Yes, I learnt English in a 15 minutes base. I discovered at the public library a book "How I learnt 22 languages in 18 months" or something like it and I got the best system ever!! Get index cards and write on in this order: First the word you want to learn in English or the language you want to learn, 2o. Write the pronunciation as you hear it in your own language 3o. Then write the meaning of the word in your language. Just that. Take your cards everywhere with you and every time you have 30 available seconds read your cards. I remember I used to read them while standing at the traffic light, while having lunch at work, at the line at the supermarket, even I took them to the toilet, yes, you got there at least 5-10 minutes of solitude... Now it's easier with the captioning on TVs and videos everywhere.. I never went to an institute or school and I could have a real conversation 6 months after... Shadowing and reading out loud as explained here are great tools..
@CouchPolyglot11 күн бұрын
Yes, yes, yes! I have done a "10-minute experiment for a year" for both Swedish and Italian and it is crazy what consistency can do if you are able to stick to it, even if it is only 10 minutes a day. I had this idea from the book "Atomic Habits", which really fascinated me 🤯
@voda202328 күн бұрын
Yes, the 15minute a day method works, I started learning English when I was 18, and now I can speak, I'm 98 years old😂😂😂
@Ichthys7328 күн бұрын
Congratulations! 😂
@shabirvalli860428 күн бұрын
Whaaaaat? All the 15 mins have piled up to 98 years! Wow!!!
@yonathan289528 күн бұрын
Yaa u can speak even if You try 15s a day by the age 98
@Lexie810-b5r28 күн бұрын
You can get great audio input here on youtube with bilingual stories, they will read a sentence of a story in English then read the same sentence in target language. Polyglot Beats here on youtube does that well for multiple languages and there other channels for specific languages... its been helping me get passive listening and learning when going on walks
@AndreSenga-so4mu27 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@TheCompleteGuitarist27 күн бұрын
It is known that if you are familiar with a story, then when you read the same story in a second language you will understand and thus acquire more language. I am English native learning spanish living in Uruguay. I have copies of local authors, translations in English and audiobooks. So I read in English, then in Spanish then I go back and forth often paragraph by paragraph rereading often and I listen to the audiobooks when I can to complement this. My speaking skills are pretty good but I have poor vocabulary and as I am a reader in English I also want to read better in spanish and improve my vocabulary. I like the approach. I think it works. Sometimes rereading a paragraph say two or three times that I did not understand on first reading, I begin to understand. I think understanding how ideas are chunked not as individual words but word groups to form meaning helps you navigate better.
@CrisCapeMusic17 күн бұрын
Very true, after learning Italian past 3 years I've learned that your brain often chunks groups of words/sentances together as opposed to remebering every individual word. Completey makes sense as that is likely more efficient in terms of storage and energy
@richardwilliams540126 күн бұрын
Man you can really feel this gents passion, so cool
@jay-ne6fx28 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this beautiful content. I'm currently trying to learn mandarin in school and really have a passion for languages and want to succeed. I have been too caught up in where I feel like I should be/want to be instead of appreciating where I am. So I would get discouraged. But now I will look at it like a plant, and just start with putting in 15 minutes of concentrated effort a day and stop trying to look for answers and just do it, and be surprised when one day it hits me how far I've come. Thank you for this I've learned a lot from this video.
@goluremilanguages27 күн бұрын
Love it. What matters is keeping contact with the language in a focused manner over time. Consistency can do wonders. Good luck.
@gaoshaoxing18 күн бұрын
you can practice with me
@kristimoore876328 күн бұрын
I know this is probably not common, but one of my 12 year olds took an intro Spanish class in school this year. I feel the same way about reading books and using paper/pen to solidify language learning. I bought her some intro stories in Spanish for her to read. This will reinforce what she learned in her intro class and she will be ahead of the game for next year when she is allowed to take more language in middle school.
@TheCompleteGuitarist27 күн бұрын
If you read the same story in both languages you acquire more language if you already know the story. Plus you can cross reference difficult passages rather than always going to a dictionary over individual words.
@kristimoore876326 күн бұрын
@@TheCompleteGuitarist Definitely! I read like that in multiple languages and find it so useful to acquire vocabulary and phrases.
@zacklofton152526 күн бұрын
Fantastic conversation! @Goluremilanguages you’re an excellent host/interviewer! Would love to see more of this content.
@cpnlsn8828 күн бұрын
Very interesting interview. I think you very skilfully got the best of your interviewee.
@paulocoutinho91335 күн бұрын
Excellent! You both nailed it. I learn Russian as a fourth language, and it occurs to me what he said about concentration and meditation. It's so rewarding and pleasant to get in contact with what you are learning and mastering.
@carc.sync026 күн бұрын
I second professor Arguelles's opinion that, even though with the internet and mobile devices foreign language learning resources have multiplied and become not just more available but also significantly cheaper, the quality of such content is not on par with that of courses from 40+ years ago. The evolution of the Assimil series he often recommends is a testament to that: if there are more languages available in the series, the older courses aimed at intellectually curious and international commerce-oriented learners, whereas today the target audience seems to be tourists
@joannaortega388627 күн бұрын
I would love to hear more about your use of meditation as a language learning aid as well as a deeper dive into how people have different personalities in different languages. Thanks for your excellent content. (I also have only child syndrome except I'm the youngest of 9 - so much younger that I grew up without close siblings and spent a lot of time alone.)
@cr-iv1el15 күн бұрын
Reading aloud gives your brain another way to connect to the language by giving it voice, literally.
@fraza-uh8ty28 күн бұрын
Great interview really enjoyed it👍
@jeremycline954228 күн бұрын
Osweald Bera just came out by Colin Gorrie. It approaches Old English in the same way as the famous Latin book mentioned by the Prof.
@The_Lord_Of_Confusion28 күн бұрын
thans for the tip
@eduardoidiomas521625 күн бұрын
That is a good example of the nature/natural method
@charliesomoza591828 күн бұрын
Thanks Goluremi! Mister Alexander Arguelles is a legend. Saludos desde Madrid!
@amarnathjha831927 күн бұрын
I grew up in India and was bilingual in school, Maithili and Hind; in college Hindi and English. Now I am retired in USA after 40 yrs of Engineering practice. Since last two years, learning Sanskrit. I has one optinal class of Sanskrit in India. I practice Sanatan Dharm, so some of the practices of religions are done in Sanskrit. I was always curious and now am learning and enjoying it. I suggest try to learn your favourite language first. I can now understand Sanskrit conversation.
@YogaBlissDance21 күн бұрын
I love Sanskrit.
@secretariatgirl424925 күн бұрын
I'm starting with The Nature Method Italian after 2 years of flaling. Just got back from s month in Salerno, Italy and realized I was searching for verb conjugations and trying to form sentences on the fly while patterns would have helped me more. So I started using a few basic patterns on my own. Ready to start again...also the Tony Marsh OPI tools could tie into this, too!
@vforvalorant101914 күн бұрын
Interesting. I wasn't convinced by the 15 minutes a day thing - I learned German to has-a-good-shot-at-the-C2-exam level in 2 years and now live in Germany, and that was a very intense process. Learning Chinese to about B2 (now rusty and more like B1) was also a very intense process, and I can't imagine how I could have even started that in 15 minutes a day, like, I did hours a day and it paid off and I can't imagine getting through all that in less than 10 years on 15 minutes a day. Now, I know that Professor Arguelles doesn't actually recommwnd sticking to that time as you get more advanced and sees it more as a bare minimum, which is important, but I'm still suddenly intrigued by his obvious joy and pride at how much he could get done in 15 minutes a day. I've now got some questions. What kind of things would he be doing in 15 minutes a day as someone who's past the stage of Assimil courses, how much would he more seriously recommend to an intermediate student of a complex language (at least to read) like Chinese, and....well, I'm busy with getting my German to a more comfortable widely-read and correctly-spoken genuine C2 and my beginner arabic, but I wonder, what could I actually achieve if I dedicated just 15 minutes a day to Chinese while I do all of this? Thank you for this fantastic interview. I'll be leafing through the prof's back catalogue to see what he's said about intermediate levels and making progress there.
@YogaBlissDance21 күн бұрын
I love the prof. he's so intense- his two methods (he says they are not all of course) BUT his shadowing and dictation in under 2 weeks VISIBLY IMPROVED my language- I was stunned. They are super intensive and so I dropped off but they WORK. Check out his videos even his very early ones like 12 years ago where he broke things down. HE'S NOT SAYING only study 15 min. is best- he's saying it at least keeps you moving forward. OF course in real life he recommends more!
@RemofRenaissance28 күн бұрын
Thank you. I found really interesting. On one of the first points (no internet / phone, etc). What I find useful as someone that likes tech and podcasts is. I associate my free time and tech only being worthwhile if it helps me learn or be productive. M So if I’m on KZbin the content has to be to learn or see / watch my target language. If I’m on my iPad. I am inking in my target language or reading a digital book. Maybe even annotating material or re-writing in digital form what I read. Then at the end of the week that will earn me say an hour or so of free time. Repetition also key. I use all these tools to read and listen to language(s) every day at consistent times. Ps. This video falls into the “educational” categorisation 😅
@gertrudejones72428 күн бұрын
This was a wonderful, inspiring conversation!!!!!!
@shamimgough171423 күн бұрын
Thank you, I've learned a lot from both of you. I've got a great thrust for languages ❤
@HeartandSoul-vb4dwКүн бұрын
It’s amazing how 15 mins of lots of things everyday can change your life.
@Lexie810-b5r27 күн бұрын
You can get great audio input here on youtube with bilingual stories, they will read a sentence of a story in English then read the same sentence in target language. Polyglot Beats here on youtube does that well for multiple languages and there other channels for specific languages... its been helping me get passive listening and learning when going on walks
27 күн бұрын
Another great Coleman Hughes interview! Keep it up!
@LeeSohlden22 күн бұрын
Kids often learn their language spending no time at all on it. They absorb, then all the sudden start talking. If a child can do it, an adult can. The adult mind has a speech center that already learned a language, and so is much much stronger, for learning languages, compared to a child. How did I learn Portuguese? From knowing Spanish, and spending zero time learning Portuguese. All I did is two things: Ear tuning exercises, so I heard the Portuguese (Brazilian) correctly, and second, passive listening to Portuguese. The ear tuning exercises do take some time, but only initially. Passive listening is just choosing what noise you have in the background as you otherwise go about your day; it takes no time. Eventually, I got help from Brazilian speakers, to help understand exactly what sentences meant, but that was after I already could get the main gist of what I was listening to. Same for Dutch, I learned it by ear tuning, then lots of passive listening, after already knowing German. My ear tuning method, I invented. It allows, for example, a student just beginning to learn Korean to hear it basically correctly in two days; that is spending one hour per day, for two days. For Korean, as it is not close to any of my known languages, I had to add a third activity, regular associations between Korean and English sentences found in a story. These associations are done primarily verbally.. (briefly look over notes for a sentence, listen to it three times as you read it, then three more times with your eyes closed. Go onto the next sentence in the story. Depend on the fact you will keep coming back to these sentences in future days, rather than trying to work with any sentence a lot on any one day. Always spend half your time on new material, half the time on previous material, for this association work.) Now, adding that 3rd habit, associations, does take about a half hour per day, for each language you are learning. But, guess what, you can do most of this association work passively, bringing it back to zero time, or at least close to zero time. You do have to, periodically, pay active attention to any audio connecting the known and target languages for you; but most of the time you can just ignore that audio and let your speech center pick it up for you. Anyone really curious about how my method goes, you can ask me. Or, look me up on youtube; I have many videos on all this. I am selling nothing. Languages are a lifetime hobby of mine, nothing more. How did I learn my method? I pretty much just ran into natural language acquisition, largely by accident, and then kept experimenting to optimize each aspect of natural language acquisition I came across. During this experimenting, I stumbled upon my ear tuning method. (This was all late 2018, to late 2019, when I was interested in twelve different languages. Today I learn twenty languages all at once, and teach twentyone.)
@mohdAbsar66620 күн бұрын
Whats your youtube channel name
@m.j.s.383827 күн бұрын
I taught English as a Second Language in S.Korea for seven years and yet managed to learn very little Korean. I studied French in grade school and university and two semesters of French immersion at Laval University, but my French is very poor except for pronunciation. I also studied Spanish for two years at university, but could never understand it spoken aloud. I have no ‘ear of understanding’ when a native speaker speaks. Pretty good at grammar and pronunciation, though.
@annushkasinger26 күн бұрын
The same. I have to study a lot, like at university in order to start speaking and remembering the words, It is hard work. Just listening doesn't help. I listen hours here in China. No way. Doesn't work. It involves all sensors and cognitive abilites to improve.
@yaiburanakul850523 күн бұрын
I am the same! I had such a difficult time understanding Spanish spoken but of course was able to read it.
@Sam-shushu21 күн бұрын
My understanding is that Arguelles is tge man that literally "invented" (if anyone can invent anything ) Shadowing and gave it its name.
@Guitar-free14 күн бұрын
What an Interesting man actually you both are. Such a great video. I spent a few years in prison and I got a "learn Thai" book and I got really good at reading and writing Thai but I can't speak it.
@tari9azerty85327 күн бұрын
Moroccan here following your Channel i appreciate the podcasts
@4himsanctified28 күн бұрын
Interesting. He's essentially "in my back yard" as I'm on the MN/WI border in the Twin Ports (Duluth/Superior)
@andyhannon592627 күн бұрын
I knew a lady who came from Duluth. Bit by a dog with a rabid tooth!
@RUITV7 күн бұрын
You need 15 mins to learn any language but to understand that you need to watch this 1 hour video. 😌🤥
@MathinusG28 күн бұрын
Thanks, your channel is a great discovery.
@goluremilanguages28 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching 🙌
@EnglishAnahit28 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing 👍👍👏👏👏👏
@_Everything_HER20 күн бұрын
wow, I'm in mn too and just woke up to snow alot now lol😂
@arturnowacki641621 күн бұрын
I'm looking for a video where Dr. Arguelles demonstrates his ability to speak in multiple languages. Does anyone know which video this is?
@pohlpiano16 күн бұрын
Wow, Arguelles! Man, you surely have good friends
@MackG77719 күн бұрын
If you wanna learn Arabic, you need to reach out to Tony Marsh "Language Matrix" as a matter of fact, you should have him on your podcast and interview him about language. He said cryptic linguist for the military and teaches online... the dude is the real deal. He teaches the us government, the military, foreign governments, NATO and those alphabet organizations in the US to speak... that's who you need this. Talk to him about learning arabic or any other language. Go look up his youtube page. He would be a great addition to your interview series.
@SebleLulseged-ox1wv16 күн бұрын
I am learning Geez now hoping it will unlock my learning ability.
@SebleLulseged-ox1wv16 күн бұрын
I hope to finally learn English after living in an English-speaking country for 24 years. I was almost ready to give up on becoming fluent, even though the school built in my head.
@InglésconRobert202511 күн бұрын
Okay, so where are we with Old Norse? Anybody interested? Modern Icelandic? Faroese?
@pohlpiano14 күн бұрын
It is interesting to mention, that many of the former hardcore "inputers“ are now moderating their approaches, and even start claiming that shadowing, chorusing, parroting, pronunciation training etc, do NOT count as output
@MegaPouni27 күн бұрын
Hey, in Latin, the "eu" in Europa is not pronounced like in english 😂, please !
@pohlpiano14 күн бұрын
Interestingly, Latin and ancient Greek languages were still part of common high school curriculum in some countries in the first half of the 20th century, like mine, for example
@jbp24610 күн бұрын
The first half of the 20th century? Latin is still part of the high school curriculum in Germany today
@pohlpiano9 күн бұрын
@jbp246 I heard that, not compulsory in my country any more, though. In the 30's, French and German were common, too, not sure whether compulsory or not.
@pohlpiano9 күн бұрын
@jbp246 So in some countries it is still going on, some not (apart from certain schools).
@pohlpiano9 күн бұрын
@jbp246 And of course, English was less important then French at that time still, at least in my country. This has changed everywhere, I guess.
@joshuanelsen860227 күн бұрын
I can't study languages for 15 minutes today, because I watched this video for 62 minutes. And commented!
@coryjorgensen62227 күн бұрын
I mean, 15 minutes is better than 10, I guess. Have we considered, perhaps, 30 min. or an hour per day? Or how about more? Comprehensible input and plenty of it is the way to learn language well. There are no tricks, no gimmicks.
@sholayo26 күн бұрын
Check his channel he talks about that. He says he studies sometime for 6 hour a day or more, but that’s what he does for a living. His point is that 15 minutes a day if done systematically does wonders. But if you can confess an hour a day, that’s 4 x better ;)
@axelsoderlund478726 күн бұрын
what language should i learn after starting with englisch then learning spanisch and german
@andreabrs093116 күн бұрын
Romanian, then Turkish, then Hindi/Urdu
@axelsoderlund478716 күн бұрын
@@andreabrs0931 i choose turkish🔥
@RolandDerUnverbesserliche16 күн бұрын
i told my new india colleague : you choose a movie, that you know... now adjust the language spoken and the subtitles to the target language... voila...
@Anila777christ11 күн бұрын
I also love to learn different languages
@jeffwest203727 күн бұрын
Not convinced that this man is a hyper polyglot. But, he is definitely hyper!
@TheCompleteGuitarist27 күн бұрын
If you watch videos on his channel you will see he is quite calm and restrained in his delivery, this is the first time I saw him in conversation with another person. You have no reason to have any opinion on wether he is an authority on the subject but further exploration might provide you with an answer. Of course the interviewer hinted that before the recorded conversation they conversed in various languages.
@sholayo26 күн бұрын
Hmmm, unlike most hyper-polyglot-youtuber-influencers he is actual professor of linguistics at renowned university with solid body of work of peer-reviewed published scientific papers. But he obviously is not Internet personality selling you fluency in 3 weeks.
@Sam-shushu21 күн бұрын
There's only a handful of hyperpolyglots on YT that I absolutely know are real. Arguelles is one of them. Richard Simcot is another. Luca L. is another. These guys are the real deal, multiple langs at C1 or 2 (usually 5-6), so many more in B1 or B2 (B2 means you can go to college in that lang). I know there are several other Hyperpolyglots out there, I just can't confirm it for you. I know Richard really well, and he mentions Luca and Arguelles all the time.
@YogaBlissDance21 күн бұрын
@@Sam-shushu Yep Luca L., Richard S. is brilliant and the Prof. who never really shows off, but I just trust him as his methods work and he's worked at various universities so....
@vforvalorant101914 күн бұрын
There are videos on his channel of him speaking MSA very fluently (though not mistake-free), having discussions about Arabic literature with a professor of Arabic literature. He also taught *in Korean* at a Korean university, and uses french language books to learn new languages. I am ~C2 in German and live in German, and I still found it cognitively demanding enough to learn a new language (Arabic) through German that I gave that up and switched to learning through English. So....that's a few languages he knows pretty freaking well.
@Franck-kb7np20 күн бұрын
To me it is a lie. The thing is that they spent hours and hours to reach the level they have now (certainly not with 15mins a day). Once you got a good understanding of how works languages then you may want to do 15min a day but come on. Would you let someone build you house with 15mins of training per day?
@simonl370327 күн бұрын
I need to learn Lithuanian is there a system that would work ?
@Alec72HD27 күн бұрын
I know how to learn E-stoned, I mean E-stonian.
@MyWTFName15 күн бұрын
Problem with AI is it uses recent content from the internet for its data source to create the learning models: garbage in --> garbage out. The older, more substantive content is not digital and can't be accessed by an AI ingestion platform. AI might be a good tool to guide a process but will only get more inaccurate (hallucinate) as more and more digital data sources shut down access to their content to prevent copyright infringement and monetization without remuneration.
@shna486918 күн бұрын
I want to learn Arabic and german.how can you help me
@a.r.470710 күн бұрын
Just start learning mate.
@DNA350ppm27 күн бұрын
7:58 what is the problem with "modern" language learning? It is, simply put: English. With English as the foundation you can hardly learn and teach rationally, and viable inferences are difficult to make. Most of all English needs a spelling reform, and also a standard language that is understandable to all native speakers.
@Alec72HD27 күн бұрын
75% of native English speakers use American English. There is your standard English.
@kpopandotherplaylists251823 күн бұрын
. English is NOT the problem, and while there are multiple " Englishes " most native speakers can largely understand not only other native Englisheses, but can understand many non native speakers too. So, I call bullshit on your asinine assertion . A ludicrous and patently irrelevent gaslighting assertion ... If, say, a French speaker is learning Hindi or Chinese, what exactly is " English is the problem " about it..? Laughable clown world comment. Just stop.
@jaimerios809224 күн бұрын
15 MINUTES,HOW,BY INJECTION ? OTHERS SAY THAT YOU CAN LEARN A LANGUAGE WHILE SLEEPING SO I AM GOING TO WAIT UNTIL I AM DEAD . THEN,SLEEPING FOREVER I KNOW I WILL LEARN NOT ONE BUT MANY LANGUAGES WITHOUT ANY EFFORT,JUST BY MAGIC.
@zoomyzn25 күн бұрын
Are you the son of language lords?
@TBara-e5eКүн бұрын
We are rambling too much before sharing information. You lose the audience before you start saying anything significant.
@teachernisrinezenati548810 күн бұрын
15 years period is enough.
@monicaanonimo355112 күн бұрын
Très interessant ✨️👌
@kristimoore876328 күн бұрын
MSA is on my list, too!
@Climbing_Carmel_TODC27 күн бұрын
It is still available. They have an internet version too.
@Passiony-r20 күн бұрын
Everyone has a foreign language that can be a good match. Chinese is mine, not German.
@BesserGlauben26 күн бұрын
Doing ancient greek at the moment ;)
@haczabim28 күн бұрын
9:00 He didn't give any reason why the traditional method doesn't work! I'm out
@twodyport808028 күн бұрын
Prof AA did not say it didn't work. It obviously works. The style does not suit everyone though.
@jamberry136928 күн бұрын
👋 👋
@foljs585828 күн бұрын
If it doesn't work, it doesn't work. You can see for yourself and ask others to verify. What reason do you need? Things can not work even if we don't know the reason why that is.
@Alec72HD27 күн бұрын
As someone who became near native in L2 as an adult, I guarantee that traditional "grammar - translation" does NOT work.
@NearGoCrazy27 күн бұрын
When should I start speaking then?
@markc641126 күн бұрын
Immediately.
@NearGoCrazy25 күн бұрын
@ how many languages you know
@markc641125 күн бұрын
@@NearGoCrazy 3
@NearGoCrazy25 күн бұрын
@@markc6411 do you have discord or something that we can talk?
@daneculp473116 күн бұрын
Speakes many languages but gets off topic and rambles on when asked a question.
@cr-iv1el15 күн бұрын
Language learners are abstract random thinkers. Expect more conversation from those who can think in multiple languages.
@mikewallace304612 күн бұрын
A French company name what
@ajijar405810 күн бұрын
assimil course
@dianalind95827 күн бұрын
I received nothing
@dna921821 күн бұрын
The professor is passionate and so dedicated but must take an ADHD medication 😢
@arnosen810 күн бұрын
why?
@mustafapolat901428 күн бұрын
If 15 minutes is enough then why is this video more than an hour long?
@ichakamaiga737427 күн бұрын
😂
@eduardoidiomas521625 күн бұрын
🤔
@romiagua274624 күн бұрын
Rsrsrsrsrs hehehe Em um universo paralelo 15 minutos são contados diferente do nosso, é isso 😁
@angelol208920 күн бұрын
I'm sorry for the way your logic works. It's just unfortunate.
@eduardoidiomas521620 күн бұрын
@@mustafapolat9014 actually He did dozens of 15 minutes timeslots for hours on different languages while abroad in korea
@joseramonperezdelriogarcia908924 күн бұрын
Argüelles,not Arguelles
@tooter4u27127 күн бұрын
Fifteen minutes a day? Maybe for language prodigies. For the rest of us fifteen minutes a day is barely a warm up unless you are satisfied with only achieving a very low level of proficiency.
@Alec72HD27 күн бұрын
Prodigy or not, nobody will even reach intermediate from 15 min a day. I don't care if you do that for 50 years nonstop. Language attrition is faster for a beginner anyway.
@Sam-shushu21 күн бұрын
I think you misunderstand the context of this. The goal of the 15 minutes a day for a year is to get a solid A1, Low A2 under your belt, perhaps doing 6 to 12 languages simultaneously depending on your free time. To make further progress you need more time in each language, so you will have to make hard decisions after that.
@TalsonHacks28 күн бұрын
Unfortunately Assimil no longer publish or sell books
@elmadas27 күн бұрын
Assimil is still selling for what I can see online, where do you get the info that it does not sell anymore?
@TalsonHacks27 күн бұрын
@elmadas I tried to look for the Russian Assimil books, but the customer support said that they don't sell the books anymore, rather you'd pay for a subscription to the Russian Assimil mobile app.
@barmalini25 күн бұрын
I don't want gay propaganda in my language study, so I dropped Duolingo without any regret
@jamessixx766025 күн бұрын
Lmao! U r so straight up! 😂
@jba69321 күн бұрын
Creo que tú eres gay
@johnnyhall4221 күн бұрын
What do you mean? Is there propaganda in that? I’ve been allowing my children to use it to learn a language
@paradoxicalocus376121 күн бұрын
Wtf if gay propaganda lmao Gay people exist and there’s nothing wrong with that. If you got a problem with that that’s YOUR problem.
@barmalini21 күн бұрын
@@johnnyhall42 oh there's a lot of it. Women dating women, butcher being in love with baker etc. Those phrases would be still fine, but when they asked me to translate the phrase "I am gay" with no option to skip it, I had to give them my straigth middle finger. Too much is too much.
@bobpolyglot45218 күн бұрын
Hi, if you want to learn Arabic, you have to define before what is your objective. Depending on this you will start with MSA or with dialects like Moroccan Darija and so. But, if you learn MSA you'll be able to speak all other variant Arabic dialects ( Moroccan, algetien, libanese, Yemenite, Saoudite, Syrian, etc ....). BDW, I'm polyglot with more than 10 languages. You can contact me for more info to share with my experience and to build your roadmap to learn languages depending on your goals
@blueprintsymphonic26 күн бұрын
great channel
@spiritsplice15 күн бұрын
You will never get anywhere in 15 minutes. So tired of these silly gimmicks.
@harimonting0122 күн бұрын
No , it doesn't work
@spider266623 күн бұрын
Sorry, but this dull and insubstantial. A Clickbait thumbnail brought me here (I should have known better). So hard to find decent language videos now. They all seem to follow the same shallow, uninvolving, uninteresting patterns.
@bobpolyglot45217 күн бұрын
Professor, your 15minute learning language is enough for A1 & A2. But, seriously doesn't work for the interlediate level. I'm ployglot (fluent in more than 10 languages) and I disagree with you regarding your method. You'll never have an advanced level. Bleuve me. I'm teaching people and I have a lot of feedback, your method is just fir the beginners. By the way, Assimil is just gir rhe beginners .
@Karin-tl5pw22 күн бұрын
ΙI cannot even wake up at the same time!!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@TheMFKPlay23 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/mWLZlaqtlJ2Vq6c&ab_channel=Metatron%27sAcademy review of goluremi
@wilsonnicolini86143 күн бұрын
Pero demora una hora el videito
@Lexie810-b5r27 күн бұрын
You can get great audio input here on youtube with bilingual stories, they will read a sentence of a story in English then read the same sentence in target language. Polyglot Beats here on youtube does that well for multiple languages and there other channels for specific languages... its been helping me get passive listening and learning when going on walks