i think i spend more time watching videos about how to learn chinese than actually learning chinese lmao
@Yourfavoritediya9 ай бұрын
Same lol
@c.d.67738 ай бұрын
actually thats me and i think this is so funny HAHHSJSJ
@intothewoods228 ай бұрын
BRO THIS IS LITERALLY ME SINCE THE BEGINNING OF TODAY LMAO
@lil_ooog7 ай бұрын
@@intothewoods22SAMEE OMGG
@intothewoods227 ай бұрын
@@lil_ooog i ended up starting spanish dude
@Blueberryminty Жыл бұрын
I would only add: do waste time on writing. It actually really helps to solidify new characters and words in your memory. If you spend time deliberately writing down a character, it helps to focus on the components the character is build up off and just the mere physical interaction and movement of your muscles will help your memory. the more senses you involve with learning, the better the retention. It has helped me a lot in distinguishing characters that look similar, when writing them you become more aware of their differences.
@manifbaker Жыл бұрын
Eveyone learns differently. I find the act of writing them solidifies them in my memory too. The same even for writing something in English, I’m far more likely to remember if I’ve written it by hand, it’s just how my brain works.
@icyboy771z Жыл бұрын
I don't write ever since everything is typed out nowadays. everyone has different ways,.
@SuperGuitarboyz Жыл бұрын
I write in pinyin only. I know people who knew how to write long time ago then completly forgotnit due to the convienece of typing.
@samdobie6748 Жыл бұрын
I manage just fine reading, never bothered writing. I have never needed to. I always type in Chinese, but never write physically.
@Kongobongoes2007 Жыл бұрын
eyyy das what I was thinking.
@0VELVETVOICE011 ай бұрын
Peppa Pig is by far the best series for learning a language, because of the easy structured sentences and the easy vocabulary
@firezera11 ай бұрын
bro is setting me up
@GrassMonkey-zj4wr10 ай бұрын
Chinese pepper pig? Hang me, now.😂
@CheesecakeOnTheMoon9 ай бұрын
100% agree with this. Peppa pig and du Chinese are my go-to methods, especially when I'm looking for less formal input 🌻
@karoma78987 ай бұрын
spongebob too ... or should i say Bob Esponja
@khloe-he8gb7 ай бұрын
@@CheesecakeOnTheMoon do you interest in spoken Chinese?
@陈诚-i9f Жыл бұрын
If you learn to read the Chinese characters , you will be able to read the Chinese novel and trust me , its the gate to another galaxy.
@24Awakening11 ай бұрын
I really wanted to learn so i dont need to go for machine translation
@moonknight57439 ай бұрын
Fr chinese webnovels, socmed, and music is the one pushing me through
@d0liprhan8638 ай бұрын
@@moonknight5743socmed ?
@d0liprhan8638 ай бұрын
Any recommendations for beginners ?
@SteveLiang-m7v8 ай бұрын
@@d0liprhan863Things like novels and typical books r too hard for beginners honestly, try some easier thing I'll say.
@MotherEarth57311 ай бұрын
你真棒❤👍🏻 成功的秘诀就是”坚持”二字! 你一定可以的,看好你 ✨
@nagu77122 жыл бұрын
Haha, I watched Peppa pig to learn English many years ago:)
@handsanitizer1963 Жыл бұрын
I’m learning Chinese mandarin soon, anything u recommend ? Haha
@Arthur-qy6ru9 ай бұрын
@@handsanitizer1963 You can try some Chinese documentaries. But they are a little difficult for beginners. Chinese primary school textbooks are also a good choice.
@handsanitizer19639 ай бұрын
@@Arthur-qy6ru will try that 🤔
@MandarinVista11 ай бұрын
I love Andre's strategic tips like listening to Chinese media, getting a language exchange partner, reading material at your level, etc. I've found all those things crucial as well. My one addition would be singing along to Chinese songs! It really builds flair for tones and vocabulary.
@AngelaVlahos6 ай бұрын
arthurian knights
@nomadsoulkarma Жыл бұрын
My experience is that -no matter how much you've practiced your pronunciation and tones, when you use it they don't understand you even when you are certain you've said it correctly. But when I speak quickly without worrying about correct tones they understand me. This was advice I got from an American I met whose Chinese was quite fluent. When I speak slowly they never understand what you say. I don't know why this is but I've seen this with others too not just me. The problem with this is that when you speak fast the response is fast from the native.you're conversing with. You can ask them to speak slowly but one minute later they are back to speaking normal speed. For character memorization I find that staring at a character for 5 or more minutes solidifies it for me. You may forget how to pronounce it but you'll remember the shape, a bit like recognizing a face.
@appletvaccount1364 Жыл бұрын
they need a certain amount of words to calibrate their listening towards your pronunciation. So just start with some nonsense phrases 我来说一下 and continue talking. If you only say 1 or 2 short words and then stop they have no chance to calibrate, they need context. It's like pumping gasoline, the line needs to be filled before gasoline is flowing
@AYinNYC Жыл бұрын
Is it even possible for a new beginner to speak fast without thinking it’s right or wrong 😅?😂
@FrozenMermaid666 Жыл бұрын
Chinese is a category 10 language which is objectively impossible and unnecessarily complicated, and one can literally learn 5 or 10 or 15 easy and pretty languages like Icelandic + Norse / Dutch / English / Norwegian / Breton / Welsh etc and get to a fluent level in 2 or 3 years, instead of trying to learn such impossible languages with characters and tones and syllables instead of words that one cannot even understand, I don’t even understand how natives even learn to speak Chinese, since it all sounds the same like the same sounds said in different tones, how does one differentiate between the words or sounds, it isn’t a properly-constructed language with normal words and a good balance between short words and medium words and long words! I highly recommend learning 5 or 10 pretty and easy languages such as category 1 and category 2 languages (and 2 category 3 languages like Irish and Scottish Gaelic) instead, and, anything harder than a category 5 language is impossible and one will never get to a truly fluent level in such languages, not even in a decade, and even natives cannot learn most characters and cannot properly express complex ideas, and one is bound to forget the characters, regardless of how many times one sees them, as there is way too much detail for one’s hern to permanently remember, and Chinese doesn’t even have tenses, so it doesn’t even make sense, unlike Germanic languages which are the most logical languages ever with the most organized aspect and the easiest and most logical alphabet aka the Latin alphabet and the most logical grammar, so one should always choose wisely if one wants to be a successful polyglot, by only choosing the easy and pretty languages with normal letters and pretty and distinctive words that are naturally easy to memorize! I started learning languages on my own about one year ago, and I am learning 15+ languages at the moment, including the prettiest languages ever created Icelandic + Norse and Dutch and Norwegian that are as pretty / refined / poetic as English and too pretty not to know, and I am already upper intermediate level and close to advanced level in Icelandic and Norse and advanced level in Norwegian and upper advanced level in Dutch after only learning them for a few months, plus Icelandic pronunciation and Norse pronunciation are super easy category 1 pronunciations, and Dutch pronunciation also, so I can even pronounce the new words in these languages without practicing at all, and I can naturally pronounce them without accent, so it sounds like native pronunciation, and I highly recommend learning them! The other Germanic and the other pretty languages on my list are also gorgeous, so they are all a great option! Það er mikilvægt að læra Íslensku og FornNorrenu og Hollensku og Norsku, því þær eru alltof flottar og fullkomnar! 🇮🇸 🇳🇱 🇳🇴 🇸🇪 🇺🇸 🇩🇰 🇬🇧 🇩🇪 🇱🇺 🇮🇪 🇫🇴
@FrozenMermaid666 Жыл бұрын
By the way, my current levels are... - upper intermediate level in Old Norse / Icelandic / German - writer level in English + native speaker level in Spanish - upper advanced level in Dutch + advanced level in Norwegian - intermediate level in Swedish / Portuguese / French / Italian / Welsh - beginner level in Breton / Hungarian / Gothic / Latin / Faroese / Galician / Danish / Slovene - total beginner in Cornish / Manx / Irish / Scottish Gaelic / Aranese / Elfdalian / Gallo / Limburgish / Occitan / Luxembourgish / Catalan / East Norse / Ripuarian / Swiss German / Alemanic / Austrian German / PlatDeitsch / Greenlandic Norse / Friulian / Pretarolo / Sardinian / Neapolitan / Sicilian / Venetian / Esperanto / Walloon / Ladin / Guernsey / Norn / Burgundian / West Frisian / North Frisian / East Frisian / Yiddish / Afrikaans / Finnish / Latvian / Estonian etc (and the other languages based on Dutch / German / Norwegian / Italian / French that are referred to as ‘dialects’ but are usually a different language with different spelling etc) (I highly recommend learning Dutch / Icelandic + Norse + Faroese / Norwegian as they are so magical, as pretty / refined / poetic as English - all other Germanic and the other pretty languages on my list are also gorgeous, so they are all a great option!)
@FrozenMermaid666 Жыл бұрын
Norse and Icelandic are two of the prettiest languages I’ve ever seen and the languages that truly deserve the attention as they are too pretty not to know, with the most alpha aspect and sound and the coolest pronunciation rules (like Dutch and English) and with real gorgeous words like erfiði / yfir / haf / vindr / dyn / skegg / dróttinn / veit / drengr / fjall / hǫnd / fisksins / lengr / hvassir / rauðr / hvarr / grænn / hvat / líkligr / hǫss / afi / frændi / heitir / veð / hráka / þó / kvern / mælti / hét / setja / hinn / kveða / sinn / leið / brott / knerri / við / dýr / með / heyra / eða etc, and the word endings (like nir and inn and sins etc) and the letter combinations are so pretty, just like the word endings and letter combinations in English and Dutch and Norwegian, and Icelandic is very similar, and Faroese also, and Icelandic also has almost only gorgeous words like efni / verða / fer / eyra / nafni / hef / leita / hafið / drekka / líf / dreki / samviska / logn / vindinn / viska / hæna / garðinn / sófn etc - I can’t stop learning new pretty words in Old Norse and Icelandic (and the other pretty languages) and they are really áddìctive to look at and read and hear in lyrics etc, I’ve been listening to Skáld songs in Old Norse and Icelandic since I found the first song in Old Norse (Troll Kalla Mik) and I’ve memorized most of those lyrics!
@creativesoul7376 Жыл бұрын
I admire folks that can learn to read hanzi without handwriting them. I would never be able to distinguish between similar characters such as 己 and 已
@simplysimone1409 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your experience with us! I had so mich fun watching your video❤
@Henry-teach-Chinese-in-jokes Жыл бұрын
I’ve made many videos teaching Chinese language vividly and in a humorous way. I hope somebody can recommend my videos to those who want to learn Chinese.
@alchemist_one7 ай бұрын
Best of luck to you and I love the enthusiasm! That said, I do think writing is worth it. Writing Chinese every day has helped my reading a lot and also transformed my brain in a sense. I think it's worth it.
@khloe-he8gb7 ай бұрын
do you interest in spoken Chinese?
@WikiPeoplesАй бұрын
Really appreciated the honesty in this video... I'm in a rut after 1.5 months... Started out super enthusiastic but the progress has been so slow that I kind of want to give up.
@ramiabouhamdan Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the episode. You are absolutely right
@mukaij3660 Жыл бұрын
My daily Chinese homework as a 3rd grade student: read a new passage-write down the new words-look them up in dictionary and write down their meanings-find 10 synonyms for each-write them for 10 times
@MattapanCHC6 ай бұрын
This is the most useful comment.
@mukaij36606 ай бұрын
@@MattapanCHC thank you
@讙Ай бұрын
damn thats smart
@etienneonearth5 ай бұрын
Congratulations man! I've been living in Xiamen for one year now and so many people never give Mandarin a proper go. Not uncommon to meet people who have been there for 15-20 years and speak virtually zero Chinese. The feeling of reward you get when you've put in so much effort and you finally get to some "non-trivial" conversations is priceless! Thanks a lot for sharing your insights.
@pembepenguen9220 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm learning Chinese for the past couple of months and I love it, even though it is difficult at most of the time. I feel like I don't see a progress to my studies (and tbh I can't say I spend so much time on it outside of my school curriculum, but still I'm trying my best) I was feeling a bit demorilazed about it and your video made me feel better
@andré-8888 Жыл бұрын
加油!
@icyboy771z Жыл бұрын
@@andré-8888 Keep at it bro. Don't study books do things like listening to music and watching dramas and learning Chinese characters from there. That's basically what I did to become native-like level in Chinese.
@vanielaful2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Andre! I love your content and had to follow immediately! :D
@andré-88882 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the support!
@Henry-teach-Chinese-in-jokes Жыл бұрын
I’ve spent about 100,000 hours studying English humor and Western culture, and many years studying Chinese culture. My native language is Chinese. I teach Chinese in humorous way and with cute pictures. Hope somebody recommend my videos to those who want to learn Chinese.
@mukaddastaj5223 Жыл бұрын
subscribed! Your channel seems fun🤭
@Maninha48211 ай бұрын
what is the name of your channel? please
@biyongwuhan11 ай бұрын
@@Maninha482 Henry Guo Teach Chinese in Jokes and Tell Jokes, or you can just click his name above. enjoy...
@ZoomZoomBoom2411 ай бұрын
Just had a look at your channel, and I've subscribed.
@얼음물-g2f9 ай бұрын
100,000 hours are about 4,000 days > 10 years
@ZiyinSu6 ай бұрын
thank you, it‘s so pratical. I’m gonna teach Chinese to my schoolmate in high school in America. It is amazing to know how people think when they first learn this language.
@muneebdanish12702 жыл бұрын
I will be moving to Sichuan in two months, Your videos helped me plan my tours, Chinese learning classes and much more🙂 thanks bro. hope to meet you one day
@cafecake Жыл бұрын
How is Sichuan so far?
@muneebdanish1270 Жыл бұрын
@@cafecake great but hard to communicate with locals🤣
@cafecake Жыл бұрын
@@muneebdanish1270 haha love it, Im planning on starting my mandarin learning journey soon, any advice and ways to start?
@muneebdanish1270 Жыл бұрын
@@cafecake share ur wechat id with me
@aidenharris3189 Жыл бұрын
It really takes time to acquire this language, the most important thing is trying to enjoy your study journey and make something you learned practical by any means.
@alma51756 ай бұрын
Hey! I agree with most of what you say. I just wanted to add that I'm studying traditional Chinese over 6 months in Taiwan and writing didn't help me at the beginning (that's what i thought back then) and i can remember the caracteres so easily now. I see one caracter on the street and i can write it right away. It also helps with my memory, different ways to save information on our brain helps more
@FinanceAlex6 ай бұрын
Great job!! Chinese really is hard - especially for a scandinavian
@FreelancerAlpha1-1 Жыл бұрын
I’m so glad to have found your channel. I’ve got a year left in my English Ed degree, I’m going to then teach 11th and 12th grade English for a few years to save up some money, and then go spend a year in China learning the language so I can also teach English abroad. Cheers!
@tata-n8q8u Жыл бұрын
English and Chinese have much in common, because they are both analytical languages, where parts of words don`t change so much to show the relations between the words. In Chinese it`s just more obvious. And I wouldn`t agree that writing is a waste of time. It really helps me to memorize characters and recognize them afterwards. I am also finishing HSK 4 after one year of study from zero
@barrelrolldog Жыл бұрын
nah, there's very little in common. I've had classmates from multiple different countries, they all learn chinese faster than westerners. He is right about writing too. I've spent a whole lot of time on it. Nothing wrong with it if you enjoy it but the ROI truly is weak. I write only when i need to now. I refuse to waste any time practicing it.
@yurichang3056 Жыл бұрын
I actually feel like he's quite right about the similarity, if compared to spanish or french or other western latin language @@barrelrolldog
@barrelrolldog Жыл бұрын
@@yurichang3056 Based off what? I can't say i have seen any one from those language pick up chinese quickly. I have however seen korean, vietnamese and japanese (with bad pronociation) pick chinese up quicker than others.
@yurichang3056 Жыл бұрын
bruhhh I already told you compared to spanish and other western languages... It's just truism that korean vietnamese and japanese can pick chinese up faster cuz for hundreds of years they've been impacting others...@@barrelrolldog
@barrelrolldog Жыл бұрын
@@yurichang3056 So again, what are you basing your chinese and latin languages on? sounds like nothing. I'd even say from what i have seen french speakers have an even harder time of it. Oh its a truism now but everywhere else online people will happily tell you that japanese has almost zero in common with chinese.
@elllllllle939 Жыл бұрын
I don’t why I feel somehow happy to see mandarin learners suffering. 😂 because I see myself in you guys. It’s just for me it’s learning English but the pain is the same.
@ImperialAkio Жыл бұрын
😭
@noufn2308 Жыл бұрын
English is easier 🥲
@ImperialAkio Жыл бұрын
@@noufn2308 Depends on what your native language is
@flashgordon6510 Жыл бұрын
English must be a beast to learn. It's always changing and so inconsistent.
@milou22rh Жыл бұрын
English is easy. Try German…
@Iisdabest889 Жыл бұрын
100% agree. Total immersion is the best way to learn, especially if you're a lazy person like me. It motivates you more, and you very quickly get used to the speed in which native chinese speakers talk. If I was in Shanghai or Beijing I'd have let my laziness get the better of me and resort to English whenever I encountered a problem. At least here I have to use Chinese if I want to see the doctor, dentist, order meituan, buy things etc. And locals are very tolerant and willing to help you improve.
@oiocha5706 Жыл бұрын
I've never met anyone with the patience to talk to me in Chinese. They immediately go get someone who speaks English
@Iisdabest889 Жыл бұрын
@@oiocha5706 Just pretend you don't speak English so they have no choice.
@camerong9391 Жыл бұрын
@@oiocha5706unfortunately that usually means your chinese isn't good enough. If you have good enough pronunciation/tones/grammar, and are easily understandable, chinese people will love talking with you- even if you use super basic words to communicate. On the other hand, if you're not easily understandable/ have a strong accent, they will probably just think it would be easier to speak English.
@eliaszeray79815 ай бұрын
Informative! Thank u.
@Shin-777 Жыл бұрын
Hey Andre! It's so impressive and inspiring seeing you learning Chinese as a foreigner! Chinese is one of my native languages, and your Chinese is great, keep it up!
@ChineseKey884 күн бұрын
You’re amazing! Your pronunciation is great! 😄 I grew up in China and later went to Australia for studies, so I really understand how difficult it can be to learn a new language-vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation all feel like challenges. 😅 That’s why I really admire you. I’m a KZbin beginner, and I share some Chinese learning resources on my channel. (I just started updating, so the content may not be much yet, but I’ll keep working hard! 💪) I hope I can help you! 📚😊 Feel free to ask me any questions about China too! 🇨🇳 By the way, can you teach me English? 😅
@boliviareports7 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience
@rsu825 ай бұрын
good advice, its helpful for my English learning, help me know whats different in both of two languages
@PopTurkey7 сағат бұрын
I recently started to learn chinese and I have set a very hard task to push and better myself and that us to be able to read and understand and speak mandarin in 1 year, even if its at the intermediate level.
@terryfinkel6755 Жыл бұрын
I've started learning chinese a few months ago, about 3-4h per week. As I have an excellent visual memory, it does in fact help me a lot to write the characters. Obviously I know I won't ever write a letter in chinese or stuff like that, but without writing the characters it would be much harder to remember them.
@manifbaker Жыл бұрын
I agree and can relate to this. Writing helps me too.
@Kkholoud14 Жыл бұрын
أنا أيضاً تساعدني الكتابة في تذكر معني الكلمات والعبارات وحفظها أسرع حظاً موفق للجميع ❤
@Kkholoud14 Жыл бұрын
@@Mochacoffee224 谢谢你🫶🏻
@Braveplantt Жыл бұрын
you don't know chinese, it's not even a language lol
@FrozenMermaid666 Жыл бұрын
There is no logical reason to try to learn Chinese or other similar languages, all should be learning the gorgeous and magical languages Icelandic and Norse and Dutch and Norwegian etc (which are as pretty / refined / poetic as English) instead of trying to learn Chinese or other similar languages - language learning should be fun, and one should choose wisely, by only choosing the pretty and easy languages that look pretty and sound pretty and cool, and that have that perfect flow and harmony, why would someone try to learn Chinese or Japanese or Korean etc is beyond me, they are objectively impossible and unnecessarily complicated and they don’t even sound / look good and have mostly non-pretty words or just random one-syllable words said over and over in different tones, I don’t even know how they can be considered languages honestly, and most languages that exist also, as they look and sound like a total mess, the most random sounds słæpt 2gether, very few languages are properly-constructed by dudes that have natural artistic talent and a mind on the logical side that knew how to create proper words that are pretty and balanced and in perfect harmony with the other words, such as the Germanic languages and the modern Celtic languages and Hungarian and Galician / Portuguese / Latin etc and Slovene etc!
@chapstick-lr2ir6 ай бұрын
Pleco mentioned!!!!! i use that app all the time as a kid when learning chinese.
@jane-fs2kb Жыл бұрын
As a Chinese, I fell the same way when I studied English,English is soooooo hard to learn
@Neptxxxxn Жыл бұрын
意满离
@foreveren5137 Жыл бұрын
I'd like to say it's easier than japanese and german or....I mean, english is the easiest language on the planet in my mind.
@SMCwasTaken Жыл бұрын
Wait till you try Spanish
@Neptxxxxn11 ай бұрын
@@SMCwasTaken The pronunciation of Spanish is easier I think
@worldofgames.700011 ай бұрын
你说的太对了
@olsefskimatt346911 ай бұрын
I love writing. I like it way more than learning. Haha. best feeling when you get the perfect stroke you were going for.
@anthonyrobertson2011 Жыл бұрын
I've found it's better NOT to get yourself too much in a twist over learning and understanding. You train yourself to be in this overhyped drive to "learn it fluently" which just works against you. You have to relax and trust your brain is working it all out even though it doesn't seem like it. Sure you need to focus, getting too relaxed doesn't work so well either, but when learning your own language you are relaxed and are never in this hyper state to force it, except on rare occassions maybe. If I miss phrases I miss them and don't get in such a twist, and just look things up, move on, and just keep learning and getting input.
@williambreeze26592 ай бұрын
Interesting perspective!
@FlowLikeWater429 Жыл бұрын
Props to your dedication from Denmark! 你做得好,谢谢
@harice1Ай бұрын
It is absolutely correct about dont spend time on writing Chinese. Typing makes it more importance nowadays. There are more Americans having difficulties spelling English words correctly, but have no problem communicating with different people in the States. Just live happily and life goes on.
@maydelosh3 ай бұрын
Hi there, I like your channel and appreciate your honesty about learning Chinese. I am a professional Chinese teacher in U.S. I think that your tips are very helpful for language learners. I recommend Peppa Pig shows to my students too. 100% agree with your immersion style of language learning. As for learning Chinese characters, I humbly think that the most effective way would be learning them from the most common ones to the least common. With the top 140 most commonly used characters, you can recognize about 50% the characters in daily readings! After having learned the top 3,000 characters, you can read more than 99% of the characters. And, another effective way to learn Chinese characters is learning by the radicals (偏旁部首). This way, they are easier to understand and remember. For example, if you use the radical 女(meaning “woman”), you can easily learn many of the characters with this radical: 妈 (using the meaning of 女 and the sound of “马”). Similar examples are: 姐、妹、姑、娘、嫂、婶,etc. They are just my humble suggestions for Chinese language learners. Hope they help. Thank you for your great videos! May DeLosh
@chunqingxia31142 жыл бұрын
Very impressive Andre!
@qingqinzhou1653 Жыл бұрын
If don’t be stressful, practice writing the characters will be useful. But it is right to spend more time in listening and speaking.
@masterchief167 Жыл бұрын
You are an inspiration man
@FlightDeckMagazin Жыл бұрын
I learned Chinese and the best way to learn is to have Chinese girl friend who is NOT interested in learning another language! Learning Chinese Characters is difficult but I wrote some years every day 2 or 3 hours characters. It's like meditation and really relaxing. There are books which explain the structure of the characters and how they are developed. You will see the picture in the character, for example riding is a man sitting on a horse. If you do not learn Chinese Characters you are lost outside Chinas big cities. One day in the morning in Beijing I was surprised I dreamed in Chinese. That's the point everything changed. Do not think it is difficult or could be wrong. Chinese is one of the easiest languages on earth. No difficult grammar, everything is simple. That's the reason they need the characters to explain something in books and newspapers. High level languages using only a few characters and difficult grammar. Never judge a language by characters!!!!! During school my English teacher offered me, if I quit English lessons, he would rate me medium grade. But if I would continue to study English, I would fail. I was so proud and happy to learn Chinese later, because it was much easier than English. Visual learning is my favorite way of learning and I always struggle with grammar. Korean characters are world heritage because they are so simple and easy to learn. Korea used Chinese Characters before. So is Korean easier than Chinese? No, absolute not! You can learn all Korean Characters in one day! But the grammar is so difficult it needs years to understand a conversation. They can express emotions, sarcasm, irony, complex situations with grammar and it needs no additional characters like in Chinese. I'm learning Korean now for more than 5 years but still Level 1 or 2. It is horrible. BUT why could they use Chinese characters earlier? One of my friends in China told me, in his hometown people speaking similar to Korean. 56 minorities living in China and they have their own languages. Chinese we learn is a language created to communicate with all minorities based on the characters, which are unique for whole China. Minorities are speaking Putonghua because this is needed during work and daily life. But there is always a level behind this, where they use their local language in thinking and speaking. That's the reason in Chinese TV you always have Chinese subtitles in movies and shows. If you can not read and write Chinese characters you are lost outside of large cities. Even you can speak fluently Putonghua, you need the characters in poor areas where people speaking local dialects. Chinese Characters in Korea were difficult to learn, so many many people couldn't write or read and the country was poor. The best decision was to create characters, which are easy and fast to learn. In Korean Characters there is always Consonant - Vowel - Consonant - Vowel - Consonant - Vowel .. This is so easy to type on computers and smartphones and connects logic of computer systems with language. It's a reason why South Korea is developing so fast in modern technology. Compared to Korean, how difficult would it be to use Chinese Characters for computer programming? How easy would it be if there is a key with a picture of a man and a key with a horse? You would press the horse and next the key with the man and everybody would understand riding something. Next you press the key with a car and everybody knows you riding a car. But it needs too many keys. Putonghua is not a high developed language. Sure, spoken dialects could be. But Putonghua is the simplified way to make it possible to communicate between them. Maybe someone knows the bells in China. In ancient time they are also simplified and used in daily life. There is no clapper inside. Why? The volume of the bell could be used to measure liquids. The weight of the bell could be used to weigh the grain or fruit at market. And the sound for tuning instruments. The goal, like writing, was to achieve standardization in society. That was a good idea 2000 years ago. But today it is no longer appropriate. The Chinese have a problem understanding irony or complex jokes. Pie in the face is still funny.
@骑着熊猫去打酱油 Жыл бұрын
actually putonghua is totally based on bejing dialect. which is called guanhua in the ancient time. so putonghua is of course a developed language, like the other languages with a long history in the world. Do you think Putonhua is a human made language? no, it is the bejing dialect.
@骑着熊猫去打酱油 Жыл бұрын
and looks like you didn't type Chinese with keyboard, because you said it needs many keys for typing Chinese characters.
@Blurrlp Жыл бұрын
I dont agree with u on the coding part... U can just use pinyin. 真的很简单啊,几秒就能打出字来。跟用键盘打出英语没什么区别啊..?
Hey, thank you for shooting this video. I hope to reach intermediate level in a year
@isaiahmcclure8894 Жыл бұрын
Achieving HSK 6 after 1 year is crazy haha. Been living in China 5 years and just started HSK 6 half a year ago
@jiayilim198610 ай бұрын
I had a Japanese and a Korean friend who both learned to speak English in like 3 months. I'm not sure if Chinese is that much harder?
@agathafang2955 Жыл бұрын
This is very helpful, thanks very much
@e-genieclimatique Жыл бұрын
in brief: The video titled provides insights into the creator's experience of learning Chinese after living in China for a year. 1. **Introduction**: - Andre marks one year since he moved to China and shares his experience with learning Chinese. - He mentions the challenges of learning Chinese, especially for native English speakers, due to the vast differences between the two languages. 2. **Challenges**: - Chinese is often considered the most difficult language to learn, especially for English speakers. - Learning Chinese to fluency requires approximately 2,400 hours. - Pronunciation is tricky due to similar sounding characters differentiated by tones. - Chinese doesn't use tenses like English; instead, it relies on word order. 3. **Motivation**: - Initially, Andre was motivated to learn Chinese because of the unique experience of being a white person speaking Chinese. - However, motivation fluctuated, especially during challenging times. He emphasizes the importance of having a solid motive. 4. **Experience in China**: - Upon arrival, Andre knew only a few phrases but felt like a "helpless child." - Over the year, he adapted to life in China and found speaking even intermediate Chinese very helpful. - Despite China's focus on English education, there's limited English information available, especially in smaller cities. 5. **Learning Tips**: - Living in the right environment helps. For instance, living in a third-tier city where fewer people speak English can be beneficial. - Engage with Chinese communities, even in your own city. - Listen to Chinese audio and video content. - Having Chinese friends or partners can aid in language learning. - For reading, choose material suitable for your level. Andre uses a translator pen to help with unfamiliar characters. - Focus on speaking, listening, and reading rather than writing. Typing in Pinyin is more practical than writing Chinese characters. - Andre recommends apps like Pleco, Quizlet, and Hello Talk for learning. 6. **Conclusion**: - Learning Chinese is rewarding, especially as foreigners aren't expected to speak it. - It's fulfilling to communicate with locals, understand their culture, and connect through their language. - Andre encourages viewers to have a genuine interest in learning for success and thanks them for watching.
@Kkholoud14 Жыл бұрын
شكرالك لقد أختصرت بشكل جميل جداً ❤
@levipierpont Жыл бұрын
Thanks, AI
@appletvaccount1364 Жыл бұрын
should have added “in 200 words or less” to your prompt
@louvetteuy8610 Жыл бұрын
It helps me when I write characters, and understand radicals, depends on preference.
@reuben5757 Жыл бұрын
First learn as many survival phrases as possible, second learn as many survival phrases as possible, third learn as many survi......it helps your mental health and gets you out of the terrified helpless feeling, which can hold you back. 4th learn the radicals and characters you see everywhere especially near home and work, after a few months you will see them and just process the meaning...no translation to English, this grounds you, reduces the alienation feeling which is a huge mind trip . When I lived in Chongqing the dialect was a daunting task, often characters were the only safety net but in Xi'an it was way easier to understand people. 5th Go on walks , spend time in busy areas, just listen to the conversations all around you. 6th You don't need to write thousands of characters, but the first 200 in HSK are a massive help, and it's really not about the writting it's remembering and recognizing them. And no matter what you do you will be unbalanced, like you might be good at reading or listening and struggle with speaking...at some point one of these areas will hold you back. Because of smartphones pinyin is important, I only see the older generations 55+ drawing characters on their phones, young people use pinyin and select the character from the many options that pop up on screen.
@Precious-wrldtr1tu Жыл бұрын
I have started learning too but I procrastinate a lot so I haven't even reached hsk1 as I'm still learning the tones.
@acetown22632 жыл бұрын
English and Chinese use the same grammar structure, that's so huge
@ephraim.478 ай бұрын
Thanks Sir. This inspired me a lot to be fluent in Chinese!❤
@khloe-he8gb7 ай бұрын
hi do you interest in spoken Chinese?
@jmp0tato2 жыл бұрын
Very nice experience sharing! Like your video.
@sara-hy3xy Жыл бұрын
English is complicated for Chinese people too😂😂. There are so many grammar rules!!
@CherikoM Жыл бұрын
😂太tm真实了,It's so hard to remember so many words changes when tenses or person changes
@RovexHD7 ай бұрын
You don’t want to learn Russian 😂😊
@myalways50526 ай бұрын
The interesting thing about English is, although there are so many grammatical rules, there are actually more exceptions to the rules. After all that time learning the rules, remember that over half the time, they don't apply, and it's really very arbitrary, there's no rule to govern when rules do and don't apply 😂 It's fine, a minority of native English speakers have a firm grasp on grammar. You could take two English Language graduates, considered to be proficient in Grammar, and watch them correct each other all day 😂
@queenme76915 ай бұрын
😅i personally don't think English tense is complex. It's actually one of the simplest. It's mostly only the pronoun he/she where an 's' is added, but I understand you if you are a Chinese speaker. Anyways,you can try french 😂😂😂😂it has so many conjugations and rules with exceptions.@@CherikoM
@queenme76915 ай бұрын
😅i personally don't think English tense is complex. It's actually one of the simplest. It's mostly only the pronoun he/she where an 's' is added, but I understand you if you are a Chinese speaker. Anyways,you can try french 😂😂😂😂it has so many conjugations and rules with exceptions.@@CherikoM
@estefaniavillaririberri34126 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this! I am a Spanish living in UK and I started to learn Chinese (in my second language lol) back in January. I do write in hanzi and in pinyin and as you said, I really feel that takes so much time since a single lesson cant take me over an hour and I just learned a few of words when I finish, but I love it and it actually helps me to focus and to memorise... At the present I am able to recognise some characters straight away and is so rewarding. What app would you say is the best in order to practise conversation? Struggling with this...at the moment Peppa Pig is my best resource as well!
@danielwhite84775 ай бұрын
Yes, it is worth it.
@肯奇塔姆-l7m7 ай бұрын
these two language are so different in many aspect,when Andre said"it will cost almostly 2800 hours to speak mandarin fluently. for a native English speaker",i realize as a chinese native speaker,so do i.i can accelerate the retention by costing more hours per day,but this procession still needs approximately 5 years.
@mgabor6936 Жыл бұрын
I'd say if you don't have to write the language, you just want to use Chinese for conversational purposes mostly relying on Pinyin, it's not that difficult and you can achieve fast results. Writing the hanzi, reading and passing tests are another thing though.
@rexnemo10 ай бұрын
Recently I've been watching a Chinese Anime about a woman who helps people and ghosts it is called "Fairies Album " . It has English subtitles and the spoken language is Zhongwen . I catch some of the words and this makes me really happy as I must have learnt something along the way . I guess my motivation to learn Chinese is just because I find the language and culture of China so intriguing . It is the very differences to English that I find most intriguing and I'm really in no rush to gain any proficiency , I'm just enjoying the journey . 🤔😊
@gabrielt.3181 Жыл бұрын
Seeing him watching Peppa Pig on TV made me laugh. He even shook his head trying to emulate a kid 😂. Nice guy
@directxxxx71 Жыл бұрын
When I learned English in university days, I listened and sang a lot of English songs too like the ones from Westlife boyband 😂😂😂
@lhy_Ellie2 жыл бұрын
Just watched your changdu traveling video. Really like it
@jasonshih3633 Жыл бұрын
Im a native speaker and I honestly think the hardest part is really just writing. I always thought speaking was actually not that hard, except the tonal part. Its the writing thats a nightmare. If you thought Kanji was hard, well the entire mandarin writing is just Kanji everywhere in essence. But maybe because Im so fluent I have a hard time figuring out why ppl have hard time learning it. I think its also worth mentioning most ppl probably learn thru hanyu pinyin which i didnt. I learned zhuyin instead.
@dmitriyaleksandrovich4443 Жыл бұрын
было бы круто если бы они перевели Три Кота.) Прикольно наблюдать за тем как взрослый дядька сидит и внимательно смотрит детский мультик, но за этим скрывается другой глубокий смысл )
@thegirlonpointe9866 Жыл бұрын
My native language is german and I thought having german or english as native language would make no difference in learning chinese but then I just looked at that ü and that ü looked at me and I knew I had a small teeny tiny advantage
@pavielin Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your suggestion.
@ghaidaa.s.m3922 Жыл бұрын
Good job thanks to share your experience good luck .
@shirleyyi9140 Жыл бұрын
加油!To tell you the truth, as a native speaker of Chinese, I found Japanese most difficult to learn(who can believe that? There so many Chinese characters in Japanese, right?) Today also marks one year of me begining to learn Japanese as well, yet I fould myself not much improved...But like you said, if it takes 6-7 years to learn a difficult language to fluency, so be it. Let's go!
@TheMoniMode Жыл бұрын
I am learning chinese and Japanese, by far japanese is the most difficult, so frustrating. In the other hand chinese aint that hard
@shirleyyi9140 Жыл бұрын
Hat off to you! Japanese is killing me...but I just want so much to understand what my favorite athlete say in his native language. So I will definitely press on! Good luck to you!@@TheMoniMode
@TheMoniMode Жыл бұрын
@@shirleyyi9140 加油 💪🏼💪🏼
@adapienkowska2605 Жыл бұрын
'takes 6-7 years to learn a difficult language to fluency' that's difficulty for English native speakers. There are no universally difficult languages. But yeah, people overestimate the similarities between Japanese and Chinese.
@umargul564411 ай бұрын
Great job sir thanks for uploading such informative knowledge ❤
@cheaire Жыл бұрын
bro. im half chinese but i live outside china. i have studied chinese since kindergarden till now highschool. thats a little over a decade. and i can only barely pass hsk4.. my ancestors would be crying blood rn
@TheBaroness8 ай бұрын
I loved your video Andre...you give really great advice which also serves for learning other tough languages.😁😁😁
@nicoleraheem11952 жыл бұрын
The intro was so relatable. 😆
@FrankCastleTIGАй бұрын
I'm really curious how easy you found it at first? I ask this because SO FAR (working through Paul Noble's two Chinese courses.- def only beginner level) I'm legit finding it reasonable.
@shadrachwilson12117 ай бұрын
I really wanna learn this language bro
@Seraphina-n7c3 ай бұрын
不是,人家中文口音已经比我的根准- His Chinese pronunciation is already better than mine bro Congrats on getting this far! Although I'm a native, I remember my pronunciation getting worse as I wasn't speaking it as much. Never would have been able to practice 20 minutes a day, never mind an hour. Respect
@chinglish-teacher Жыл бұрын
谢谢你,说的很好呀!
@matildawolfram4687 Жыл бұрын
Interesting video! Many thanks to the author of the channel for the recommendations! The problem with many people is that they want to take a "magic pill" or get "secret knowledge" and immediately have skills and abilities. However, the truth of life is that knowledge, skills, and abilities do not come by themselves. You can't learn a foreign language without doing anything, without wasting your time and effort, just like you can't learn to ride a bike lying on a comfy couch, listening to lectures and watching videos about "modern methods of learning" on a bike. To really learn something, you have to really practice every day. You're going to fall down while you're learning, and you're going to get bumps - that's normal! The ups and downs of learning are an integral part of our lives. Motivation from success and depression from failure will always be your study companions. However, every student has problems in his or her studies that he or she lacks the knowledge to solve. It can be: poor memorization of words; no progress in language learning; the student can speak, but does not understand speech by ear; misunderstanding of grammar; incorrect pronunciation, etc. Agree that a problem you don't know how to solve is very demotivating. In order to find the answer to our question we have to spend a lot of time to read videos, articles and books by polyglots. In today's world, we have to solve problems as quickly as possible. I don't have time to study and analyze a huge amount of information. My goal is to master the basic knowledge of a foreign language as quickly as possible and already start earning money effectively in the international arena. I settled on the practical guide by Yuriy Ivantsiv " Polyglot's Notes: practical tips for learning foreign language". This book is always in my bag. If I have a problem while learning a language, I quickly find the answer in this book. There are many different techniques and tips for learning a foreign language in Polyglot Notes. I have made my own individual schedule and plan for language learning. Now I know what I am going to study, how I am going to study, when I am going to study and what results I am going to achieve. No problem could stop me! With an effective language learning plan my professional skills are more and more in demand internationally every day. Friends, don't stop there! Everyone has talents that millions of people around the world need! Learn the language and make your ideas and dreams come true! Thanks to the author of the channel for the informative and useful video! Your videos motivate me.
@ChangHit003 ай бұрын
Just be able to understand and speak and read is enough
@boostnicho68918 ай бұрын
is that Changzhou? I literally saw my home in the first clip, near the stadium.
@justinmodessa54444 ай бұрын
It's not the most difficult language for sure. There's a lot in common between English and Chinese. Both use svo. I started learning 20 years ago and I'm still learning a lot but progress goes in waves. The key is to memorize tons of vocab. I just finished memorizing the Hsk 9 list and it took about three years. But actually using the words right and being able to do that will probably take another five years. So even getting to level six is just scratching the surface. So yeah even after 20 years to talk just like they do with all of the different idioms and expressions still evades me. Realistically it probably takes about 30 years to get to around native level
@rictusjas1014 Жыл бұрын
It’s quite often that even the Chinese native speakers forget how to write the Characters correctly, let alone foreigners. That’s because the formation of hanzi has nothing to do with it’s pronunciation, which is unique in the world. Basically, the Characters are like the irregular Symbols and you have to rely on rote memorization.
@nouhailabourass77802 жыл бұрын
If you need any help with Arabic ! I am here mate! And good job👌🏻🥰
@abhinavchauhan7864 Жыл бұрын
Can you help me up with arabic?
@johnyblitz97742 ай бұрын
I heard English is not being taught anymore in primary school in China, so many teachers are out of a job? Is this true?
@queenfilmknowledge80076 ай бұрын
I would say for me I've been learning Chinese for over 6 years now. And in my opinion, I think writing is only important if you're going to utilize it in a career or area that involves you having to writing Chinese characters. Like I am Chinese teacher/tutor and translator. And for me it's crucial to know how to write Chinese characters because If I myself don't even know how to write the character I and teaching that's a problem. So, I think yes, it's important to know how to write Chinese if you're going to be using the characters in some shape or form. But if you plan not ever writing Chinese at all than I don't think it's necessary (Although I think it's fun to write haha)
@TheBilly Жыл бұрын
2:20 English also has aspect and mood in addition to tense. Language learners often say "tense" when they actually mean one of these, because we're not strict about this terminology in English e.g. learners of Spanish often whinge about the subjunctive.....that's the subjunctive MOOD, not the subjunctive TENSE; there are different tenses to use in the subjunctive mood (You might have heard that "get scrod" joke about the pluperfect subjunctive.....)
@gaelleferuzi6616 Жыл бұрын
the Peppa pig part was too relatable 😂
@Jaime-z8j5 ай бұрын
I definitely don't speak Mandarin, but I highly recommend to learn any language one word per day, then two, then three and that's where the magic begins. Your brain needs time to learn and can only digest small bits at a time. It's more practical to start trying to master the pronunciation of one single word per day
@nabaa3891 Жыл бұрын
I'm learning korean As an Arabic native speaker ، I'm having fun and It has the easiest writing system But the grammar part is difficult ، because there are a lot of grammatical expressions .
@audreykas1892 Жыл бұрын
江健, 不错啊! 😅😅努力努力再努力
@good2freelance1 Жыл бұрын
The only way to learn chinese is to interact with the locals, watch lots of tv dramma and read and have fun. Fun is the best way to learn and improve. Like playing sports, if not fun you don't improve.
@veronicariana22958 ай бұрын
谢谢您 分享经验。 有帮厨的
@francegamble1 Жыл бұрын
I actually hate using the pinyin keyboard. Once my screen isn't cracked anymore, I like using the writing keyboard.
@Mac-w9c Жыл бұрын
am also learning Chinese listening to music and watching movies in Chinese also to learn
@FindSomethingInteresting Жыл бұрын
I can teach you Chinese, can you teach me English? 🥰
@yimengxuezhongwen11 ай бұрын
Can you tell us more about the translator pen you use?
@djihane8514 Жыл бұрын
I am going to start learning chineese but I still afraid I won't be able to do that and am an Arabic native speaker 🙃
@loringogh-cw8nw Жыл бұрын
think about your motivation for learning Chinese
@blackpinkfan8806 Жыл бұрын
My son spent 3 months at primary school in China and he could talk to us in Madarin by typing pinyin which would be transferred to characters easily by the logiciel. Of course that is his mother language because he was born in China.