10 mistakes I made with my first foreign language

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Days and Words

Days and Words

Күн бұрын

Here are 10 mistakes that I made when I first studied a foreign language, and what YOU can do to avoid them. By avoiding some of the most common mistakes that people make when starting to learn a language, you can shave months or even years off reaching your goals in your target language.
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Wow, you actually made it to the end of the description. I guess you want to know more. Well, the behind the scenes for this video is that it was the last of SEVEN videos that I recorded that day (three four this channel and four for the other), so that's why I might not seem as energentic as I am in in most videos, and why I didn't bother retaking when I say "poly'g'h'rots" and stuff. On the bright side, it was the first time I had ever successfully filmed 7 videos in one day.

Пікірлер: 535
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
What mistake did you make with your first foreign language (can be one of these or anything else!)
@skamiikaze
@skamiikaze 3 жыл бұрын
Trying to learn too many languages at once. I tried to learn Russian at the same time as Polish. I got really confused doing both at the time and it kinda hurt my learning. I ended up putting Russian on the back burner for later since I came to my senses and realised that it was too much all at once
@sussysapling5984
@sussysapling5984 3 жыл бұрын
My first mistakes was bragging about learning Japanese when I only at the beginning and not being humble enough when learning. Learning languages takes time and dedications, wish to you all reaches fluency in the language that you have chosen
@ariane4099
@ariane4099 3 жыл бұрын
My three mistakes were; thinking its easy, telling everyone, and not using my time correctly. I don’t regret these and I will never regret them because now I’m learning Korean, and I avoided these mistakes and it’s wayyy easier. To anyone reading this, keep your language learning a secret, if you tell your family/friends they will only put you down.
@HaIsKuL
@HaIsKuL 3 жыл бұрын
Volume over rigour. Wanting to do more vocab and more lessons instead of fully understanding and integrating it to your speech.
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
yikes - I think that depends on your friends and family. My friends and family have basically never put me down for learning Swedish or French, or any other skill. But yes if people are going to put you down or make fun of you, then keep it a secret from those people, sure.
@JohnnyUtah488
@JohnnyUtah488 3 жыл бұрын
My #1 mistake: Watching videos _about_ language learning instead of actually studying!
@darthwatson8274
@darthwatson8274 3 жыл бұрын
“That would be a waste of time”
@halaabduljawad4949
@halaabduljawad4949 3 жыл бұрын
I'm just gonna gooooooo😳
@untilisee
@untilisee 3 жыл бұрын
This is not a mistake if you learing English =)
@writerspen010
@writerspen010 3 жыл бұрын
I feel so called out xD
@haicautrang5304
@haicautrang5304 2 жыл бұрын
I feel called out
@yairk984
@yairk984 3 жыл бұрын
"I was always a morning person. I just wasn't awake to experience that" that is pure gold, mate!
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
It is a joke but honestly it's true. If you stay up until 3am then you can't be a morning person even if on the inside, you are. That was me.
@anarki777
@anarki777 3 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords - I'm awake. It's 9:30am. I'm not a morning person.
@hopefillledday9026
@hopefillledday9026 3 жыл бұрын
@@anarki777 same, I was up at 7am and honestly I'm so tired and want to go back to bed. But I get the logic of getting stuff done asap, just need to get going!
@anarki777
@anarki777 3 жыл бұрын
@@hopefillledday9026 - It's kind of annoying when someone who doesn't have sleep problems tells you (someone who has multiple sleeping disorders) that you're actually a morning person and thereby implies that you're just lazy or disorganised and can't get your life together properly.
@your_sweetpea
@your_sweetpea 3 жыл бұрын
This is me as well, I always want to curl back up in bed when I wake up but if I actually get up I do so well
@soberoak
@soberoak 3 жыл бұрын
"For ten years I didn't think I was a morning person, until I started getting up in the morning, and I realized I was a morning person, I'd just never been awake to experience that." Brilliant.
@GODDAMNLETMEJOIN
@GODDAMNLETMEJOIN 3 жыл бұрын
I was never a morning person until I had a job with a 6am shift. Now I have the house to myself in the early morning but can't stay up past ten without becoming a zombie.
@MisterGames
@MisterGames 3 жыл бұрын
The most realistic language channel on YT. No pretentiousness. No BS. Honesty within himself and realism in the world of learning. THIS is what a person who truly wants to help others looks like, instead of someone looking to make a quick many bucks. Kudos my Aussie language mentor and thanks you!
@lilmamajaiteh
@lilmamajaiteh 3 жыл бұрын
You’re so realistic about learning languages and I love it !
@ertyertyloide5778
@ertyertyloide5778 3 жыл бұрын
@ドライ oh vraiment, permettez moi d'en douter.
@jjindie
@jjindie 3 жыл бұрын
@ドライ non tu ne l'as pas
@i2harry
@i2harry 3 жыл бұрын
Just for my own notes. Watch the video for awesome explanations. 10. To think there is an end date for fluency. 9. Too much Duolingo 8. Have too much conversations without enough input 7. Pay for tutor if possible; not just use language partner 6. Try to understand using similar dialects 5. Kids material is not easier to understand. There is no logic. 4. Not reading things interesting to you or assume things you are interested are too hard. 3. Not prioritizing language learning for the da 2. Set hour goal. 1. Not let anyone told you what you want.
@aseragalaly2540
@aseragalaly2540 3 жыл бұрын
Oh thank you
@bryanlee5195
@bryanlee5195 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks! I was looking for this, lol
@sceKernelDestroy
@sceKernelDestroy 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I was just about to rewatch to create this list :D
@jacquesdevos4846
@jacquesdevos4846 3 жыл бұрын
Having too high expectations was a huge mistake for me. You really need to be realistic when you set goals. Dont think you will be fluent any time soon, esp. if you dont commit thousands of hours to the language.
@AlexG-bc7ji
@AlexG-bc7ji 3 жыл бұрын
My main mistake was putting off mass input for too long. I think that spending the first few months focusing on mastering high-frequency vocabulary and understanding sentences structures was beneficial and definitely was my first big step in getting better. But there comes a point where you need to move from intensive study to extensive study, and I should have started extensive reading/listening and mass input much sooner than I did, because once I finally got around to it it made a huge difference in helping me start overcoming the intermediate plateau.
@sandwichbreath0
@sandwichbreath0 3 жыл бұрын
Same for me. I think for my L3 I'll include mass input pretty much from day one. Waiting until I'd learned 5-10K words and x amount of grammar rules led me to the really disheartening situation where, when I started watching/listening to native content in real-time, I couldn't understand 90% of what was said -- but would then see in transcripts/subtitles that I did actually know most/all of the words. Any possible burnout/fatigue with diving too deep too soon is a much easier problem to correct than coming at it so backwards again.
@smrtfasizmu6161
@smrtfasizmu6161 3 жыл бұрын
@@sandwichbreath0 No matter how much words you knew that was inevitably going to happen when you started listening to the natives. Even if you have a vocabulary that is larger than that of a native speaker, if you have never listened to an average native conversation, you will not be able to understand anything.
@smrtfasizmu6161
@smrtfasizmu6161 3 жыл бұрын
@@sandwichbreath0 How did you have massive input without listening to the native content? Were you just reading?
@smrtfasizmu6161
@smrtfasizmu6161 3 жыл бұрын
Mass input means extensive reading and listening. Intensive reading and conscious study can't be considered massive input. Mass input learning strategy is listening (or extensive reading) to hours of content that was meant for native speakers every day.
@sandwichbreath0
@sandwichbreath0 3 жыл бұрын
@@smrtfasizmu6161 That's what I mean, I never did mass input back then. I did heaps of reading, but all my listening was in lessons. Being new to language learning, I assumed natural speech was the same as the lessons, just sped up. My rude awakening came when I finally moved on to TV/movies. That's what ultimately led me to mass immersion.
@languagecomeup
@languagecomeup 3 жыл бұрын
"You want the best possible input at all times". Well said. Duolingo is not acceptable lol
@AfroLinguo
@AfroLinguo 3 жыл бұрын
For real. I never use Duolingo. I really don't like it.
@sharonoddlyenough
@sharonoddlyenough 3 жыл бұрын
IMO, Duolingo is fine as a start, to see if you are interested enough to go further, but move on as quick as possible.
@ClowdyHowdy
@ClowdyHowdy 3 жыл бұрын
Waking up in the morning was the best thing I've done for my language learning. The mistake I made early on was spending too much time with early grammar instead of getting quick exposure to a lot of it. It's like trying to draw details of a scene before blocking out everything with circles, rectangles and cylinders. Sketch it out by covering a ton of grammar quickly.
@AfroLinguo
@AfroLinguo 3 жыл бұрын
I definitely have to start waking up in the morning again haha.
@tomatom9666
@tomatom9666 9 ай бұрын
That's a key point, and as a professional artist that is the only way I can approach painting something, I think that's absolutely the best way to learn almost anything, get a quick overview of all of it and once you have a vague understanding of the entire structure, the larger low resolution patterns, then you will grasp the smaller rules quickly because they fit in to a larger picture and it makes immediate sense. I'm learning German, and I noticed that the more I learned about grammer with Babble the more questions I had, and the slow drip feed of rules was not helpful. I'm doing much better now that I'm just focused on input and I have a vague idea of the different sentence cases that are actually used, as opposed to only knowing about a few of them. Despite the attempt of babble to link the new grammar to a kind of context, it is still a tunnel vision approach to learning.
@broccoli9308
@broccoli9308 3 жыл бұрын
It's like you are behind the car pushing and all you can see is the ground below so you don't know if/when the mud ends. Mud mud mud. You are asking yourself, why am I doing this, this mud never ends, is this the same rock as before? am I actually moving at all? The ground changes so slowly you don't even realize pushing has been easier lately. Then you look back and realize how much ground you have covered.
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, that's definitely the case with my Swedish.
@sneak1677
@sneak1677 3 жыл бұрын
At first my Spanish was basic (por favor, hola, adiós) but now es bien, yo hablo con personas de españa y México, es dificil que conprendo mucho con personas de españa pero yo aprendo, yo ayuda personas quien no comprendo un poco
@theblackryvius6613
@theblackryvius6613 3 жыл бұрын
I’m not learning Spanish, but I’ve had some interactions with it enough for me to understand 60% of what you wrote. Either that or just loanwords. At some point in the future, I might want to learn Spanish, but in the present, Japanese is my main focus.
@sneak1677
@sneak1677 3 жыл бұрын
@@theblackryvius6613 translation: it's good, I talk with people from Spain and Mexico, it's difficult to understand much from people from Spain but I'm learning, I help people who don't understand a little
@yugouzumaki996
@yugouzumaki996 3 жыл бұрын
@@sneak1677 i'm trying to learn Spanish, i'm still a noob xD, (somehow tho i understood the 2 first sentences of your comment) do you have any advice/sources to learn Spanish?
@cristobalrojas4185
@cristobalrojas4185 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for being honest, unlike all the youtube poliglot gurus who make language learning seem way more easier than it really is!
@narayana8249
@narayana8249 3 жыл бұрын
I think it's important to realise that language learning isn't hard, in that nothing of it is truly impossible to do at any point, but what makes it very difficult to accomplish is that it involves a long-term commitment to actually achieve your goals in that language, and so it's more an exercise in determination than any of its individual components. Also, it can be pretty hard to know what works and what doesn't when you're learning a new language for the first time, making the experience all the more daunting.
@TH-cq7bj
@TH-cq7bj 3 жыл бұрын
I just saw someone post a video that they became fluent in Spanish in one month they're a native English speaker
@Ricky-kb5dx
@Ricky-kb5dx 3 жыл бұрын
@@narayana8249 I've seen some contemporary polyglots claiming that the two first foreign languages are the most difficult ones to master, after that it gets easier...
@jimbeammeup9879
@jimbeammeup9879 2 жыл бұрын
It's easy to start but difficult to stay
@RitiksVideos
@RitiksVideos 3 жыл бұрын
My biggest mistake was focusing on output too early. Input is far more important.
@AfroLinguo
@AfroLinguo 3 жыл бұрын
When I started learning Chinese, from day one, I had a language partner. I she helped me a lot. So long as you are getting input as well, it is fine.
@autentyk5735
@autentyk5735 2 жыл бұрын
"Adults' material has inherent logic in them". Jeez, after only about 10 videos, you make more sense to me than anyone I have ever listened to. Truly and completely. I am a philologist. I have been addicted to a Catalan soap opera for months now, as there is nothing else as logical, practical, and dense in the kind of language one really must master in order to successfully participate in everyday communication.
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@isabella-1796
@isabella-1796 3 жыл бұрын
The main mistake I made was not doing a lot of listening practice (my target language has strictly been Korean for 3 and a half years). I watched maybe 4 K-Dramas that I liked on repeat here and there, but I still should've listened a lot more. Thankfully though it's not a HUGE problem, and it's relatively easier for me these days because I try listen to Korean every single day for at least an hour and a half or more. Another mistake I made 2 and a half years in was wanting to be perfect and make perfect native sentences. I don't even have to explain how that's a mistake, it's so obvious to why. 😅
@r21guns74
@r21guns74 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly the same here!
@Themoment888
@Themoment888 3 жыл бұрын
My mistake was focusing on learning strictly from textbooks and having poor listening skills. Also, being nervous to speak Korean outloud. My family already knew I was studying it but if they were around, I wouldn't speak because I was nervous about sounding off. Now I'm doing pimsleur speaking comprehension and watching dramas for listening comprehension and I'm already improving a lot more. I think textbooks make the learning process too structured and feel like a classroom. I think I learn better when it's more interactive.
@ZackRekeSkjell
@ZackRekeSkjell 3 жыл бұрын
Reading something of interest is key! I first started reading Harry Potter when I was first advised by my teacher to read books in English and when I look back at it I don't understand how I managed to get through it. Now after learning English for years I still struggle with calling myself fluent because I still know there are so many more nuances to learn.
@Truthshallsety0ufree
@Truthshallsety0ufree Жыл бұрын
I'd agree with all these. Another mistake or two I made: Approached the learning method from a conscientious angle, trying "to learn" it in an academic manner. With my second language I've found a more immersive approach more effective. 2) related to the point above, concentrate on volume of input and don't try to become too advanced too quickly. By staying at your level for longer, you acquire the language, like a child would, rather than learn it.
@chaotic_libraries2853
@chaotic_libraries2853 3 жыл бұрын
That last part where you mentioned how numerous polyglots script there videos is so important and shouldn’t be looked over. When I started learning French I would constantly go back and forth with Spanish as well because I wanted to be multilingual like all of these polyglots when I should of focused on just one. Because of these polyglots scripting and labeling their videos, “I speak 13 languages,” it is severely damaging the newbies of language learning since they don’t have any prior experience.
@SaturnMood
@SaturnMood 3 жыл бұрын
My first mistake was in starting to learn my first foreign language. Now learning languages consumes lot of time. It is like bottomless barrel. And the fact is: I still suck it speaking and listening
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
Well just focus on the one you want to get good at!
@jonk1370
@jonk1370 3 жыл бұрын
Language learning doesn't need to take a lot of time. Think about the things the majority of people either waste time on to. Use that time to learn a language even for 10 minutes a day every day. Or integrate language learning into things you already do. For example, watch, watch KZbin videos in your target language instead of English, or listen to the radio/ a podcast on your way to work. That will improve your listening for sure. As for speaking, talking to yourself is helpful, and with the internet its impossible to not find someone who speaks the language your are learning
@SaturnMood
@SaturnMood 3 жыл бұрын
@CalebThank you. I do not know what to count as the second language.
@animeandstuff5377
@animeandstuff5377 3 жыл бұрын
lol immersion always helps try MIA
@sherryjackson8474
@sherryjackson8474 3 жыл бұрын
@@animeandstuff5377 MIA is an app?
@elenas.3612
@elenas.3612 3 жыл бұрын
I love your channel! Thank you for sharing :)
@EsmaeelMZ
@EsmaeelMZ 3 жыл бұрын
Very helpful as always, Thanks😊💕
@JJWong22
@JJWong22 3 жыл бұрын
Great tips and advice. Thank you!
@patriciaadams3010
@patriciaadams3010 3 жыл бұрын
Great video! Really genuinely helpful points.
@jameschaney8593
@jameschaney8593 3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video, thank you.
@anna.rrrrrr
@anna.rrrrrr 3 жыл бұрын
I always come to your channel for inspiration and useful information. And I'm never disappointed!! Love you, thanks! ❤️
@kirali_sa
@kirali_sa 3 жыл бұрын
Hello! I wanted to thank you for all of your amazing videos! 😊 Your channel opened my eyes to many things about the language learning process 🌟
@nomaynemcintosh5462
@nomaynemcintosh5462 3 жыл бұрын
Wow. You hit the bullseye 🎯. I highly agree with your hindsight on the process of beginning, acquiring and maintaining your languages.
@nicholasmontano7172
@nicholasmontano7172 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, very helpful to hear from your experience
@andreipetrach3
@andreipetrach3 3 жыл бұрын
Another cool video! Great job, man and thanks for sharing all that. I can relate to many of the mistakes you mentioned. Just one suggestion. It would have been great if you had listed the mistakes in the description plus the minute in the video where you discuss every single one of them. Cheers!
@JamesWilliams-eu5mn
@JamesWilliams-eu5mn 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the info
@MilanSmore
@MilanSmore 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks, good vid
@elliot570
@elliot570 3 жыл бұрын
Like many others have said I really enjoy your no bullshit approach to language learning content. Keep up the good content!
@kattkatt744
@kattkatt744 3 жыл бұрын
The mud and car metaphor was good. I'm going to think about that one when I struggle getting myself started!
@idontcareyo4850
@idontcareyo4850 3 жыл бұрын
English is my first language with Portugese and Spanish tied for 2nd and 3rd let me explain. I took 4 years of spanish in highschool, then I moved to Brazil for 2 years. I had 6 weeks of intense language Study. I had full immersion 6 hours a day in class 5 days a weeks, plus an extra hour of study on my own all 7 days. Spanish only being halfed learned then trying to learn Portuguese was a unique experience. I felt like i had to forget Spanish to learn Portuguese. When I finally got to Brazil it took me about 3 months for it all to click then I finally understood Spanish and Portuguese, it felt like once Portuguese clicked I remembered Spanish again. So I became "fluent" in both about the same time. I didn't realize I could speak Spanish until I was talking to a Spanish speaker in Brazil and like 3 minutes in realized I was understanding him through Portuguese and then speaking back in Spanish. I agree that fluency is a moving goal post because If I had know how well I'd speak 3 months in I couldn't have believe it. Here I am 4 years later I can't believe how much better I was 2 years in than 3 months, and how much better I am 4 years later. I Want to learn Japanese but the problem for me is I always feel like I have so much Spanish and Portuguese to learn that I have a hard time jumping in 😂
@jacquelinexlara
@jacquelinexlara Жыл бұрын
I speak the same languages as you do. It’s always important to keep Spanish and Português very separate in your mind as you’re probably aware. One of my biggest challenges is to make sure I do not speak “Portuñol” I’m definitely still pushing to learn much more in both these beautiful languages. 😅
@SeaboltSpeaks
@SeaboltSpeaks 3 жыл бұрын
Spot on! I like this video, and the idea behind it. Lots of super useful info. And i fully agree, getting up a little earlier for languages has been great, and you're right language first and everything gets done, languages last, and they don't get done all the time.
@Ace-xo9oe
@Ace-xo9oe 3 жыл бұрын
I'm studying a language at school but it's not very satisfying for me (because it's in school, it's at a very low level), which is why I'm studying another language on my own at the same time. I have a very good ear for languages and they're also completely different (from grammar to letters) so it's not too confusing....
@sneak1677
@sneak1677 3 жыл бұрын
If you want to learn something, don't use school (unless it's college, uni or a tutor), go to the internet, I do it for my languages y ahora yo hablo español bien (and now I speak Spanish well)
@Ace-xo9oe
@Ace-xo9oe 3 жыл бұрын
@@sneak1677 I meant that studying a language is a requirement (I'm in high school...), but thanks for the tip😅 The language I'm learning alone is Spanish, actually, so that's really cool
@sneak1677
@sneak1677 3 жыл бұрын
@@Ace-xo9oe excellent, in American terms I'm about to start high school myself
@ShaneGodliman
@ShaneGodliman 3 жыл бұрын
So true about there not being an end date! Understanding and accepting that trying to achieve "fluency" was going to be a life long journey actually kind of made me feel more relaxed about my learning, like it took the pressure off or something
@Gabriel-is5xq
@Gabriel-is5xq 3 жыл бұрын
This is useful, thank you
@Noa-li
@Noa-li 3 жыл бұрын
this is great stuff, I've been learning languages for 22 years now, and this is helpful ! + you are charming so thank you
@mariakudimova
@mariakudimova 3 жыл бұрын
So true about the audiobooks and the way they help to read a book! Thank you for sharing your experience! It's really helpful and inspiring!
@DavidDayMusic
@DavidDayMusic 3 жыл бұрын
This is a great video!
@pinoypolyglot5501
@pinoypolyglot5501 2 жыл бұрын
Love your channel! Honest advice and not claiming to be an expert!
@vitoriaabdala5816
@vitoriaabdala5816 3 жыл бұрын
Your videos are always a good wake up call to some bad habits I noticed I started doing on my language learning. The part about studying in the morning was a big hit hahah I started to create so many excuses... This video was great to remind me why I’m studying French and why it should be a priority. I started using Busuu and had one class on Italki because of your videos too and I loved it! Thank you so much and keep up the great work :)
@kevgoeswandering8488
@kevgoeswandering8488 3 жыл бұрын
thank you sir , you are truly inspiring
@marionrichardson3966
@marionrichardson3966 3 жыл бұрын
This is awesome! You're videos encouraged me to quit doing things to just get my hours in, but to instead spend quality hours doing what actually helps me learn. If that means 1 hour of flashcards in addition to my other methods of study... So be it.
@TheMaskedUnicorn
@TheMaskedUnicorn 2 жыл бұрын
You're so original and concise. Thank you for your videos! I'm enjoying watching all the way to the end for new information. You have a fresh take on everything, and I enjoy it!
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Portuguesewithadelina
@Portuguesewithadelina 2 жыл бұрын
Great advice! Thank you for making this. I'm going to work with my students with these in mind this year. Obrigada! ☘
@captainbamis7257
@captainbamis7257 2 жыл бұрын
Really interesting stuff.
@levipatrickdiaz
@levipatrickdiaz 3 жыл бұрын
This is great. It’s so refreshing to find a channel with someone who is earlier on in the language learning journey, and not already like 5 languages in. I’m particularly focused on getting to native/near native in my third language (Russian) while still working on my second (Spanish). It’s insane how many hours of dedicated work it truly takes to get to a near-native level. Sure, basic conversation is possible in months, but understanding poetry and jokes and rap music and learning/remembering obscure words like “grayish brown ” or “frolic” or “bell bottoms” takes such an obscene amount of time. I heard that the average high school grad (in the US, I believe) has like 60,000 words in their vocabulary when they graduate. I’ve been living in Central America for almost five years, and I can’t imagine how many years it will be before I reach that sort of level in Spanish, and Russian could take decades, assuming I want to maintain that Spanish level. Also, for anyone considering living in a country for immersion, be prepared to be very intentional in your learning, because it will NOT come automatically, and having even a handful of people who speak your native language living nearby can have a devastating impact on your quest for fluency. You can be stagnant for YEARS at intermediate level this way. Anyways, thanks for the video and the suggestions! Russian has been overwhelming me a bit lately as I consider how far I am behind in it and how long it took me to get to my current level in Spanish, which has made it harder for me to want to prioritize it. Just gotta keep at it day in and day out year after year, I guess, and definitely gotta get better at doing it in the morning.
@mattice9083
@mattice9083 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure if I have 60k vocab lmao
@k1medward
@k1medward 3 жыл бұрын
Dam!! I love this guy so much!!! So matter of fact!! You are better than these KZbinrs that give you false hopes.
@ShinobiNando
@ShinobiNando 3 жыл бұрын
As someone trying to relearn a lot of the languages I forgotten I appreciate any and all tips!
@VariationsOnASeam
@VariationsOnASeam 2 жыл бұрын
This is my favorite language learning channel. I come here when I'm discouraged.
@katya_fhs
@katya_fhs 3 жыл бұрын
I think the hour at which you do your language learning is highly dependent on your habits. For me, language learning is like a craving, and I'm always excited to do up to three hours of listening, reading, and flashcards after work. I can never get engaged in the morning, not for work, nor for language learning. Mandarin is my second foreign language, and the same way I learned English, even though it is a professional goal of mine, I always feel like it's a fun thing I do in my free time.
@liam_britcoin
@liam_britcoin 3 жыл бұрын
This video really intrigued me. I’ve been stuck in a higher-intermediate level plateau of Brazilian Portuguese for probably a year now and can’t seem to jump to an advanced bracket. Like you, I have a lot of language exchange conversations with native friends, however I never really progress. I’m always using the same words and remain in my comfort zone. I pick up maybe 5-10 new words each conversation, but never am able to commit them to memory. I lost motivation a while back, but want to change my ways and focus. Any advice?
@jpsjbod
@jpsjbod 3 жыл бұрын
I think one thing is the more advanced you get, the harder it is to advance more. You have to learn more words, constructions etc, easy enough, but you can't forget any of the old ones. So you need to listen, read, and speak even more to keep the old stuff active; where does the time needed come from?. Just as a concert pianist practices several hours a day, a high level learner needs more practice. That said, there probably is a way, but I am a B2 myself for a couple of years.
@vanessameow1902
@vanessameow1902 3 жыл бұрын
7:02 I'm actually really looking forward to a more comprehensive video on this topic👍👍
@attaotigba
@attaotigba 3 жыл бұрын
Your insights are so damn lucid. Thank you...
@Muhammad-xo4tv
@Muhammad-xo4tv 3 жыл бұрын
Man !! ur videos are just so good that after i finish the video i get sad because i have to wait a whole week to the next one haha keep up with these high quality vids
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
I have a back catalogue haha. Cheers for the comment!
@thelitterbug7624
@thelitterbug7624 2 жыл бұрын
Good advice, particularly with the hour based goals
@countjimothy7335
@countjimothy7335 3 жыл бұрын
Came here to watch this video after watching 2h of a Swedish tv series and my brain felt like it had a mild aneurysm
@clara_hp6254
@clara_hp6254 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been learning English for 5 years in school now and I never understood Irish/Scottish people and I just understood that guy and I’m so happy ☺️
@HeffeFrank
@HeffeFrank 2 жыл бұрын
"not letting external factors decide what I should be doing and why" 11:40 so important in every aspect of our lives
@jonathanmcculley3728
@jonathanmcculley3728 3 жыл бұрын
My Japanese has made many leaps in 2020 alone, more specifically the second half of the year, and I contributed a lot of it to you (also Matt vs Japan for specific info on Japanese). Making it such a priority to the point where when I’m at work I am using my SRS app to hammer in vocabulary, watching dramas in Japanese, speaking with my long distance girlfriend in Japan. It has made me so happy to see the progress. And if about 6 months could’ve made this much difference, I’m dying to see what it’ll be like by the end of this year. I thought I was fluent until you helped me regain my humility. Thank you.
@viveza4725
@viveza4725 3 жыл бұрын
I realised that I was also making some of them mistakes but you helped me a lot, sir.
@idolevin8795
@idolevin8795 3 жыл бұрын
I am so thankful that I started to learn German with a tutor first. It really made things more serious and I feel that I've actually learned quite a bit in the 9 months that I've been learning so far, 1 lesson a week. Duolingo and Babbel are just not good enough for me. My tutor gives me books and other resources that she has and is very encouraging. It's expensive but absolutely worth it.
@default632
@default632 2 жыл бұрын
This is actually good advice.
@NebulaM57
@NebulaM57 3 жыл бұрын
You're really good at making these videos. They're appreciated by all of us! You pass on great information. I like the early morning idea and will have to start making that a priority. I think my biggest hangup is knowing what to do, how to start. I liked your review of Ouino and am considering it for the structure. I did play around in the trial and two things that really popped for me was in the vocab section. They used the word in a sentence and spoke that sentence both normally and then slow. I was quite amazed how much that helped me pronounce and apply the word. I'm working on French for my first language. One thing I notice about the language is that it seems to have a lyrical rhythm. You can tell if you're saying it right because it will 'sound' right. At least that's been my experience. Anyway, thanks for the few frames of your language learning log. It's good to see some sort of ideas of how to spend the study time. Thanks again for all your time making these videos! I look for them often!
@skamiikaze
@skamiikaze 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video :-)
@Tehui1974
@Tehui1974 3 жыл бұрын
Good video. I'm at an intermediate level in my second language. I've come to the realisation that although I spent time learning new words, I didn't spend enough time learning new phrases and sentences that I can use regularly. I'm currently rectifying that now.
@scotthullinger4684
@scotthullinger4684 Жыл бұрын
By far the most truthful thing I heard in this video is that the more you learn of a foreign language, the more you become aware of just how much you do NOT know about that particular language. It seriously is quite necessary to become aware of how ignorant you are in order to be able to learn more. Learning a foreign language deeply is surely not meant for a know-it-all sort of person.
@sonnenhafen5499
@sonnenhafen5499 3 жыл бұрын
if it is a priority to you, it makes much more fun ;) thanks for these 10 mistakes, i see you have carefully thought about yourself and i think you're very selfreflected. i'm currently trying to get russian into my brain, and it's much more fun, the more time i'm able to put in.
@Beloved2015
@Beloved2015 3 жыл бұрын
I've been wanting to learn Japanese for a few years and I have attempted to learn it a couple times but I usually don't make much progress... I am trying again now and I want to try different approaches, which includes getting advice from actual language learners (crazy idea, I know). I already have several new ideas that I've gotten from your videos so I wanted to say thank you! :)
@shreddder999
@shreddder999 2 жыл бұрын
_#4 Completing the first 12 lessons before I realized I had accidentally clicked on Xhosa._
@erichfeit7779
@erichfeit7779 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a very helpful program. I am studying Hebrew with Duolingo. The high repetition is good for me because reading and writing in Hebrew takes a lot of practice. Erich from New Zealand
@Sam-shushu
@Sam-shushu 3 жыл бұрын
I think this is the best language learning advice I've ever seen, period
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks man!
@tifatan7087
@tifatan7087 3 жыл бұрын
Hi! Great video 👍 I agree with you 100% percent on every single point! Especially on getting tutor early on, and doing what you feel works best for you! Sometimes I see in the comment section that people disagree with you - mostly on either spending money or duolingo, but I really think they are missing the point. I feel that your channel / your thought process is generally geared towards somewhat serious language learners, and in that case I’m with you 100% (as someone who speaks 3 languages). Your advice would definitely speed up the learning process for any language 👍 Right now I’m learning German very casually, as in to substitute the time I otherwise would spend scrolling instagram😅In this case Duolingo has been great, because I know there are better options out there, but they just aren’t accessible to me - in the sense that when I use Duolingo, I know my alternative won’t be another language learning practice, but just Instagram. Sorry for mumbling on but I just feel the language community is so divided over Duolingo but it doesn’t even have to be..
@jadeashlee9664
@jadeashlee9664 3 жыл бұрын
I’ve been learning Hebrew about a year and a half now and I’m just now getting to the point that I can have a conversation. Learning a language is fun 😁 This is my first Language I’ve learned so excited to get to that higher level
@ronshlomi582
@ronshlomi582 8 ай бұрын
האם את מדברת עברית שוטפת עכשיו?
@jadeashlee9664
@jadeashlee9664 7 ай бұрын
@@ronshlomi582 כן עכשיו אני יכולה לקיים שיחות בעברית 😉
@Allahu_Akbar_
@Allahu_Akbar_ 6 ай бұрын
@@jadeashlee9664you my friend are a great person for not giving up on the language u want and actually learning it masterfully,I congratulate u for that.I also wanna be like that,wish me luck.
@MindfulLang
@MindfulLang 3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely loved your analogy of how starting to read a book is like pushing a car through mud. I can definitely relate. While it can be a little daunting at first, reading material I am actually interested in has done absolute wonders for my reading ability. I struggled reading children's fiction but am able to read non-fiction (Guns, Germs and Steel, and Sapiens etc) much much much easier than I expected. My biggest mistake when learning my first foreign language (Chinese) was neglecting tones and focusing too much on doing well in exams and not not spending enough time actually speaking. As for counting hours, for me personally I find that it can be a little redundant sometimes. For me it is easy to fall into the trap of saying that I've "studied" for an hour without really effectively studying per se. If I have a checklist I am able to concretely assess whether or not I have achieved what I set out to achieve. For me I guess it's kinda of quality vs quality.
@Bootinyourbutt19199
@Bootinyourbutt19199 3 жыл бұрын
J’étudie français maintenant. Merci pour le conseil!!!
@Ajas0810
@Ajas0810 3 жыл бұрын
I just started watching you because you popped up by the KZbin algorithm I think because I watch Steve Kaufman a lot. Anyway good info. I’m tempted to leave spanish when I’m only maybe at a B1 level and go to German. But i really want to be good at spanish so I’m gonna keep going. Definitely a mistake I don’t wanna make.
@lorakintas
@lorakintas 3 жыл бұрын
It took me a long time to immerse myself in English when I was a teenager. I was afraid of leaving the comfort zone of just learning through my private English school back in the day, so I've been consuming French content while learning it and I've been learning much faster than before.
@AfroLinguo
@AfroLinguo 3 жыл бұрын
Great video. I definitely have to start looking for better input than duolingo.
@manofglass_4003
@manofglass_4003 3 жыл бұрын
Good video
@Flauschbally
@Flauschbally 3 жыл бұрын
Really cool video and helpful. I found myself in your mistake as well 🤣 And I can totally agree: If I don't do my language first, everything else gets done, but not my language. And true... kids books and movies are not easier 🤣 often they drive me insane and I think... hello...??? It's for 5 year old ones and I have no clue what they are talking about. Thank you for your great videos. 😄
@bangboom123
@bangboom123 3 жыл бұрын
Establishing tangible goals is so important. Your mood can change daily, even with the weather, so it's never a great idea to try to "feel" fluent. Personally I found my German improved massively, as did my feeling of understanding German, when I set myself the target of reading a specific, fairly advanced novel, and working my way up and through it.
@christiandimaria3420
@christiandimaria3420 3 жыл бұрын
I make sure to get a minimum of 1 hour of French every day before work. That way no matter what happens or not matter burnt out / busy I am later in the day, I still get my language learning in.
@mitrutoros2054
@mitrutoros2054 3 жыл бұрын
Waw thanks ! This video is awesome ! I've been learning Russian for 6 months just for fun and I've made all 10 mistakes 😂😂😂 I had a feeling that I was making these mistakes, now I know for sure. But unfortunately I am decided ...to continue like this ...doing all 10 mistakes...because I love the way I'm learning...even if I know is wrong...but the most important thing when you learn a language is to enjoy it ..so I'm afraid if I corect the way I learn and do it right ...may be I will not enjoy it any more ...so I decide to do it in the wrong way but to enjoy ...For example I learn with partners ...although I am a beginner ...but all lessons are full of laughs ...I never laugh in my life so much ...I drink a glass of wine I lough ..and speak on phone learning russian...such a pleasure ....I don't see my self quitting this and go in a boring school class with a teacher. So in conclusion maybe all is coming to this: doing it wrong ...knowing I do it wrong but more easy and having the best time, enjoying it so much ....VS ...doing it right, boring and not enjoy ....I chose enjoy ...and I hope the progress will come from enjoying.
@peterwosny1104
@peterwosny1104 3 жыл бұрын
As always, very interesting. I‘ m not sure, if I agree on everything, e. g. I‘m not sure how to match audible with reading. I think I would get quite confused, if I try to listen and to read at the same time. But I agree on the problem of other language. I‘ m learning Spanish, but I tend to think of starting other languages like Japanese, Russian or Dutch. It‘ s kind of weird. I know how tough and long the language journey is in one language, but I alwyas picture myself speaking another. By the way: thx to you, I quite duolingo and make good use of the time won.
@jpsjbod
@jpsjbod 3 жыл бұрын
Listen to the audio, rewind as needed or wanted, check the e-book for comprehension. A good audioplayer is needed, one that allows you to rewind 5-10 seconds preferably. Audible has a good one for android; you set the default rewind time. On the PC though, you have to go back 30 seconds at a time.
@muhannadayoubi1433
@muhannadayoubi1433 3 жыл бұрын
Mistake 3 about the morning is on point. Every time I delay language learning for the night, I find myself barely able to concentrate, or not in the mood to learn, so on, while every time I study in the morning I feel energised and excited.
@carlo7503
@carlo7503 3 жыл бұрын
I started at the beginning with English(I'm Italian) and I didn't remember literally anything of English Language from school, I didn't remember grammar, words and obviously I couldn't speak/reading/listening. So, I started with an italian-english book, and I finished it, then I started with another book of grammar, and another and so on. After having done a lot of grammar, I was still unable to speak fluently, and I looked for a teacher/professor online and I had been speaking, just speaking, for weeks. In the meantime I had started spanish too, which was easier than english(Italian and Spanish are quite similar) and with russian(which is the language that I am studying every day) I have took the DELE C1 in Spanish, but I do not have the same level in English I presume, though I listen every day to podcast/audiobooks in English. I have made a lot of mistakes, I chose professors who weren't really prepared or interested in my learning, I have tried to speak without a solid vocabulary, I thought I could handle several languages at the same time(months ago I was studying English, Spanish and Russian at the same time), but you know, I have never considered these things mistakes. I think that in language learning, experience makes a crucial difference. If you know how to start, which books you should pick up, if you are aware when you could speak and when you need just to study and listen Well, it's a huge difference between you and someone else, and you could develop this mindset throughout mistakes and the comparison between different languages. For example, while with English and Spanish it was easy to remember words(words in the long run make the difference between an educated person and someone who just speaks the language without criterion), with Russian it was nearly impossible remember words at the beginning, because of the different alphabet and letters that in Russian are pronounced in a totally different way. So I started writing as much as possible, in order to get confident with cirillic alphabet, but it took a very long time, 15 months at least. But, as I said, every mistake that you made will give you a new way of thinking if you pay attention, or in other words, if you really want to learn the language. As always, thank you for your videos, your channel and Luca Lampariello's channel are the best for language learning. Ps: sorry for my English, I haven't been writing for a long time :/
@melrose8199
@melrose8199 3 жыл бұрын
I've been learning 3 foreign languages. English is my first foreign language and right now my level is C1 but my mistake back then when I was a kid was taking too much classes. My second foreign language is Spanish and my mistake was using too much Doulingo+ watching spanish series with English subtitle from the begining+ reading pure grammer too early, before making a strong vocabulary core+ not having a daily routine. The third one that i'm learning currently is German. I tried to fix all the mistakes I made with English and Spanish and right now i'm trying to learn 6k german words, intermediate grammer, watching youtube videos and listening podcasts to get the sense of the language. Now I think watching series isn't helpful for me, until B2 level. But when I started learning I made another mistakes too. I tried reading Herr der Diebe when I was just start learning+ tried speaking with native speakers when I knew too little German. Now that i'm concentrating on learning vocab and short sentences, I see i'm making progress much faster. I should try to count hours as you said. I like learning new methods and concepts on the way of learning anything. I always make new mistakes until there will be much less things to be corrected. Thanks for the videos and salud!^^
@midoripuca
@midoripuca 2 жыл бұрын
7:15 I can't stop laughing at how calmly you said that, great video
@Hagelnot
@Hagelnot 3 жыл бұрын
Here is a thing I like to do to improve my spanish: I bought a couple of Asterix Comics in spanish (I am between B1 and B2 I think). Read it through, noted all vocabularies I didn't know or couldn't instantly translate on little sheets (were about 200). Each week I'd take one of those sheets with me to work and go through it ~twice a day, but only about 5 at a time (depending on how hard they are to me) Then I read the comic again until the page I'm done with those vocabularies. This way I repeat them even once again, but with the important context which makes it easier to understand and remember.
@Dannykhc
@Dannykhc 2 жыл бұрын
All right! I'm doing that as well with German, great vocab to learn and much more interesting
@Hagelnot
@Hagelnot 2 жыл бұрын
@@Dannykhc sehr cool (: viel Erfolg!
@heathersaxton8118
@heathersaxton8118 3 жыл бұрын
One kids show that’s actually extremely helpful for a2 and b1 learners though is Peppa Pig! It’s on KZbin in a billion different languages. The original British version is actually designed as educational content for little kids to learn to talk and you hear so many basic words and structures being used. Was my life savior for me when learning Cantonese and had no beginner material to listen to.
@parthwani
@parthwani 3 жыл бұрын
"It's weird but it works" That hit me... Now let's make it's first topic of the day!
@pinoypolyglot5501
@pinoypolyglot5501 2 жыл бұрын
The last line hahaha, I’m gonna use that!
@Robert-cc5ir
@Robert-cc5ir 3 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with all your points except the one about language partners. It depends. For me I try to look for someone who is a) an experienced language partner b)community tutor or teacher who wants to learn another language. I have found that these people are really happy to use resources they already have for lessons to teach you in exchange for the conversation but I guess it depends how well you get on... good video :)
@daysandwords
@daysandwords 3 жыл бұрын
I made great friends learning Swedish, it's just not really worth the time I had to put in to speaking English.
@Robert-cc5ir
@Robert-cc5ir 3 жыл бұрын
@@daysandwords yeah I get what you mean, but it's good when your starting out. Could you make a video on what it is like learning 2 languages at once?
@UltimateTrackMom
@UltimateTrackMom Жыл бұрын
Great list.. I have done at least 4 of them😂
@clairewoodfin3336
@clairewoodfin3336 3 жыл бұрын
I love what you said about hours-based goals. I’ve really been trying to get my listening comprehension in Ukrainian up to a higher level, and going about it the traditional way, the one talked about in the language learning community, of having achievement-oriented goals just hasn’t been working. Working at it for a certain of number of hours will help a lot more, I think. Thanks for the advice!
@jpsjbod
@jpsjbod 3 жыл бұрын
Audiobook + kindle may be painful at first, but really does work. You will know how long and audiobook is, so you can count your hours too.
@smaintfaint5080
@smaintfaint5080 3 жыл бұрын
Did you say Ukrainian? Wow, I'm so excited somebody is learning my native language out here !! Please don't give up on it)
@clairewoodfin3336
@clairewoodfin3336 3 жыл бұрын
@@jpsjbod Great tip, thank you!
@clairewoodfin3336
@clairewoodfin3336 3 жыл бұрын
@@smaintfaint5080 Yes! It's a beautiful language and I wish there were more people learning it. I'll keep doing my best!
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