary becomes. Now I don’t do this on paper in my notebooks for every word. I tend to have a similar mental journey for every new vocab word I learn (typically with Drops until I exhaust a course or need to move in to more specific words) but if there’s vocabulary I have a problem remembering, I’ll make an etymology family map like the one above to help me remember it. It’s difficult to explain a visual approach in only words like this, but I employ highlighting key things in my maps, and if this mindset hasn’t occurred to anyone, I hope it helps! Languages are so beautiful and have different personalities and outlooks.
Cafuné me recuerda a asmr lol. Hey i just found your channel and i love it, I've been learning Deutsch for 2 years and i feel so related about the methods you talked about today! Muchas gracias!
After watching half a dozen of your superb videos, I clicked the notification bell. Please keep on with your impressing videos! Thanks for the good hints!
Thank you! ❤️
where's the quizzlet and drops apps links plz?
Brasil✌😍
Great video , we hope more vídeos in the future , saludos desde México esperamos y pronto nos visites 👍👍☯️☯️✌️✌️🇮🇹🇮🇹🇮🇹
por supuesto!
Apbrīnoju cilvēkus kas zina vairākas svešvalodas...!😊
Once o get past the beginning, I don't put any effort into memorizing. Just keep looking up words as I read until I don't have to. That's how I learned english, after all!
Que mulher linda, Meu Deus.. Preciso ir para Germany!! Seu canal é muito lega!! Ganhou um inscrito. Moro em London e agora estou na Itália, perto da Alemanha 😏😏😀😍
Wenn ich ein neues Wort lerne, schriebe ich das Wort und dann sag ich das Wort, ich denke dass Vocab lernen ist total leicht, es ist leicht, neue Wörter zu lernen aber es macht mehr Spaß Grammatik zu lernen
Oi Lina Vasquez coloca legendas no português(Brasil),nunca te pedi nada hahaha.
Bel video come sempre!!!
obrigada! ❤️
@@LinaVasquezOfficial De nada!! Comunque il mio commento era in Italiano! xD
Writing down words in an exercise book does help me remember them. But writing the word down once is enough for me: I don't want to spend my time copying vocabulary lists.
yes!
Linda!
That's funny because the sound reminds 'cafone' (italian word) which means a very rude person!
i use memrise, it's better than duolingo
I appreciate what u mentioned above but as u know everybody has different method.
Thanks though
bashar dorgham literally said that about twice in the video and made a point of that at the end ...
you can learn more
First 😄😁
Like😀
i want learn langueges
then you should take action!
She Is Beautiful😍
Yes, and now "cafune" is now forever tied to her in my memory! :)
A alemã mais linda que já vi na minha vida !😍
The only thing I will memorize is how beautiful you are 😏 Looking hoottt
Brasil loves You. Kisses
❤️
I'm sorry, but those ARE extensions!
I came faster than the speed of light 😊😉
Os gringos tem uma facilidade de aprender português.!
nem sempre
@@LinaVasquezOfficial Mas voces são muito mais esforçados do que eu por exemplo.Ja comecei é parei várias vezes o aprendizado de inglês
Mas da para perceber o sotaque dela ainda.
@@ofuturocondutor512 Tem um canal que se chama PROFESSOR KENNY,ele é um canadense casado com uma brasileira ,da uma olhada lá eu achei bem interessante a forma simples que esse professor explica.
Fala Brasileiro pow não intendo nada que vc fala
Não tem pq ... O publico do canal a maioria falam alemão ou inglês ... Ela sabe falar português mas fazer um vídeo completamente seria difícil
Pow ta certo ne