If you are a beginner in your target language, please feel free to check out my video about "how I learn langauges in a LAZY way as a BEGINNER" ruclips.net/video/GQHeC5m63yU/видео.html 😆💛 I’m so excited to share with you all my lazy language learning routine Yayyyy!! There’s really no magic when it comes to language learning. I believe the two most critical things are to enjoy the process and to be consistent. I believe that’s exactly what made me a polyglot today. I hope you enjoy today’s video, and please do share with me your ways of learning languages that made you enjoy the process, I would love to know
When do you think is the best moment to start simultaneous languages? Like, do you start both at the same time or do you wait to have a certain knowledge of one to start learning another?
Basically the advice is: - watch videos in a foreign language - listen to podcasts - read books And you don't really need to work on it, just do it to immerse yourself in the foreing language environment and have fun.
@@YuhHuhNuhUh Know the fundamentals language you're learning and once you have solid foundation then you're good to cruise reading books, watching media etc etc etc.
That's language acquisition. It's not mutually exclusive with becoming a polyglot, it's just become trendy largely because a lot of polyglots have found it their preferred learning paradigm in recent years.
This is how I was able to learn and be able to have small conversations in Brazilian Portuguese after about 6 months, all I did was use duolingo, found people to talk to in the language, listen to music , and watch shows
in brief: 1. **Enjoy the Learning Process**: The creator emphasizes the importance of enjoying the language learning process. She believes that consistency, which is key to mastering a language, comes easier when you're having fun. 2. **No Strict Schedules or Goals**: Unlike traditional methods, she doesn't set strict goals or schedules, nor does she focus on memorizing vocabulary. Instead, she follows methods that make her happy and keep her engaged. 3. **Watching RUclips Videos**: Part of her daily routine involves watching RUclips videos in the language she's learning. She prefers videos on topics that interest her, spoken by RUclipsrs who speak clearly and talk a lot. This helps her practice listening skills. 4. **Listening to Podcasts**: While doing chores or running errands, she listens to podcasts in the target language. This helps her immerse herself in the language without needing to live in a country where it's spoken. 5. **Talking to Herself**: She practices speaking the language by talking to herself, which she finds useful when there's no one else to converse with. 6. **Reading Books**: She ends her day by reading books in the language she's learning. Even though she might not understand everything, it helps her practice reading and pronunciation. 7. **Using Social Media**: She has a separate social media account where she follows French influencers and accounts. This allows her to improve her French while scrolling through social media. 8. **Learning Multiple Languages**: When learning multiple languages, she prioritizes one (currently French) and spends at least 1.5-2 hours on it daily. For the other languages, she spends at least 10 minutes each. The creator emphasizes that her approach is not about discipline or forcing oneself to study, but about enjoying the process and learning in a way that feels natural and engaging.
I never intended to learn Korean, but I’ve developed comprehension of the language since I watch a lot of Korean dramas and movies. I’m now thinking of studying it seriously since I’m familiar with the words, just not the grammar. I realized it was time since the other day I was telling my cat to get up in Korean, without even realizing I knew the word already 😂
@Susurrations You don't remember but it's how you learned how to communicate since you were a baby. You start imitating and picking up words from the people talking around you. I think it's easier for kids because their minds are like new sponges and they aren't afraid of trial and error. My mother told me when I was 4, I was almost trilingual lol
i feel this, i watched so much midnight diner that i started picking up bits and pieces of japanese without even realizing, then i'd hear phrases in other contexts and realize "wait i know what they just said"
Lots of polyglots use the method where you think in the language you're learning. A lot of it pertains to going back to when you were learning your mother tongue; how your parents and environment makes you fluent, and you have to think in that language. I watched another polyglot talk about how they also learn this way, and I didn't realize that I had done that with every language I know. It also helps to choose a language with a culture that interests you, much like how you said to watch a video with topics that interest you. It makes you want to engage in the language more
That's what I did when I was a kid and learning English, it got to the point where I knew the word in English but couldn't remember the word in my own language lol.
That's exactly how I did learn Japanese!! And now I recommend that method to the ones around me and I am trying to apply it to the other languages I want to learn too
Yess! I speak 3 languages fluently and another 2 a bit and that's exactly how i do it. I just go by my daily tasks thinking about them in the given language and if i can't think of the word i need for the given context then i just look it up.
@@pearlywong I knew a Taiwan girl years ago who learned English by watching her favourite BBC period dramas all through her teens. She spoke like a posh 19th Century lady!
@@philipdavis7521 This is basically how i learned English by accident by watching English youtubers in my childhood because i loved "Lets Play" videos!
Comprehensible input is not a great theory, in my opinion. Krashen says you can sit and watch TV all day in the target language and acquire it which is totally false. There has to be an equal and considerate amount of output and interaction (which encompasses the ability to notice new forms and for negotiation of meaning to take place, if and when necessary) along with the input. While children seem to be able to follow the method of comprehensible input, that’s all they do anyway. Children’s job is just to absorb language all the time. Unless you’re in a setting where you can immerse in the target language, comprehensible input suddenly falls flat. And even then, like mentioned before, you cannot rely solely on input.
School and formal learning can be so boring and filled with busy work that doesn't teach you much. It is important to immerse yourself in the language, and there are many opportunities throughout the day to do so.
That's basically how I learned English too!! my mother tongue is Spanish and in school you waste at least 12 years since kindergarten to highschool learning grammar and memorizing verbs but surprisingly I got way more fluently learning for about 2 years by my own with this method (that's called Comprendible Input btw) and I can now understand and speak with natives without struggling. Now I'm doing the same for other languages as well, hoping to be a polyglot one day 😊
Talking to yourself to practice a foreign language is a free-essential if you don't live abroad. I'm so used to it now I don't even feel embarrassment anymore X'D For your french, we have a cool youtube channel called "Arte" (it's a french-german creation, so sometimes it's more in german) with great topics, in case you've never seen it and you want to vary with news. Great video, thanks for sharing it !
Have learned/speak 8 languages, and this is highly language dependent as well as what your base language is. For example, I have not met a single person whom I studied languages with that could do this with Mandarin nor Japanese, due to the pictorial nature. The learners were from Latin and Arabic script based languages and all struggled to some degree. Even classmates that were native Mandarin speakers learning English or French had to dedicate time getting familiar with the alphabets, pronunciations, and nuances of text writing. The "lazy" method you recommend actually leverages a lot of intuitive abilities you developed as a child coming from a Mandarin/Hakka and from what I assume was early exposure to Latin scripts (via English). Notice how when you moved to Arabic, the different script and writing styles plus pronunciation techniques require some dedicated practice there as well. I am not saying immersion isn't necessary. But blindly JUST doing immersion is not going to get you far as fast as if you have interweave it with dedicated targeted practice for vocabulary, grammar structures, and of course, actively practicing actually speaking the language since listening is always easier. There are a couple of great channels on RUclips that cover this and real life organizations that also use this targeted technique for more rapid language acquisition.
so true. i have some comprehesion of korean (i know the alphabet and some words) through immersion but i can't actually communicate in korean, even though i have immersed mostly through music and youtube videos for a long time. i definitely had more progress in learning japanese because of conscious effort in understanding the language paired with immersion, since you need some grammar and vocabulary to start thinking and forming phrases in a new language. i do agree that enjoying the process is the best way to learn, but i think some effort in grammar is necessary.
I have to say, I'm learning Arabic purely by listening to recordings where they say the English then repeat the Arabic three times, I've learned a little bit of the script but no grammar etc. and I'm somehow picking it up very fast. Listening is my main learning method and it's really working well for me so I can relate to what the lady in this video is saying and doing. I've also improved my Spanish dramatically at a much quicker speed just from listening to videos and being in on-line chats, similar to what she is doing. I wish I had known all this many years ago before trying to delve into so much grammar and vocabulary lists etc. Once I hear certain patterns that start forming, I realize there's a grammar link there somehow then I investigate it further and then it really sinks in because I'm looking at it out of curiosity and not from having it taught to me in rote fashion. I really think this lady is on to something here. I'm progressing way quicker in my language learning using her methods than what I did via the 'old school' way for many years There is no wrong and right when it comes to language learning, it's a matter of learning a language according to the learning style that suits you the best and also what learning style to apply according to what stage you are at with regard to a particular language.
This is so true. Good that you pointed out. It's something that works for a child living in that environment. I've seen MANY adults for whom it never works unless it's very close to their mother tounge. Or else every other hardcore anime fan would have learnt Japanese by now lol. So first figure out if you're someone who learns language just by intuition. I think most who can do so just know it. If you feel you're not really that type, don't waste your time just by doing immersion if you actually wanna learn.
@iri8032 Majority of anime fans don’t acquire Japanese because whenever they are watching anime, they just looking & reading the English subtitles or other non-japanese translations and don’t pay attention to the actual spoken Japanese language with visuals to observe context clues (which is called comprehensible input). In order to make the immersion works, it has to be 95% only in your target language that’s when your brain pattern recognitions and problem solving will start to work to understand a message and you have to do it with consistency until your mind made a new way of thinking. That is why acquiring a language that’s close to your mother tounge is easier ‘cause your brain recognise similarities of patterns and making an new one for a new language would take less time than a language that is very foreign. Children learn their native languages with 90+% immersion in that language only.
this is exactly how i feel. i tried all the popular advice like getting a good grammar book, using anki or quizlet for vocab so that i could learn spanish in 2020. i was only consistent for a few months before i burned out due to de motivation and not seeing progress. i honestly hated learning spanish when i was doing it that way because it reminded me so much about how we learn language in school. i learned about comprehensible input and i learned about the channel dreaming spanish and i decided to give it a try so i picked up spanish again this year in january. i think this method really works for me because i’m finding that i’m understanding a lot of the beginner/super beginner videos on their channel and even if there are words i don’t know, i can figure out what they are through context.
Best way for one person will not be best way for another. I have been learning French and what seems to work best for me is only just reading, rather than listening to stuff and saying the French I learn from reading to friends. This may not be most effective but it’s what works best for me. Best of luck to all fellow language learners out there 🎉
@@thedavidguy01 look inside the brain of polyglot and look inside brain of someone who failed high school language learning multiple times. I would bet money that Not only would you find that the polyglot has greater distribution of white and greater matter in area of brain responsible for learning languages. Not only that but you would also find that the polyglot simply is smarter and therefore process information during learning differently. And to add to my point, as I mentioned in my first comment one study method for one person may not work for another. It depends on how people’s brain are configured okay. That’s the simple answer. If you evidence that supports your claim more than mine and you think I’m wrong I’m all ears I would love to hear back from you. Thanks.
@@protyper9861 The evidence from decades of second language acquisition research is that language learning is unlike other learning and that it works the same way for everyone. For example, there’s an order of acquisition of language features for each language and all learners acquire them in the same order. Some people acquire language faster but in the same way.
That's because every person has their own different ways to learn a language did they find out her own different tip supposed for other ppl to be easy but it is not. They way how i learned english was reading books, and setting the language in my phone also listen bcs that helped me to understand english more, but I learn it different lol
Oh yes talking to yourself is very important. Thinking in the language as well. That's how I perfected English. Now I got bored because I know it well enough I can call myself bilingual. I wanted to learn French but dropped it unfortunately but maybe this video is a sign. Now I decided korean sounds very beautiful so here we are. I also love to copy sounds so talking to myself even if I don't really know what I'm saying is good practice. Language is just sounds that mean things how hard can it be
When I was in school I did 6yrs of English lessons, I understood nothing and was bored to learn English. Then I try to learn by myself at 17yrs old to understand news about my favorite video games, now I’m 24 and even if my writing is still not good, I can watch video/tv show or movie in English without subtitles and understand 98/100%. So, for everyone who try to learn new language, keep trying to understand with video/book/movie who interest you and you gonna learn really faster. Your video is really good, thanks
Seeing you struggle but having fun really made me realise that focussing on my grades is whats holding me back and making me anxious. If i try to just learn the language for fun my grades will probably improve
Girl you just described my day of learning. A lots of listening then speaking and very important, enjoying. By the way talking to yourself it’s completely normal
I find that learning in context helps you to remember in context. Such as, I’ll forget a word or sentence until I’m in that situation again and then it will com back to me naturally. It happened to me with Japanese even though I haven’t thought about it in years. It’s happening to my now with Korean and Chinese.
As a visual learner, it was important to me to be able to read hiragana and katakana first. To learn kanji, I’m taking the advice of a teacher to learn the meaning of each character for each year of a school age learner in Japan. I see images in my mind as I speak. The same method works for me with Spanish and Italian I must mentally see the words as I speak until I am comfortable with using them.
RUclips has a good transcript feature that moves along with each sentence so you can pause and see the words you missed. Also the kindle app links to audible to do the same thing for a lot of books. Very useful tools!
You're right ! I'm French and I'm learning English, and when I was a kid (middle school) I was better than people my age because I used to play Pokemon in english. I had fun playing it and I learnt a lot of vocabulary through the attacks names. I took it for granted and when I reached highschool, I wasn't improving at all despite being in a European Class (which means that I had more advanced English courses). I was probably the worse in this class. At that time, I wasn't even listening to music so I never heard any English outside of school. It's only as a senior that I started watching English speaking YT videos, and playing Animal Crossing in English. I immediately noticed an improvement and the next year I was reading my first book in English. You just have to find something you like and dive into it, whether it is video games, song lyrics, reading, YT videos, films...
This is one of the things I do with a lot of reading, but most of the time I have to look up every word or phrase I can't understand. It makes it a lot slower getting through a video or a book but that's just the way I am. I like how you said "whatever works for you". I think that's kind of synonymous with what Steve Kauffman says, "whatever motivates you". Staying motivated is the "ONLY" reason anyone learns. Edit: I forgot to add, use a tablet to read, you can look up words, phrases sentences and paragraphs instantly, with just a touch, if you have the right translators installed. Plus you can easily save them to ANKI, to study later; no typing needed. There are thousands of free books to read also.
I find you are definitely the real deal because even before you mentioned your native tongue, I thought English was your native and the very very very minor accent you have on like two sounds, was from all the other languages you've learned. Thank you for the advice and amazing job
What a coincidence, because I use the same approach! And I don't consider it a lazy technique, I'd say that is the way to learning just having fun! Nice video, and I enjoyed watching it as well!
This is always how I learn and when I'm serious about it I just use the LanguageReactor and make sure I instantaneously look up every word I don't know by mousing over it. Then again, if I see subtitles too long, that can be a bad habit so I'll sometimes just listen casually. I always think this method is the more hardcore, high effort way of doing and I tell people they need to "put in the effort". I feel like when people do traditional study techniques like flashcards, grammar drills, etc., they're being what I would call "lazy" and they need to put in effort if they wanna get results. I honestly always feel kinda mentally tired after a 1-2 hour hardcore active listening session and even more than after talking to natives for the same period of time.
I think this is good for non-beginners more than just complete beginners. Because we don't have the chance to learn exactly like babies do, it's a good tool for beginners to at least learn a pronunciation writing system (pinyin, hangul, hiragana, zhuyin, etc) and other beginner stuff while you do this. We, as grown people, have the capacity to tackle both listening and immersion and also learning the alphabet at the same time. Babies acquiring their first language can't just learn the alphabet immediately because they have nothing to base it on, but we can just go ahead and do it since we have already an effective means of communication.
I've always loved languages. I took a mandarin class right before the panoramic. It was challenging and exciting. Long way to go, though learning is fun. Thank you for sharing. 🦋👩🏿🌾👩🏿🍳
As a French, I think watching French videos related to everyday news is (so cute) and brave. Especially knowing that Hugo (HugoDécrypte) is really well known in France and we like him too haha Good luck and keep going! (i'm so happy you're learning my language aaaa ♥)
Do you have any recommendations for french youtubers? I want to wantch more french stuff but I haven't found someone that could interest me. I feel like when you search up "french youtubers/youtuber français" you only find people who either try to sell you something or language youtubers... So as a french person, you might know some good youtubers?
@@blub4963 Hugo décrypte which they mentionned is a really nice youtuber, he talks about french and international news and breaks it down to make it more easy for younger people to understand, so there shouldn't be any really complicated words and is actually interesting :)
@@livvies_ is there anyone else? I really don't want to be confronted with news from around the world where ever I go... Do you perhaps know some RUclipsrs who do comedy (in this case it would be alright if they also do some political topics/news/opinion but like in a humorous kind of way) or talk about history, fashion or movies/Series? Like something for escapism?
@@blub4963 Hi ! if you are still searching for a French RUclipsr, you can try to watch the videos of « squeeze ». He makes videos on a lot of subjects such as anecdotes around the world, interactive games(where he invites guests) or scary stories. Most of them are really fun to watch
I love this channel so muchhhhh. It encouraged me that language learning does not need to be so strict to the point that I don't enjoy anymore. I'm ready to change my ways of learninggg haha.
Hi Pearly!!! Was scrolling randomly and saw your video and I was like "that's my friend!" :-D This is a great video. Language learning isn't as hard as everyone makes it out to be. I'm probably spending around 15+ hours a week on Egyptian Arabic, but it doesn't feel like it because most of that time is listening to podcasts, music, watching videos, reading stories, talking with friends...not taking formal classes or "studying". I love that you're giving Harry Potter a try. I've heard it's a very difficult book to read in a foreign language. I've been debating picking it up in Spanish, but I think there are a lot easier books that would still challenge me.
I love your positive personality and these tips are great. I’m American so English is my first language. I studied French as a kid, then mandarin, then Vietnamese, and now I’m finally taking on Korean. I will use this tips for my Korean learning journey. Merci, 谢谢cảm ơn, 감사합니다!!!
😂😂😂 It was amazing!! I see languages, and the learning of it, as a way to connect people and understand the world around you... That energy you have is such important to enjoy the process of learning.
My favorite part about learning languages is not only immersing my self in other cultures, but feeling like I am learning secret code words only people that speak the language know is the coolest feeling especially when I get to see someone happy and smile about it.
Thanks for this great video, I really liked it and learnt a lot from it! Def gonna make sure to keep it fun. One thing I would suggest in line with this philosophy: you said you choose videos that have really clear speaking. That’s definitely important when learning, and you learn a lot from that (especially language). If your focus is on learning the formal language and that is your main interest, that’s great! However, especially with French, there is quite a lot of informal slang, some differences in pronunciation etc (and just the speed) which make it difficult to understand informal french if you only listen to clear french. I used to listen to radio shows in french and then when I moved to france I struggled to understand people initially, even though I could understand 95%+ of the radio shows. My solution was to watch french TV shows, and especially, stand-up comedy. Once you’re advanced in a language, Comedy is a really fun way to practice: people speak really naturally, and you learn a lot of slang (and a lot of cultural jokes and references - different regions of france constantly joke about each other etc). It’s probably the hardest thing you can watch in a foreign language for that reason (if you are used to formal language), but definitely worth it if you have reached that level
This is a great video! I learned spanish using pretty much the same method as you did and its all sooooo true!! One tip I can give for you to boost your views and get more subscribers is doing a video talking in the languages you know. It's a video idea that pops up everytime for anyone interested in polyglots or learning new languages, so it could help your channel grow a little bit more. Keep up with the good work!
Commenting so I don't lose the video. I am in advanced Hebrew but to pick it up conversationally is still very difficult. I'm going to try your methods. I do believe that in the beginning, people will need to take the traditional role of learning and practicing vocab and learning sentence structure but when you are more advanced, it is important to practice conversation, listening and reading, just like you outlined in your video. Thanks!
I just found your youtube channel and I love your energy so much ! I'm myself a french native speaker trying my best to learn tagalog, the national language of the Phillipines. That's not easy but this learning journey is so enriching. So far my method is pretty similar to yours : I try to immerge myself as much as I can in the language. I read everyday a lot in tagalog and watch tv shows and youtube videos. So far it seems to be working pretty well !
Totally! yay so happy to find someone who learn languages in a similar way^^ À très bonne chance pour l'apprentissage du Tagalog et merci pour ton gentil message :)
I'm learning italian, Spanish and I'm just starting to learn Japanese. Just the time issue on Spanish and Japanese I'm trying to add more time learning. Like you I love learning languages. Great video keep up the good work. This is my first time on your channel.
tongue lol. I've been learning Japanese and these help so much! I started to label things around my apartment to help me. Example: I will label a cabinet with the Japanese for cabinet. Then I also include a label for an action. Like "open the cabinet". So I can learn the word and a verb associated with it.
Fun's the way, it seems. I'm struggling with Japanese for YEARS, but recently I'm starting to comprehend more and having some fun. I'm paying attention to the music I hear, and tyring to capture the meaning of the sentences in anime and movies. I bought some Japanese manga to try to learn, and I'll try to play Pokémon Moon in Japanese. Let's see how it goes. I still make tons of notes, but I really like practicing handwritten Japanese. I started Mandarin with an app and it's been fun too.
thank you i need this sm, i am so stressful learning my 3rd language without realizing that the way i could become fluent in my 2nd language is bcs im enjoy learning it just by watching youtube video, tiktok video and reading in my 2nd language. i didnt event need spent time memorizing their vocabulary, i learn it by watching a lot of vlog and funny video even by that way i also learn their slang word too. thank you sm
i a lazy learner and this is the best advice ever. i've learned most of my japanese through immersion and i found that notes never really worked for me. still working on it but will apply these tips to help me with my consistency
These are really great tips im gonna add them to my daily routine as well. I can get so stuck on taking notes and while i generally like doing that, i feel like it can get tedious without producing as good of results because its too hyperfocused and i give up from the effort
Hello, i am french i am using the exact same method since few weeks and i already feel the results. And i am currently watching this video in order to practice my english listening because you speak well and clearly. From now on you are one of my "Hugo Decrypte" (very interesting guy by the way). I think i am going to watch all your videos!
I saw you pour milk in a pan, then later take out a bun. I’m sold on your techniques because you clearly are a magician. I am going to try your way to learn Korean. Sometimes Korean words come to me out of the blue. I haven’t been doing the lessons. I’ll listen for awhile. Thank you
no literally! i knew so little french and Spanish in school that I couldn't hold a conversation outside the "what's your name, how old are you, describe your family etc" and i had to force myself to memorize it but when i started watching cartoons and movies in these languages I literally began speaking so much and words just easily stuck
This is also how I learned French and how I'm learning Spanish! I am studying Spanish vocabulary, but I don't think it's necessary at all, and I just think can just speed up the process if you're already immersing. Most people don't understand how important immersion is for learning, because they've never been told about it. They think that they can study their way to fluency and that they'll eventually just naturally understand. In reality, you can't acquire a language without immersion, but you absolutely can acquire one without studying grammar or vocabulary.
@@amperage8032 i am not completely fluent in spanish, but i lived in spain for some months and was able to get around fine without ever having taken spanish classes. what helped me the most were two things: youtube and duolingo. on youtube, i started by watching the “pero like” buzzfeed channel (which was a lot of fun and when they speak spanish there’s usually subtitles which is helpful). another really helpful channel is spanish with paul, which is a really amazing resource (though if you struggle with pronunciation then trying to emulate him is not ideal). finally, there is a really old telenovela-style show in beginners’ spanish, the kind US high school spanish teachers put on for students at the end of the year when they don’t feel like teaching. it is in english and very slow spanish, and the subject matter is quite interesting. these are great resources but rather useless if you know absolutely zero spanish, which is why duolingo is important. i could write on and on about how duolingo is wrongly disparaged by the masses, but it would take forever, so please just trust me lol! my key advice is to be consistent (finish the full spanish tree before you even start to complain it’s useless, or not worth it!!) and to trust the process. after you do this, i trust that you will no doubt be able to consume more sophisticated spanish media (i now watch vlogs and shows in spanish, and read articles in it). only thing left to do is to practice consistently!! where i lived before i didn’t have much opportunity to speak spanish, but obv in spain i could and it vastly improved!! finally i would urge you to try writing in spanish and memorizing verb tenses, which is what i’m doing now. it makes much more sense, and is much less frustrating and easier to remember after you’ve achieved a certain level of the language. hope this helped and let me know how it goes!! :)))
I love your personality so much. I love how you're making this work for you. Thank you for giving me permission to b a LAZY language learner. This is incredibly helpful because I've been doing most of this. OMGSH I also made a social media account in my target language!
Thanks for your comment and the question! It took me around a year to understand 50% of them. I should have specified in the video that I only started using this method once I have a basic understanding of the language (in other words, I was not a complete beginner when I started using my lazy method). Prior to adopting this lazy method, I joined a 2 months intense French course and got myself to a level around A2. Hope it helps!
@@pearlywong Do you have any suggestions on where to find french podcasts? I think I would like to listen to comedy podcasts but maybe that would be too difficult?
This is what people who are serious about languages need to hear!! In the past, I was someone who tried very hard to learn languages. Studying grammar, vocabulary, spelling and trying to decipher exactly everything that is being said word to word. It was only after I gave up on the “goal of fluency” when I really began to acquire 2nd and 3rd languages. really, without even trying. Just watching and listening to as much as possible, things that I would like to watch either way. after struggling for years, and believing that I was incapable of learning languages, I’m proud to say that after my trip to Europe I was able to converse freely with Portuguese, Italians, Spanish and French! Now I’m studying Arabic, and will eventually start with Mandarin Chinese! Great video, thank you for sharing!!
wowww your language learning journey is so inspiring! I can't agree more! I think the ability of having fun in language learning process is so underrated!
I started going on long walks very frequently during the holiday and thought to myself “Hm, maybe I could learn a language during these walks.” So I put on the “Talk to me in Korean” podcasts instead of music and in a few months I learned more than what school would usually teach me in a year. Although I can barely speak still, I’m slowly learning more and more by merely immersing myself in the language, looking at song lyrics and reading Korean comments under RUclips videos. I’ll definitely implement some of these techniques! Thank you :)
Thank you for this! There's more than one way to learn and best way for one to learn is to enjoy the learning process. That's why I love listening to music even in other languages... Something I was taught by my music teacher back in highschool whom ironically was also my middle school teacher. But yeah! I appreciate you!
I'm brazilian so my first language is brazilian portuguese and I pretty much learned english without effort just by watching US american tv shows and listening to songs in english, i didn't study for one second, i was just having fun. That's for sure the best way
Tu parles bien français !!! J’ai été trop contente de voir que tu regardais des RUclipsrs français !!! Ta vidéo m’a permis de m’entraîner à la compréhension de l’anglais. Merciii beaucoup !!! Bravo d’apprendre autant de langues je veux en apprendre autant que toi (même plus). Bisous depuis la France !!!✨💕
My Summary: 1. Intro: enjoy urself when u wanna learn & consistency is the key 2. very entertaining method: watch RUclips video ofc😅 (like what we are doing rn) 3. the best method if u are BUSY person: listen to podcast when u doing something (jogging, working, taking errands) 4. weird but effective method: speak to ourself when we taking break (honestly I already doing it, when taking shower or when I comb my hair in mirror😂) 5. a method that calm ur mind: reading a book and speak it out loud, plus scrolling through social media. little tips: If u wanna learn Arabic, firstly u can learn it from Duolingo (not sponsored, but I hope they sponsored baobaopearly😅) because the alphabet is vert different.
Why would anyone want to learn Arabic or Turkish or Japanese etc or other similar languages! Not only are those the hardest ever, they’re also a non-pretty language (only very few words a pretty word) and, one tends to learn pretty words faster, while non-pretty words take a lot more repetitions to memorize, so it’s going to be a million times harder to learn a language that has mostly non-pretty words, and usually one ends up giving up, anyway! So it’s best to choose a pretty language such as Dutch and Norwegian and Welsh and Gallo and Portuguese etc (technically all Germanic languages and all Celtic languages and most Latin languages are pretty and easy to learn / memorize) and to learn the pretty languages for their pretty / poetic words and enjoy the process of learning!
The best way to learn a language fast is by memorizing as many new words as possible (including the most used 1.000 words) and then watching many videos with subs in the target language (or both English subs and subs in the target languages that are displayed at the same time, if available) and, it can be quite easy to learn a few thousand words, especially if one chooses a pretty language such as Dutch (Dutch & English are the prettiest languages ever with the most pretty / poetic words and the easiest languages ever) and Norwegian and Welsh and Swedish and Portuguese and French etc, and one should start by memorizing the most used 1.000 words, and then once one knows at least 5.000 base words, one picks up new words naturally, usually in context - I learned over 8.000 words in Dutch in just a few months and am now a quite advanced level in Dutch, and intermediate level in Norwegian / Swedish etc and also Portuguese etc, but I can understand almost everything in Portuguese because I am native speaker level in Spanish since childhood, as I learned Spanish without even trying by simply watching a lot of movies and TV series, and I learned over 10.000 base words in Spanish just from TV series, so it’s possible to learn an easy language such as Spanish and Italian by just watching videos or series etc without knowing many words because Spanish and Italian words are usually very easy to hear and one will usually hear clearly the way the word is pronounced and learn it that way, so one doesn’t even have to see its spelling, and that’s how I learned most Spanish words in childhood, only by hearing them pronounced many times, but last year I started learning the main rules for spelling, and I can usually figure out how to spell a Spanish word that I haven’t seen spelled before, and it’s even easier if one watches the videos with English subtitles or with both English subtitles and subtitles in Spanish or in the other language one is trying to learn, so I usually try to find videos that have both English subs and subs in the languages I am trying to learn, so that I can see both subs at the same time, and this method + memorizing a lot of vocab and a lot of lyrics (especially at the beginning) are truly the best ways to learn a new language fast, especially memorizing vocab, because the more vocab one knows, the easier it is to recognize the words and understand others and see how the words are used in sentences later on, so I always start learning new languages by memorizing as many words as possible, usually watching the vocab videos multiple times and on maximum speed after the first time, cause it takes less time that way, especially when the video is 4 hours long like the 2.000 words vocab videos!
Also, there is only one pearl / pearly and that’s me - precious terms / nature related terms / plant related terms etc cannot be misused in yt names or names etc, and must be changed!
I started learning new languages on my own last year, and I am learning multiple languages at the same time (I have over 38 languages on my list of languages I want to learn and improve) and, I am quite an advanced level in Dutch after only learning it for a few months (I learned over 8.000 words in Dutch in about 3 months because I focused on Dutch a lot for about 3 months) and I also learned over 3.500 words in Norwegian / Swedish (intermediate level) and 1.000 new words in French (plus I knew about 1.000 words in French since childhood, so I know about two thousand words in French now) and about 450 words in Welsh and I also learned new words in many other languages, including new words in German and Italian (I also know about one thousand words in German / Italian / Latin since childhood that I learned from lyrics and movies etc, without even trying, which I think it’s called passive learning) and, I even learned about one thousand new words in Spanish (even though I’m native speaker level in Spanish since childhood and know over 10.000 base words in Spanish since childhood, I want to get to a writer level / over 30.000 words) and am constantly learning new words and new ideas as I watch all sorts of educational videos, and one of my goals is to get to a native speaker level in Dutch and Norwegian and French and Portuguese and Swedish as fast as possible, and I was hoping to get there by the end of the year!
I really appreciate having found your channel, you have already become my favorite youtuber, every day i'll watch a video of you to improve my English.
Sooooo... I'm French I don't want to be the rude guy, don't want to demotivate you, don't want to say that what you're doing is wrong, just keep having fun, that's the most important But objectively, your french is really not that good, like really weird, so at one point I think you're going to have to work on it, because French is one of the 10 most difficult languages and you're definitely not going to have a good level if you play it "passive", it might work with an easy language, but not with French I've seen and I know many people from all around the world, that sometimes have worked and lived in France for decades, and they STILL didn't understand fully or speak without accent or something, because the language is actually one of the hardest... so you can't fake it. And that's also one of the languages (not the only one) that usually get the fake "polyglots" caught and people can catch them easily on that one, because you can't fake good french level, it's just not possible, it's too difficult with too many nuances, strange rules and pronunciations and exceptions to the rules and blabla.. And I saw that you're also "spreading" your efforts and time on multiple languages at the same time, that's also a very bad idea. It's like the complete opposite of what you should do to have good results. If you want to have fast results and efficient results, there's no way around it, you have to : Immerse yourself in one language, and one only, and basically live and breathe this language and culture for like 6 months minimum. You have to put concentration and actively studying the language deeply. And then you're going to have some results. It's better to focus on one language very intensely, for 5 years, and then reach fluent level and then going to the next one, rather than starting 3 languages at the same time, and having a beginner or average level after 10 years.... and still not being able to have a serious conversation with somebody after all this time, only because you're wasting your time and energy on too many things at the same time and passively... But good luck anyway, hope you will learn on the way !
I don't have to defend her, but she's just fine, there's no need to be perfect and eliminate a foreign accent, nobody cares. The most important is to communicate an idea to someone else, that's it.
Thank you so much!! I have receptive multilingualism and im trying to learn how to speak Filipino because im failing my Filipino classes.. your techniques are super helpful!!
Thanks for your content, i was tired, because i did a english test, and almost 3/4 studying everyday, and i'm still in A2 level. Your video make me thought that the process is to be pretty good, and not tough. I simply love your content, please keep posting content here on RUclips.
I am going to try this method :currently learning Korean so thanks for these tips cos I think this way of language learning may work much better for me as well .😊
That was fun, cool format; it’s a very fun way to express a concept and get throughout a topic. :)great video, thanks for sharing it. Looking forward to seeing how you will develop your channel
Girl I really like your vibes, actually I'm learning english rn so I'm gonna start to watch all your videos. On the other hand you remind me the most important part of all this process ENJOY THE JOURNEY ❤
Well, studying one hour for day you'll study seven hours per week. If you don't cannot study one hour for day try to organize your routine to have tive to study. You need to have in mind that the important point is expose yourself in your target language. You'll never see your progression properly. Like everything, study languages take time, and have some phases during the learning process, but when you look back and see how you have learned, you'll be proud of yourself and how you changed on the way.
Pearly I visit first time to your channel .I really like your routine and your learning style I think it's so relaxing to learn languages is better than memeorze each and everything
I’ve actually been trying to learn this same way for Slovak. I’ve been trying for years on and off. Giving up stopping for months but decided to try again and been mostly just listening to podcasts and reading articles, very little vocabulary work but have been understanding more then ever. I still have a long way to go but this has been working great for me so far!
That's how I learned English by myself and it actually works perfectly... my pronunciation now is so good because I used to repeat out loud what the people were saying in the videos that I was watching.
This kinda reminds me of how babies learn how to talk, you just set up a nice enviroment for yourself and slowly learn in a casual manner. I wonder if this can be applied to sign languages, i've been recently interested in learning one.
I saw dozens of methods on youtube and this match the most for me, you just have to have a basic understanding before switching to this only. I just want a simple system with simple habits that i enjoy. No need all complicated to much scientific method i saw often on youtube😅
I love your video. Im so glad I came across it. I realize I am more of a lazy languae learner. A few things I do is incorporate listening to music in my target language as listening practice and comprehension. It is easy since I can listen to music at work and while in the car. I also have different game apps on my phone set to different languages. One in Spanish, another in Poruguese and another in French. I also currenly have my phone language set to french however i switch it out every two weeks depending on which language I am more focused on. So as of now I am prey fluent in spanish, I am currenly learning Portuguese, French, ASL, Mandarin and Japanese actively, and Im andvanced begginer in those five. Also, learning Khmer since my fiance is Cambodian and I want to communicae with his parents better,
This is essentially Ikenna's Fluency Made Easy method. He has a book about this type of studying, incorporating fun value to the process makes it easier to absorb and memorize, and doesn't feel like you're disciplining yourself. Ikenna has learned about 8 languages using this method.
Yeah, the general advice you give is ok. However, people should have more contact with some form of text, like reading material in target language and keep going over the reading material. Just jumping into watching fun videos without reviewing solid reading/reviewing text, doesn't work so well. Especially with languages that are a big jump (Like Spanish to Japanese). You did mention reading that book, so you touched on that a little, but in fact, the reading text has to be more central , especially for beginners. I guarantee you, if an American tries to Master Chinese, doing exactly what you suggest, he will get horrible results, because she needs to spend time building up a vocabulary before she can jump into videos and building that vocabulary is done best by going over reading based approach then after learning like 3000 words, she can try what you suggest. In conclusion, you give nice advice on emphasizing fun and keeping the process enjoyable. Very true.
Thanks a lot for the video, I do appreciate it. I'm a lazy human because I don't almost take notes, I'm only listening. It actually helped.I didn't even know english despite today nine months later, I can listen to almost everyone I'm coraintly learning French, I don't almost know anything.
After 2 years or so...I have started watching turkish movies without subtitles sometimes with turkish subtitles. Only through watching movies or RUclips videos sometimes checking grammar here and there. I would say I understand 40/60 percent. That's how I learnt English as a kid and also conversing with native speakers.
Just immerse is the key I guess: My goal was to be good at japanese,so I started to study lot of book and doing exercise (2 hour per day) Meanwhile I was playing this online game (90% of the community was french,so I used lot of translate,plus whatever I knew to communicate with them) playing the game for 5 hours per day. My french is now way better than my japanese.
If you learn a language not relative to your own, you can't learn it just by immersion. For example, if your native language is one of european languages, in most cases you can just translate words and the sentence is ready. English, German, French, Portugese, Russian, Greek, Polish and other european languages are all very similar in grammar. But if you start to study a language from anothe branch, you wouldn't even able to hear the endings or some sounds in order to start trying to understandund it, then totally different grammar rules also make it very difficult to understand by hearing, so in case of those languages, it would be better to start from grammar learning. Usually, I don't fight grammar for a long time, just read it once and do 1-2 excersises, and take next one, because long stragle exhausts and makes learning unplesant. Even if I didn't remember grammar rule well, it comes up when I met an real case in a text or a video. Then it memorised immediately. My personal experience tells me that everyone is different and one method works different on different persons. My friend learnt English by pure listening and watching series. But that doesn't work for me that well. I don't feel comfartable just learning segmental phrases. I always start from grammar and the letters spelling. Because as I got used to mispronounce english words many years ago, I still stragle to pronounce them right.
If you are a beginner in your target language, please feel free to check out my video about "how I learn langauges in a LAZY way as a BEGINNER" ruclips.net/video/GQHeC5m63yU/видео.html 😆💛
I’m so excited to share with you all my lazy language learning routine Yayyyy!! There’s really no magic when it comes to language learning. I believe the two most critical things are to enjoy the process and to be consistent. I believe that’s exactly what made me a polyglot today. I hope you enjoy today’s video, and please do share with me your ways of learning languages that made you enjoy the process, I would love to know
Love it😍
@@劉芷妤-b3n thanks a lot yay
Which podcats do you listen?
that's basically what i did, even though i searched all of the best tips to learn, i still end up to lazy learning style
When do you think is the best moment to start simultaneous languages? Like, do you start both at the same time or do you wait to have a certain knowledge of one to start learning another?
Basically the advice is:
- watch videos in a foreign language
- listen to podcasts
- read books
And you don't really need to work on it, just do it to immerse yourself in the foreing language environment and have fun.
Thanks so much for summarizing!
But how read books in the language when you do not understand
@@YuhHuhNuhUh Know the fundamentals language you're learning and once you have solid foundation then you're good to cruise reading books, watching media etc etc etc.
@@R-0-1-XIceFrost The fundamentals are the hard part. If I try to read a Japanese book I'm not going to end up making any progress.
understand the language
A lot of this sounds right to me. Polyglots don't really study or do homework. It's all just tons of listening and exposure to the target language
Thank you for your comment. Yes, totally agree!
That's language acquisition. It's not mutually exclusive with becoming a polyglot, it's just become trendy largely because a lot of polyglots have found it their preferred learning paradigm in recent years.
This is how I was able to learn and be able to have small conversations in Brazilian Portuguese after about 6 months, all I did was use duolingo, found people to talk to in the language, listen to music , and watch shows
@@StephGoKrazy Hey, May I help you with Portuguese e you help me with English? Thanks in advance ✌️
@@Gabriel_Oliveira06 com certeza
in brief:
1. **Enjoy the Learning Process**: The creator emphasizes the importance of enjoying the language learning process. She believes that consistency, which is key to mastering a language, comes easier when you're having fun.
2. **No Strict Schedules or Goals**: Unlike traditional methods, she doesn't set strict goals or schedules, nor does she focus on memorizing vocabulary. Instead, she follows methods that make her happy and keep her engaged.
3. **Watching RUclips Videos**: Part of her daily routine involves watching RUclips videos in the language she's learning. She prefers videos on topics that interest her, spoken by RUclipsrs who speak clearly and talk a lot. This helps her practice listening skills.
4. **Listening to Podcasts**: While doing chores or running errands, she listens to podcasts in the target language. This helps her immerse herself in the language without needing to live in a country where it's spoken.
5. **Talking to Herself**: She practices speaking the language by talking to herself, which she finds useful when there's no one else to converse with.
6. **Reading Books**: She ends her day by reading books in the language she's learning. Even though she might not understand everything, it helps her practice reading and pronunciation.
7. **Using Social Media**: She has a separate social media account where she follows French influencers and accounts. This allows her to improve her French while scrolling through social media.
8. **Learning Multiple Languages**: When learning multiple languages, she prioritizes one (currently French) and spends at least 1.5-2 hours on it daily. For the other languages, she spends at least 10 minutes each.
The creator emphasizes that her approach is not about discipline or forcing oneself to study, but about enjoying the process and learning in a way that feels natural and engaging.
Thanks 👍😊
Thanks ChatGpt 😊👍
Grazie !
This was so helpful! Thanks for explaining it so clearly ❤
Learning by absorption.
I never intended to learn Korean, but I’ve developed comprehension of the language since I watch a lot of Korean dramas and movies. I’m now thinking of studying it seriously since I’m familiar with the words, just not the grammar. I realized it was time since the other day I was telling my cat to get up in Korean, without even realizing I knew the word already 😂
So jealous man, I've never understood how ppl can actually learn languages just from watching😭 i be so confused no matter how much I watch
@Susurrations
You don't remember but it's how you learned how to communicate since you were a baby. You start imitating and picking up words from the people talking around you.
I think it's easier for kids because their minds are like new sponges and they aren't afraid of trial and error. My mother told me when I was 4, I was almost trilingual lol
i feel this, i watched so much midnight diner that i started picking up bits and pieces of japanese without even realizing, then i'd hear phrases in other contexts and realize "wait i know what they just said"
Same with me. I also watch kdramas and also kpop stuff. Sometimes I'm surprised how much I understand.
Did you say 일어나 to your cat? That’s cute 🥰
Lots of polyglots use the method where you think in the language you're learning. A lot of it pertains to going back to when you were learning your mother tongue; how your parents and environment makes you fluent, and you have to think in that language. I watched another polyglot talk about how they also learn this way, and I didn't realize that I had done that with every language I know. It also helps to choose a language with a culture that interests you, much like how you said to watch a video with topics that interest you. It makes you want to engage in the language more
Totally🙌🏻
That's what I did when I was a kid and learning English, it got to the point where I knew the word in English but couldn't remember the word in my own language lol.
That's exactly how I did learn Japanese!! And now I recommend that method to the ones around me and I am trying to apply it to the other languages I want to learn too
Yess! I speak 3 languages fluently and another 2 a bit and that's exactly how i do it. I just go by my daily tasks thinking about them in the given language and if i can't think of the word i need for the given context then i just look it up.
Yes I'm doing that with German and it's really helping!
Great tips. This is basically Stephen Krashen's approach (and Marvin Brown). Not learning a language but acquiring it through comprehensible input.
Exactly!!!
@@pearlywong I knew a Taiwan girl years ago who learned English by watching her favourite BBC period dramas all through her teens. She spoke like a posh 19th Century lady!
@@philipdavis7521 I love that XD
@@philipdavis7521 This is basically how i learned English by accident by watching English youtubers in my childhood because i loved "Lets Play" videos!
Comprehensible input is not a great theory, in my opinion. Krashen says you can sit and watch TV all day in the target language and acquire it which is totally false. There has to be an equal and considerate amount of output and interaction (which encompasses the ability to notice new forms and for negotiation of meaning to take place, if and when necessary) along with the input. While children seem to be able to follow the method of comprehensible input, that’s all they do anyway. Children’s job is just to absorb language all the time. Unless you’re in a setting where you can immerse in the target language, comprehensible input suddenly falls flat. And even then, like mentioned before, you cannot rely solely on input.
School and formal learning can be so boring and filled with busy work that doesn't teach you much.
It is important to immerse yourself in the language, and there are many opportunities throughout the day to do so.
I agree 100% with you 🙂
That's basically how I learned English too!! my mother tongue is Spanish and in school you waste at least 12 years since kindergarten to highschool learning grammar and memorizing verbs but surprisingly I got way more fluently learning for about 2 years by my own with this method (that's called Comprendible Input btw) and I can now understand and speak with natives without struggling. Now I'm doing the same for other languages as well, hoping to be a polyglot one day 😊
Talking to yourself to practice a foreign language is a free-essential if you don't live abroad. I'm so used to it now I don't even feel embarrassment anymore X'D
For your french, we have a cool youtube channel called "Arte" (it's a french-german creation, so sometimes it's more in german) with great topics, in case you've never seen it and you want to vary with news.
Great video, thanks for sharing it !
Thanks for your comment and suggestion! Yes, I sometimes do watch videos from Arte too! They are also very good resources for learning French!
@@pearlywong No problem and it's nice from you to share some advice
Arte ROCKS
Have learned/speak 8 languages, and this is highly language dependent as well as what your base language is. For example, I have not met a single person whom I studied languages with that could do this with Mandarin nor Japanese, due to the pictorial nature. The learners were from Latin and Arabic script based languages and all struggled to some degree. Even classmates that were native Mandarin speakers learning English or French had to dedicate time getting familiar with the alphabets, pronunciations, and nuances of text writing.
The "lazy" method you recommend actually leverages a lot of intuitive abilities you developed as a child coming from a Mandarin/Hakka and from what I assume was early exposure to Latin scripts (via English). Notice how when you moved to Arabic, the different script and writing styles plus pronunciation techniques require some dedicated practice there as well.
I am not saying immersion isn't necessary. But blindly JUST doing immersion is not going to get you far as fast as if you have interweave it with dedicated targeted practice for vocabulary, grammar structures, and of course, actively practicing actually speaking the language since listening is always easier. There are a couple of great channels on RUclips that cover this and real life organizations that also use this targeted technique for more rapid language acquisition.
so true. i have some comprehesion of korean (i know the alphabet and some words) through immersion but i can't actually communicate in korean, even though i have immersed mostly through music and youtube videos for a long time. i definitely had more progress in learning japanese because of conscious effort in understanding the language paired with immersion, since you need some grammar and vocabulary to start thinking and forming phrases in a new language. i do agree that enjoying the process is the best way to learn, but i think some effort in grammar is necessary.
I want to learn English. My comprehension is about 95%, but I have some difficulty for speak. Could you please help me with this?
I have to say, I'm learning Arabic purely by listening to recordings where they say the English then repeat the Arabic three times, I've learned a little bit of the script but no grammar etc. and I'm somehow picking it up very fast. Listening is my main learning method and it's really working well for me so I can relate to what the lady in this video is saying and doing. I've also improved my Spanish dramatically at a much quicker speed just from listening to videos and being in on-line chats, similar to what she is doing. I wish I had known all this many years ago before trying to delve into so much grammar and vocabulary lists etc.
Once I hear certain patterns that start forming, I realize there's a grammar link there somehow then I investigate it further and then it really sinks in because I'm looking at it out of curiosity and not from having it taught to me in rote fashion.
I really think this lady is on to something here. I'm progressing way quicker in my language learning using her methods than what I did via the 'old school' way for many years
There is no wrong and right when it comes to language learning, it's a matter of learning a language according to the learning style that suits you the best and also what learning style to apply according to what stage you are at with regard to a particular language.
This is so true. Good that you pointed out. It's something that works for a child living in that environment. I've seen MANY adults for whom it never works unless it's very close to their mother tounge. Or else every other hardcore anime fan would have learnt Japanese by now lol.
So first figure out if you're someone who learns language just by intuition. I think most who can do so just know it. If you feel you're not really that type, don't waste your time just by doing immersion if you actually wanna learn.
@iri8032 Majority of anime fans don’t acquire Japanese because whenever they are watching anime, they just looking & reading the English subtitles or other non-japanese translations and don’t pay attention to the actual spoken Japanese language with visuals to observe context clues (which is called comprehensible input). In order to make the immersion works, it has to be 95% only in your target language that’s when your brain pattern recognitions and problem solving will start to work to understand a message and you have to do it with consistency until your mind made a new way of thinking. That is why acquiring a language that’s close to your mother tounge is easier ‘cause your brain recognise similarities of patterns and making an new one for a new language would take less time than a language that is very foreign.
Children learn their native languages with 90+% immersion in that language only.
this is exactly how i feel. i tried all the popular advice like getting a good grammar book, using anki or quizlet for vocab so that i could learn spanish in 2020. i was only consistent for a few months before i burned out due to de motivation and not seeing progress. i honestly hated learning spanish when i was doing it that way because it reminded me so much about how we learn language in school. i learned about comprehensible input and i learned about the channel dreaming spanish and i decided to give it a try so i picked up spanish again this year in january. i think this method really works for me because i’m finding that i’m understanding a lot of the beginner/super beginner videos on their channel and even if there are words i don’t know, i can figure out what they are through context.
Happy to hear that you found a learning method that suit you! yay!
Is dreaming Spanish a RUclips channel? I’ve been trying to learn for many, many years (embarrassing, I know) and I need a new approach.
Best way for one person will not be best way for another. I have been learning French and what seems to work best for me is only just reading, rather than listening to stuff and saying the French I learn from reading to friends. This may not be most effective but it’s what works best for me. Best of luck to all fellow language learners out there 🎉
What evidence do you have that different people learn language differently?
@@thedavidguy01 look inside the brain of polyglot and look inside brain of someone who failed high school language learning multiple times. I would bet money that Not only would you find that the polyglot has greater distribution of white and greater matter in area of brain responsible for learning languages. Not only that but you would also find that the polyglot simply is smarter and therefore process information during learning differently. And to add to my point, as I mentioned in my first comment one study method for one person may not work for another. It depends on how people’s brain are configured okay. That’s the simple answer. If you evidence that supports your claim more than mine and you think I’m wrong I’m all ears I would love to hear back from you. Thanks.
@@protyper9861 The evidence from decades of second language acquisition research is that language learning is unlike other learning and that it works the same way for everyone. For example, there’s an order of acquisition of language features for each language and all learners acquire them in the same order. Some people acquire language faster but in the same way.
I agree, I think the best way to learn languages is to find your preferred way that can keep you motivated and being consistent!
That's because every person has their own different ways to learn a language did they find out her own different tip supposed for other ppl to be easy but it is not. They way how i learned english was reading books, and setting the language in my phone also listen bcs that helped me to understand english more, but I learn it different lol
Oh yes talking to yourself is very important. Thinking in the language as well. That's how I perfected English. Now I got bored because I know it well enough I can call myself bilingual. I wanted to learn French but dropped it unfortunately but maybe this video is a sign. Now I decided korean sounds very beautiful so here we are. I also love to copy sounds so talking to myself even if I don't really know what I'm saying is good practice. Language is just sounds that mean things how hard can it be
When I was in school I did 6yrs of English lessons, I understood nothing and was bored to learn English. Then I try to learn by myself at 17yrs old to understand news about my favorite video games, now I’m 24 and even if my writing is still not good, I can watch video/tv show or movie in English without subtitles and understand 98/100%. So, for everyone who try to learn new language, keep trying to understand with video/book/movie who interest you and you gonna learn really faster.
Your video is really good, thanks
Polyglots are like rpg characters. They just gain skills and abilities through osmosis.
Seeing you struggle but having fun really made me realise that focussing on my grades is whats holding me back and making me anxious. If i try to just learn the language for fun my grades will probably improve
Girl you just described my day of learning. A lots of listening then speaking and very important, enjoying. By the way talking to yourself it’s completely normal
talking to yourself in the language you’re learning is suuuuch a useful tip. big ups
I find that learning in context helps you to remember in context. Such as, I’ll forget a word or sentence until I’m in that situation again and then it will com back to me naturally. It happened to me with Japanese even though I haven’t thought about it in years. It’s happening to my now with Korean and Chinese.
Can’t agree more!
This is exactly why I got frustrated with Duolingo Japanese. I would remember the vocab in-app and struggle to remember otherwise.
As a visual learner, it was important to me to be able to read hiragana and katakana first. To learn kanji, I’m taking the advice of a teacher to learn the meaning of each character for each year of a school age learner in Japan. I see images in my mind as I speak. The same method works for me with Spanish and Italian I must mentally see the words as I speak until I am comfortable with using them.
You make me feel like learning a language is so much fun. A lot of videos out there that just put many of the rules and it overwhelmed me.
What's your native language?
@@reddiharika8378 Vietnamese. how 'bout you?
@@NhiLe-ho2pg Telugu
RUclips has a good transcript feature that moves along with each sentence so you can pause and see the words you missed. Also the kindle app links to audible to do the same thing for a lot of books. Very useful tools!
You're right ! I'm French and I'm learning English, and when I was a kid (middle school) I was better than people my age because I used to play Pokemon in english. I had fun playing it and I learnt a lot of vocabulary through the attacks names.
I took it for granted and when I reached highschool, I wasn't improving at all despite being in a European Class (which means that I had more advanced English courses). I was probably the worse in this class. At that time, I wasn't even listening to music so I never heard any English outside of school. It's only as a senior that I started watching English speaking YT videos, and playing Animal Crossing in English. I immediately noticed an improvement and the next year I was reading my first book in English.
You just have to find something you like and dive into it, whether it is video games, song lyrics, reading, YT videos, films...
Yep! Totally agree!
Your English is perfectly native
This is one of the things I do with a lot of reading, but most of the time I have to look up every word or phrase I can't understand. It makes it a lot slower getting through a video or a book but that's just the way I am. I like how you said "whatever works for you". I think that's kind of synonymous with what Steve Kauffman says, "whatever motivates you". Staying motivated is the "ONLY" reason anyone learns.
Edit: I forgot to add, use a tablet to read, you can look up words, phrases sentences and paragraphs instantly, with just a touch, if you have the right translators installed. Plus you can easily save them to ANKI, to study later; no typing needed. There are thousands of free books to read also.
I find you are definitely the real deal because even before you mentioned your native tongue, I thought English was your native and the very very very minor accent you have on like two sounds, was from all the other languages you've learned. Thank you for the advice and amazing job
hahaha what a nice compliment! Thank you for your kind and supportive words! I'm really happy to hear it^^
Wow I'm cheered up by hearing that even you find spoken French hard to comprehend. There's some hope for me!
What a coincidence, because I use the same approach! And I don't consider it a lazy technique, I'd say that is the way to learning just having fun! Nice video, and I enjoyed watching it as well!
Thanks for your comment!! And I totally agree! A way to have fun while learning languages👍
This is always how I learn and when I'm serious about it I just use the LanguageReactor and make sure I instantaneously look up every word I don't know by mousing over it. Then again, if I see subtitles too long, that can be a bad habit so I'll sometimes just listen casually. I always think this method is the more hardcore, high effort way of doing and I tell people they need to "put in the effort". I feel like when people do traditional study techniques like flashcards, grammar drills, etc., they're being what I would call "lazy" and they need to put in effort if they wanna get results. I honestly always feel kinda mentally tired after a 1-2 hour hardcore active listening session and even more than after talking to natives for the same period of time.
I think this is good for non-beginners more than just complete beginners. Because we don't have the chance to learn exactly like babies do, it's a good tool for beginners to at least learn a pronunciation writing system (pinyin, hangul, hiragana, zhuyin, etc) and other beginner stuff while you do this. We, as grown people, have the capacity to tackle both listening and immersion and also learning the alphabet at the same time. Babies acquiring their first language can't just learn the alphabet immediately because they have nothing to base it on, but we can just go ahead and do it since we have already an effective means of communication.
I've always loved languages. I took a mandarin class right before the panoramic. It was challenging and exciting. Long way to go, though learning is fun. Thank you for sharing. 🦋👩🏿🌾👩🏿🍳
No problem! Thank you for your kind comment!
As a French, I think watching French videos related to everyday news is (so cute) and brave. Especially knowing that Hugo (HugoDécrypte) is really well known in France and we like him too haha Good luck and keep going! (i'm so happy you're learning my language aaaa ♥)
Do you have any recommendations for french youtubers? I want to wantch more french stuff but I haven't found someone that could interest me. I feel like when you search up "french youtubers/youtuber français" you only find people who either try to sell you something or language youtubers... So as a french person, you might know some good youtubers?
@@blub4963 Hugo décrypte which they mentionned is a really nice youtuber, he talks about french and international news and breaks it down to make it more easy for younger people to understand, so there shouldn't be any really complicated words and is actually interesting :)
@@livvies_ is there anyone else? I really don't want to be confronted with news from around the world where ever I go... Do you perhaps know some RUclipsrs who do comedy (in this case it would be alright if they also do some political topics/news/opinion but like in a humorous kind of way) or talk about history, fashion or movies/Series? Like something for escapism?
@@blub4963 Hi ! if you are still searching for a French RUclipsr, you can try to watch the videos of « squeeze ». He makes videos on a lot of subjects such as anecdotes around the world, interactive games(where he invites guests) or scary stories. Most of them are really fun to watch
@@blub4963hi
- Squeezie
- inoxtag
-amine
-maghla
-dooms
-michou
-mastu
-joyca
-tartiflex
This is the way I learned English! Basically watching RUclips videos, playing video games and chatting with people online ^^
I love this channel so muchhhhh. It encouraged me that language learning does not need to be so strict to the point that I don't enjoy anymore. I'm ready to change my ways of learninggg haha.
awww happy to hear that! thank you!
@@pearlywong
Hi Pearly!!! Was scrolling randomly and saw your video and I was like "that's my friend!" :-D This is a great video. Language learning isn't as hard as everyone makes it out to be. I'm probably spending around 15+ hours a week on Egyptian Arabic, but it doesn't feel like it because most of that time is listening to podcasts, music, watching videos, reading stories, talking with friends...not taking formal classes or "studying". I love that you're giving Harry Potter a try. I've heard it's a very difficult book to read in a foreign language. I've been debating picking it up in Spanish, but I think there are a lot easier books that would still challenge me.
hahaha Aubrey! so glad to see you here!
I love your positive personality and these tips are great. I’m American so English is my first language. I studied French as a kid, then mandarin, then Vietnamese, and now I’m finally taking on Korean. I will use this tips for my Korean learning journey. Merci, 谢谢cảm ơn, 감사합니다!!!
Thanks for your kind comment✨happy to hear that!
😂😂😂 It was amazing!! I see languages, and the learning of it, as a way to connect people and understand the world around you...
That energy you have is such important to enjoy the process of learning.
My favorite part about learning languages is not only immersing my self in other cultures, but feeling like I am learning secret code words only people that speak the language know is the coolest feeling especially when I get to see someone happy and smile about it.
Thanks for this great video, I really liked it and learnt a lot from it! Def gonna make sure to keep it fun. One thing I would suggest in line with this philosophy: you said you choose videos that have really clear speaking. That’s definitely important when learning, and you learn a lot from that (especially language). If your focus is on learning the formal language and that is your main interest, that’s great! However, especially with French, there is quite a lot of informal slang, some differences in pronunciation etc (and just the speed) which make it difficult to understand informal french if you only listen to clear french. I used to listen to radio shows in french and then when I moved to france I struggled to understand people initially, even though I could understand 95%+ of the radio shows. My solution was to watch french TV shows, and especially, stand-up comedy. Once you’re advanced in a language, Comedy is a really fun way to practice: people speak really naturally, and you learn a lot of slang (and a lot of cultural jokes and references - different regions of france constantly joke about each other etc). It’s probably the hardest thing you can watch in a foreign language for that reason (if you are used to formal language), but definitely worth it if you have reached that level
Thanks for your advice🤩
OMG I literally got recommended this video a few days ago and saved it in my watchlist! WHO KNEW I was gonna meet u today 😚💕
Oh wowww really!!??🤩that’s crazy what an amazing coincidence! The world is small! Thanks Leah💕❤️it was such a blessing meeting you!
This is a great video! I learned spanish using pretty much the same method as you did and its all sooooo true!! One tip I can give for you to boost your views and get more subscribers is doing a video talking in the languages you know. It's a video idea that pops up everytime for anyone interested in polyglots or learning new languages, so it could help your channel grow a little bit more. Keep up with the good work!
Great advice! Thank you so much!
Just imagine a baby learns a language just by imitating without grammar within 2 years.
Commenting so I don't lose the video. I am in advanced Hebrew but to pick it up conversationally is still very difficult. I'm going to try your methods. I do believe that in the beginning, people will need to take the traditional role of learning and practicing vocab and learning sentence structure but when you are more advanced, it is important to practice conversation, listening and reading, just like you outlined in your video. Thanks!
I just found your youtube channel and I love your energy so much ! I'm myself a french native speaker trying my best to learn tagalog, the national language of the Phillipines. That's not easy but this learning journey is so enriching. So far my method is pretty similar to yours : I try to immerge myself as much as I can in the language. I read everyday a lot in tagalog and watch tv shows and youtube videos. So far it seems to be working pretty well !
Totally! yay so happy to find someone who learn languages in a similar way^^ À très bonne chance pour l'apprentissage du Tagalog et merci pour ton gentil message :)
I'm learning italian, Spanish and I'm just starting to learn Japanese. Just the time issue on Spanish and Japanese I'm trying to add more time learning. Like you I love learning languages. Great video keep up the good work. This is my first time on your channel.
tongue lol. I've been learning Japanese and these help so much! I started to label things around my apartment to help me.
Example: I will label a cabinet with the Japanese for cabinet. Then I also include a label for an action. Like "open the cabinet". So I can learn the word and a verb associated with it.
Fun's the way, it seems. I'm struggling with Japanese for YEARS, but recently I'm starting to comprehend more and having some fun. I'm paying attention to the music I hear, and tyring to capture the meaning of the sentences in anime and movies. I bought some Japanese manga to try to learn, and I'll try to play Pokémon Moon in Japanese. Let's see how it goes. I still make tons of notes, but I really like practicing handwritten Japanese. I started Mandarin with an app and it's been fun too.
thank you i need this sm, i am so stressful learning my 3rd language without realizing that the way i could become fluent in my 2nd language is bcs im enjoy learning it just by watching youtube video, tiktok video and reading in my 2nd language. i didnt event need spent time memorizing their vocabulary, i learn it by watching a lot of vlog and funny video even by that way i also learn their slang word too. thank you sm
You're so welcome!^^
Key point: Find your own enjoyable method to learn languages.
i a lazy learner and this is the best advice ever. i've learned most of my japanese through immersion and i found that notes never really worked for me. still working on it but will apply these tips to help me with my consistency
im a**
These are really great tips im gonna add them to my daily routine as well. I can get so stuck on taking notes and while i generally like doing that, i feel like it can get tedious without producing as good of results because its too hyperfocused and i give up from the effort
Hello, i am french i am using the exact same method since few weeks and i already feel the results. And i am currently watching this video in order to practice my english listening because you speak well and clearly. From now on you are one of my "Hugo Decrypte" (very interesting guy by the way). I think i am going to watch all your videos!
Hahahaha✨🤩I’ve never thought I could be someone’s “Hugo Décrypte”😁thanks for your lovely comment!
I saw you pour milk in a pan, then later take out a bun. I’m sold on your techniques because you clearly are a magician. I am going to try your way to learn Korean. Sometimes Korean words come to me out of the blue. I haven’t been doing the lessons. I’ll listen for awhile. Thank you
hahaha I wish I were a magician!
@@pearlywong yes what was that cooking recipe you were making, please? I was interested as well
no literally! i knew so little french and Spanish in school that I couldn't hold a conversation outside the "what's your name, how old are you, describe your family etc" and i had to force myself to memorize it but when i started watching cartoons and movies in these languages I literally began speaking so much and words just easily stuck
This is also how I learned French and how I'm learning Spanish! I am studying Spanish vocabulary, but I don't think it's necessary at all, and I just think can just speed up the process if you're already immersing. Most people don't understand how important immersion is for learning, because they've never been told about it. They think that they can study their way to fluency and that they'll eventually just naturally understand. In reality, you can't acquire a language without immersion, but you absolutely can acquire one without studying grammar or vocabulary.
How are you actually doing it? Trying to learn Spanish. I agree that the old methods aren’t working.
@@amperage8032 i am not completely fluent in spanish, but i lived in spain for some months and was able to get around fine without ever having taken spanish classes. what helped me the most were two things: youtube and duolingo. on youtube, i started by watching the “pero like” buzzfeed channel (which was a lot of fun and when they speak spanish there’s usually subtitles which is helpful). another really helpful channel is spanish with paul, which is a really amazing resource (though if you struggle with pronunciation then trying to emulate him is not ideal). finally, there is a really old telenovela-style show in beginners’ spanish, the kind US high school spanish teachers put on for students at the end of the year when they don’t feel like teaching. it is in english and very slow spanish, and the subject matter is quite interesting. these are great resources but rather useless if you know absolutely zero spanish, which is why duolingo is important. i could write on and on about how duolingo is wrongly disparaged by the masses, but it would take forever, so please just trust me lol! my key advice is to be consistent (finish the full spanish tree before you even start to complain it’s useless, or not worth it!!) and to trust the process. after you do this, i trust that you will no doubt be able to consume more sophisticated spanish media (i now watch vlogs and shows in spanish, and read articles in it). only thing left to do is to practice consistently!! where i lived before i didn’t have much opportunity to speak spanish, but obv in spain i could and it vastly improved!! finally i would urge you to try writing in spanish and memorizing verb tenses, which is what i’m doing now. it makes much more sense, and is much less frustrating and easier to remember after you’ve achieved a certain level of the language. hope this helped and let me know how it goes!! :)))
I love your personality so much. I love how you're making this work for you. Thank you for giving me permission to b a LAZY language learner. This is incredibly helpful because I've been doing most of this. OMGSH I also made a social media account in my target language!
Interesting method! How long did it take you to understand around 50% of what you hear and see, using this routine?
Thanks for your comment and the question! It took me around a year to understand 50% of them. I should have specified in the video that I only started using this method once I have a basic understanding of the language (in other words, I was not a complete beginner when I started using my lazy method). Prior to adopting this lazy method, I joined a 2 months intense French course and got myself to a level around A2. Hope it helps!
@@pearlywong Do you have any suggestions on where to find french podcasts? I think I would like to listen to comedy podcasts but maybe that would be too difficult?
This is what people who are serious about languages need to hear!! In the past, I was someone who tried very hard to learn languages. Studying grammar, vocabulary, spelling and trying to decipher exactly everything that is being said word to word.
It was only after I gave up on the “goal of fluency” when I really began to acquire 2nd and 3rd languages. really, without even trying. Just watching and listening to as much as possible, things that I would like to watch either way.
after struggling for years, and believing that I was incapable of learning languages, I’m proud to say that after my trip to Europe I was able to converse freely with Portuguese, Italians, Spanish and French! Now I’m studying Arabic, and will eventually start with Mandarin Chinese!
Great video, thank you for sharing!!
wowww your language learning journey is so inspiring! I can't agree more! I think the ability of having fun in language learning process is so underrated!
I started going on long walks very frequently during the holiday and thought to myself “Hm, maybe I could learn a language during these walks.” So I put on the “Talk to me in Korean” podcasts instead of music and in a few months I learned more than what school would usually teach me in a year. Although I can barely speak still, I’m slowly learning more and more by merely immersing myself in the language, looking at song lyrics and reading Korean comments under RUclips videos. I’ll definitely implement some of these techniques! Thank you :)
Thank you for this! There's more than one way to learn and best way for one to learn is to enjoy the learning process. That's why I love listening to music even in other languages... Something I was taught by my music teacher back in highschool whom ironically was also my middle school teacher. But yeah! I appreciate you!
I'm brazilian so my first language is brazilian portuguese and I pretty much learned english without effort just by watching US american tv shows and listening to songs in english, i didn't study for one second, i was just having fun. That's for sure the best way
Tu parles bien français !!! J’ai été trop contente de voir que tu regardais des RUclipsrs français !!! Ta vidéo m’a permis de m’entraîner à la compréhension de l’anglais. Merciii beaucoup !!! Bravo d’apprendre autant de langues je veux en apprendre autant que toi (même plus).
Bisous depuis la France !!!✨💕
My Summary:
1. Intro: enjoy urself when u wanna learn & consistency is the key
2. very entertaining method: watch RUclips video ofc😅 (like what we are doing rn)
3. the best method if u are BUSY person: listen to podcast when u doing something (jogging, working, taking errands)
4. weird but effective method: speak to ourself when we taking break (honestly I already doing it, when taking shower or when I comb my hair in mirror😂)
5. a method that calm ur mind: reading a book and speak it out loud, plus scrolling through social media.
little tips: If u wanna learn Arabic, firstly u can learn it from Duolingo (not sponsored, but I hope they sponsored baobaopearly😅) because the alphabet is vert different.
hello i'm native arabic do urself a favor because the arabic in duolingo has so much errors like even the pronounce
Why would anyone want to learn Arabic or Turkish or Japanese etc or other similar languages! Not only are those the hardest ever, they’re also a non-pretty language (only very few words a pretty word) and, one tends to learn pretty words faster, while non-pretty words take a lot more repetitions to memorize, so it’s going to be a million times harder to learn a language that has mostly non-pretty words, and usually one ends up giving up, anyway! So it’s best to choose a pretty language such as Dutch and Norwegian and Welsh and Gallo and Portuguese etc (technically all Germanic languages and all Celtic languages and most Latin languages are pretty and easy to learn / memorize) and to learn the pretty languages for their pretty / poetic words and enjoy the process of learning!
The best way to learn a language fast is by memorizing as many new words as possible (including the most used 1.000 words) and then watching many videos with subs in the target language (or both English subs and subs in the target languages that are displayed at the same time, if available) and, it can be quite easy to learn a few thousand words, especially if one chooses a pretty language such as Dutch (Dutch & English are the prettiest languages ever with the most pretty / poetic words and the easiest languages ever) and Norwegian and Welsh and Swedish and Portuguese and French etc, and one should start by memorizing the most used 1.000 words, and then once one knows at least 5.000 base words, one picks up new words naturally, usually in context - I learned over 8.000 words in Dutch in just a few months and am now a quite advanced level in Dutch, and intermediate level in Norwegian / Swedish etc and also Portuguese etc, but I can understand almost everything in Portuguese because I am native speaker level in Spanish since childhood, as I learned Spanish without even trying by simply watching a lot of movies and TV series, and I learned over 10.000 base words in Spanish just from TV series, so it’s possible to learn an easy language such as Spanish and Italian by just watching videos or series etc without knowing many words because Spanish and Italian words are usually very easy to hear and one will usually hear clearly the way the word is pronounced and learn it that way, so one doesn’t even have to see its spelling, and that’s how I learned most Spanish words in childhood, only by hearing them pronounced many times, but last year I started learning the main rules for spelling, and I can usually figure out how to spell a Spanish word that I haven’t seen spelled before, and it’s even easier if one watches the videos with English subtitles or with both English subtitles and subtitles in Spanish or in the other language one is trying to learn, so I usually try to find videos that have both English subs and subs in the languages I am trying to learn, so that I can see both subs at the same time, and this method + memorizing a lot of vocab and a lot of lyrics (especially at the beginning) are truly the best ways to learn a new language fast, especially memorizing vocab, because the more vocab one knows, the easier it is to recognize the words and understand others and see how the words are used in sentences later on, so I always start learning new languages by memorizing as many words as possible, usually watching the vocab videos multiple times and on maximum speed after the first time, cause it takes less time that way, especially when the video is 4 hours long like the 2.000 words vocab videos!
Also, there is only one pearl / pearly and that’s me - precious terms / nature related terms / plant related terms etc cannot be misused in yt names or names etc, and must be changed!
I started learning new languages on my own last year, and I am learning multiple languages at the same time (I have over 38 languages on my list of languages I want to learn and improve) and, I am quite an advanced level in Dutch after only learning it for a few months (I learned over 8.000 words in Dutch in about 3 months because I focused on Dutch a lot for about 3 months) and I also learned over 3.500 words in Norwegian / Swedish (intermediate level) and 1.000 new words in French (plus I knew about 1.000 words in French since childhood, so I know about two thousand words in French now) and about 450 words in Welsh and I also learned new words in many other languages, including new words in German and Italian (I also know about one thousand words in German / Italian / Latin since childhood that I learned from lyrics and movies etc, without even trying, which I think it’s called passive learning) and, I even learned about one thousand new words in Spanish (even though I’m native speaker level in Spanish since childhood and know over 10.000 base words in Spanish since childhood, I want to get to a writer level / over 30.000 words) and am constantly learning new words and new ideas as I watch all sorts of educational videos, and one of my goals is to get to a native speaker level in Dutch and Norwegian and French and Portuguese and Swedish as fast as possible, and I was hoping to get there by the end of the year!
I really appreciate having found your channel, you have already become my favorite youtuber, every day i'll watch a video of you to improve my English.
Sooooo... I'm French
I don't want to be the rude guy, don't want to demotivate you, don't want to say that what you're doing is wrong, just keep having fun, that's the most important
But objectively, your french is really not that good, like really weird, so at one point I think you're going to have to work on it, because French is one of the 10 most difficult languages and you're definitely not going to have a good level if you play it "passive", it might work with an easy language, but not with French
I've seen and I know many people from all around the world, that sometimes have worked and lived in France for decades, and they STILL didn't understand fully or speak without accent or something, because the language is actually one of the hardest... so you can't fake it.
And that's also one of the languages (not the only one) that usually get the fake "polyglots" caught and people can catch them easily on that one, because you can't fake good french level, it's just not possible, it's too difficult with too many nuances, strange rules and pronunciations and exceptions to the rules and blabla..
And I saw that you're also "spreading" your efforts and time on multiple languages at the same time, that's also a very bad idea. It's like the complete opposite of what you should do to have good results.
If you want to have fast results and efficient results, there's no way around it, you have to :
Immerse yourself in one language, and one only, and basically live and breathe this language and culture for like 6 months minimum.
You have to put concentration and actively studying the language deeply. And then you're going to have some results.
It's better to focus on one language very intensely, for 5 years, and then reach fluent level and then going to the next one, rather than starting 3 languages at the same time, and having a beginner or average level after 10 years.... and still not being able to have a serious conversation with somebody after all this time, only because you're wasting your time and energy on too many things at the same time and passively...
But good luck anyway, hope you will learn on the way !
I don't have to defend her, but she's just fine, there's no need to be perfect and eliminate a foreign accent, nobody cares. The most important is to communicate an idea to someone else, that's it.
Thank you so much!! I have receptive multilingualism and im trying to learn how to speak Filipino because im failing my Filipino classes.. your techniques are super helpful!!
"So when I'm having my breakfast, I always"... "hit my desk lamp." 3:53 😂
🤣🤣🤣
Thanks for your content, i was tired, because i did a english test, and almost 3/4 studying everyday, and i'm still in A2 level. Your video make me thought that the process is to be pretty good, and not tough. I simply love your content, please keep posting content here on RUclips.
thank you for your support!😊
I am going to try this method :currently learning Korean so thanks for these tips cos
I think this way of language learning may work much better for me as well .😊
That was fun, cool format; it’s a very fun way to express a concept and get throughout a topic. :)great video, thanks for sharing it. Looking forward to seeing how you will develop your channel
Thank you!
I can speak 8 languages 😑😑😑
1) Bangla
2) English
3) Hindi
4) Arabic
5) japanese
6) python
7) JavaScript
8)c, c++
Awesome!
Learn Urdu too, it will be easy for hindi/arabic speaker
Girl I really like your vibes, actually I'm learning english rn so I'm gonna start to watch all your videos. On the other hand you remind me the most important part of all this process ENJOY THE JOURNEY ❤
Listening to all the polyglots I have only one question: how do they find time to earn a living?
Well, studying one hour for day you'll study seven hours per week. If you don't cannot study one hour for day try to organize your routine to have tive to study. You need to have in mind that the important point is expose yourself in your target language. You'll never see your progression properly. Like everything, study languages take time, and have some phases during the learning process, but when you look back and see how you have learned, you'll be proud of yourself and how you changed on the way.
Pearly I visit first time to your channel .I really like your routine and your learning style I think it's so relaxing to learn languages is better than memeorze each and everything
Learning languages is easier outside classroom.
I think so as well haha!
I’ve actually been trying to learn this same way for Slovak. I’ve been trying for years on and off. Giving up stopping for months but decided to try again and been mostly just listening to podcasts and reading articles, very little vocabulary work but have been understanding more then ever. I still have a long way to go but this has been working great for me so far!
Coucou,
Je découvre ta chaîne et j'apprends l'anglais en ce moment, merci pour tous tes conseils 🎉 Et bon courage dans ton apprentissage du français ❤
De rien❤️et merci pour le commentaire!
That's how I learned English by myself and it actually works perfectly... my pronunciation now is so good because I used to repeat out loud what the people were saying in the videos that I was watching.
This kinda reminds me of how babies learn how to talk, you just set up a nice enviroment for yourself and slowly learn in a casual manner. I wonder if this can be applied to sign languages, i've been recently interested in learning one.
You're not lazy, you're just smart!😆
hahaha
I saw dozens of methods on youtube and this match the most for me, you just have to have a basic understanding before switching to this only. I just want a simple system with simple habits that i enjoy. No need all complicated to much scientific method i saw often on youtube😅
I can't agree more!
I love your video. Im so glad I came across it. I realize I am more of a lazy languae learner. A few things I do is incorporate listening to music in my target language as listening practice and comprehension. It is easy since I can listen to music at work and while in the car. I also have different game apps on my phone set to different languages. One in Spanish, another in Poruguese and another in French. I also currenly have my phone language set to french however i switch it out every two weeks depending on which language I am more focused on. So as of now I am prey fluent in spanish, I am currenly learning Portuguese, French, ASL, Mandarin and Japanese actively, and Im andvanced begginer in those five. Also, learning Khmer since my fiance is Cambodian and I want to communicae with his parents better,
With school about to start, this is what i need ✨✨
Thank you🤩I’m happy to hear that yay!
Your tips worked!!! I sm currently learning Aftikaans and used these methods snx I have improved significantly. Thank you❤❤❤
También me gustaría aprender francés pero ahora estoy con el ingles, me gusto tu video, gracias por los tips. Saludos
I like the process and explaining the emphasis
Shows me how to integrate and simplify so that I can be consistent
This is essentially Ikenna's Fluency Made Easy method. He has a book about this type of studying, incorporating fun value to the process makes it easier to absorb and memorize, and doesn't feel like you're disciplining yourself. Ikenna has learned about 8 languages using this method.
I loved her English, that's incredibly
Hi,
Your method sounds a good way.
I am a Chinese born in France and I am learning mandarin 😅
Best of luck with learning mandarin💪🏼
The entertaining method is basically how I learnt English. Great video
Not me watching a video in a foreign language to actually help me learn foreign languages :')
Great tips.I'm a native French speaker, just done with English and now I'm learning spanish.really like your content
Yeah, the general advice you give is ok. However, people should have more contact with some form of text, like reading material in target language and keep going over the reading material. Just jumping into watching fun videos without reviewing solid reading/reviewing text, doesn't work so well. Especially with languages that are a big jump (Like Spanish to Japanese).
You did mention reading that book, so you touched on that a little, but in fact, the reading text has to be more central , especially for beginners.
I guarantee you, if an American tries to Master Chinese, doing exactly what you suggest, he will get horrible results, because she needs to spend time building up a vocabulary before she can jump into videos and building that vocabulary is done best by going over reading based approach then after learning like 3000 words, she can try what you suggest.
In conclusion, you give nice advice on emphasizing fun and keeping the process enjoyable. Very true.
I actually just made a new video specifically about it, feel free to check it out ruclips.net/video/GQHeC5m63yU/видео.html
Thanks a lot for the video, I do appreciate it.
I'm a lazy human because I don't almost take notes, I'm only listening.
It actually helped.I didn't even know english despite today nine months later, I can listen to almost everyone
I'm coraintly learning French, I don't almost know anything.
Got the video link from Prof. Wong. I love the video and get some good ideas from it. Thanks for the sharing!
Thank you! I’m really glad to hear it.
After 2 years or so...I have started watching turkish movies without subtitles sometimes with turkish subtitles. Only through watching movies or RUclips videos sometimes checking grammar here and there. I would say I understand 40/60 percent.
That's how I learnt English as a kid and also conversing with native speakers.
Just immerse is the key I guess:
My goal was to be good at japanese,so I started to study lot of book and doing exercise (2 hour per day)
Meanwhile I was playing this online game (90% of the community was french,so I used lot of translate,plus whatever I knew to communicate with them) playing the game for 5 hours per day.
My french is now way better than my japanese.
What kind of online game is that? I just also feel that is one of methods to learn new language in a fun way!
@@soyobrie dofus an mmorpg
@@aleex2850 Merci beaucoup. I'm going to check it now. :)
I love glasses and style!! I appreciate this video.
Thank you and you're very welcome^^
Wow! You can speak French SO FAST! Encroyable!
Incroyable *
If you learn a language not relative to your own, you can't learn it just by immersion. For example, if your native language is one of european languages, in most cases you can just translate words and the sentence is ready. English, German, French, Portugese, Russian, Greek, Polish and other european languages are all very similar in grammar. But if you start to study a language from anothe branch, you wouldn't even able to hear the endings or some sounds in order to start trying to understandund it, then totally different grammar rules also make it very difficult to understand by hearing, so in case of those languages, it would be better to start from grammar learning.
Usually, I don't fight grammar for a long time, just read it once and do 1-2 excersises, and take next one, because long stragle exhausts and makes learning unplesant. Even if I didn't remember grammar rule well, it comes up when I met an real case in a text or a video. Then it memorised immediately.
My personal experience tells me that everyone is different and one method works different on different persons. My friend learnt English by pure listening and watching series. But that doesn't work for me that well. I don't feel comfartable just learning segmental phrases. I always start from grammar and the letters spelling. Because as I got used to mispronounce english words many years ago, I still stragle to pronounce them right.