French Military Techniques to Learn a Language FAST

  Рет қаралды 263,605

Olly Richards

Olly Richards

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 383
@storylearning
@storylearning Жыл бұрын
🇫🇷💪🏼Are you ready for the full story? Check it out here! 👉🏼kzbin.info/www/bejne/gXO9qXiVh7qUmK8
@lilidesbelons4093
@lilidesbelons4093 9 ай бұрын
We have 5 millions victimes that give ordres to the fake military ,we have the cadavre of their Nevers and the history of the fight ... military in your imagination man
@kurtsteiner8384
@kurtsteiner8384 11 ай бұрын
Its called total immersion and is a good way to learn a language. Any language you have to use it.
@ianpeden2906
@ianpeden2906 10 ай бұрын
No, you need to learn by comparing the new language to languages you already know, otherwise the new language is just a noise, and you are guessing what is meant. Better to be told what the new language means and then use it. That is how people learn languages in a bilingual environment.
@breadjinnie5495
@breadjinnie5495 11 ай бұрын
This is a great method. My French teacher wasn't this strict. But our midterms and finals were not a test. We had to go to a restaurant as a class and only speak French. I didn't realize how effective her methods were until years later. I graduated in 2002, and to this day, I still understand and can speak some French. I haven't studied it much after high school. I would every once in a while listen a French podcast. I watched Lupin in French with French subtitles, and I still understood most of it. I can't really write it well, but I can understand it. I am more focused on Japanese and Korean now.
@KeisTravel
@KeisTravel 11 ай бұрын
I’m Japanese. Thank you for your focusing Japanese!
@blondisbarrios7454
@blondisbarrios7454 10 ай бұрын
Nice final exam 💯
@skndr1964
@skndr1964 10 ай бұрын
très bon professeur 😉
@ohwowitsme8548
@ohwowitsme8548 10 ай бұрын
If you still remember even the smallest things what was her method of teaching?
@stefanodadamo6809
@stefanodadamo6809 Жыл бұрын
The famous "démerde-toi" language method
@lisilonglegs
@lisilonglegs Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. This kind of training would certainly give you the needed motivation to learn.
@anoitedfighter
@anoitedfighter 10 ай бұрын
True story most of the Bulgarian's who served as prisoners of war in France after WWI came back speaking decent french and with french cooking recepies. Most them would get elected in local governments or will open businesses others will serve in the administration because French was like English back then. People always wondered how they learned so good French while building roads in France. I think now i get the idea.
@gostavoadolfos2023
@gostavoadolfos2023 9 ай бұрын
Interesting historical fact.
@e-genieclimatique
@e-genieclimatique Жыл бұрын
in brief: The video discusses the unique and intense methods employed by the French Foreign Legion to teach its recruits the French language. - The French Foreign Legion is known for its rigorous combat training and its strict approach to teaching French. - Communication on the battlefield is crucial, and with recruits coming from various linguistic backgrounds, everyone is required to learn French. - The Legion teaches French not as a second language but as a working language. - Recruits have 17 weeks to learn operational French, mastering 500 words and using them fluently in sentences. - From the first day, speaking any language other than French is strictly prohibited. - The Legion also assigns recruits a new French name, which they must respond to promptly. - The teaching environment can vary from a traditional classroom to outdoor settings. - The instructor is typically a platoon leader who also teaches French in a direct and no-nonsense manner. - The teaching method, known as the KY blong method, is based on repetition, incentive, and immersion. - The recruits are drilled repeatedly to ensure they understand and remember the words and phrases. - The main goal is for recruits to understand and relay orders in French. - The teaching approach is exceptionally practical, focusing on words and phrases that the recruits will use daily. - The instructor uses various techniques to teach, such as pointing to body parts and having the class repeat the corresponding French word. - Recruits are also taught military terms and equipment names. - If a recruit makes a mistake, they might be asked to do push-ups as punishment. - The Legionnaires end up speaking a dialect of French, influenced by the diverse backgrounds of the recruits. - Singing in French is a significant part of the training, with recruits singing various French songs, including the Legion's anthem. - The video concludes by directing viewers to another video for a more in-depth look at the Foreign Legion's language lessons. Overall, the video highlights the intense and immersive approach the French Foreign Legion takes to ensure its recruits learn French quickly and effectively.
@CrispyRisp
@CrispyRisp Жыл бұрын
chatGPT vibes
@jmwild22
@jmwild22 Жыл бұрын
@@CrispyRisp Totally 😂
@ianpeden2906
@ianpeden2906 11 ай бұрын
If they are prohibited from speaking any other language than French, then their learning will be impaired. Languages are best learnt by reference to languages you already know for meaning acquisition.
@joiesamaniego3056
@joiesamaniego3056 11 ай бұрын
​@@ianpeden2906sadly, this is also how the US does this. Lessons are two weeks only. They say they need to be this tough for their survival.
@NDScalio
@NDScalio 11 ай бұрын
​@@ianpeden2906No, because it would promote the bad habit of relying on other languages when french is supposed to be the one everyone uses.
@Vagabund92
@Vagabund92 Жыл бұрын
Nice to see clips of "Thomas Gast - Der Legionär" a german former legionary. Very wholesome guy.
@JDesrosiers
@JDesrosiers 11 ай бұрын
Native french speaker here. Understood nearly nothing from the first soldier.
@michelr2521
@michelr2521 10 ай бұрын
L'armée, en générale , est un corps constitué qui n'accepte pas les particularismes. Tout doit fonctionner suivant un ordre établi, la langue technique doit être acquise très rapidement, etc... en fait il s'agit simplement de materialiser la motivation de l individu. Ne pas oublier que la legion est souvent en opérations extérieurs. Vidéo très intéressante, merci
@mlocascio656
@mlocascio656 11 ай бұрын
I had to take French in high school. I wasn't too good at it, but I loved it. Thanks for the video Olly, it's interesting and fun!
@jujutomato
@jujutomato 10 ай бұрын
t'inquiète pas je vis en France frèrot , je connais pas ton niveau mais je suis quasiment sûr que tu écris mieux français que la plupart des mongoles que j'ai pu croisé dans ma vie lol
@doudouquent9725
@doudouquent9725 10 ай бұрын
@@jujutomato Diantre, en voilà un langage bien familier ! N'avez vous donc rien de plus reluisant à redire sur notre gargantuesque vocabulaire?
@jujutomato
@jujutomato 10 ай бұрын
JPP 😂😂@@doudouquent9725
@DCS_World_Japan
@DCS_World_Japan 11 ай бұрын
Language teacher who's been through similar (but civilian) language programs. The two things here are immersion and motivation (the "students" want to be there). If those two conditions are met anyone can learn any language fast.
@if7363
@if7363 11 ай бұрын
That's what my Swedish host family did when I was au-pair. No other language than Swedish while I was total 0 at Swedish. Learnt to understand some things within two weeks and talked basic stuff in 3 month. One of tactics was laughing on purpose when I said something wrong so that I would never make that mistake anymore.
@Perkwunosik
@Perkwunosik 10 ай бұрын
nah imagine telling them your relative just dead in a grammatically incorrect way and they just laugh at you
@TheBilly
@TheBilly 9 ай бұрын
Or maybe they just looked down on you and got a sadistic thrill out of it because you were an au-pair. 3 months for basic stuff isn't fast for an English speaker learning a Germanic language, so that was all just needlessly cruel
@sincotarious519
@sincotarious519 9 ай бұрын
@@TheBillymost english speakers cant speak propper Norwegian or Swedish after years, id say 3 months is alright
@if7363
@if7363 9 ай бұрын
@@TheBilly English is not my first language. They felt righteous thinking they are doing massive job/good deed showing how they live and not knowing that we lived actually better.
@if7363
@if7363 9 ай бұрын
@@TheBilly English is way easier than my mother's tongue. It is same or way more difficult to learn our language than German. And it is not Slavic.
@haraffael7821
@haraffael7821 11 ай бұрын
I was left alone with the family of my Vietnamese girlfriend and she told them "I go take a shower, but you can talk to him"... I was not able to speak or understand Vietnamese back then... A fierce struggle and a few days later I was able to understand a little about food and about family
@tianamichael
@tianamichael 10 ай бұрын
I feel the same way as these légionnaires while doing my residency training in a Spanish speaking country. The stressful work environment forced me to learn faster. When you don't have the choice, you learn faster.
@alyssapowell1799
@alyssapowell1799 11 ай бұрын
It wasn't always true that French Foreign Legion members couldn't use their native language or had to learn French. In WW1, there were many Czech and Slovak recruits (some came from America and there were recruiting efforts in Chicago and Detroit) and they greeted each other with "Na zdar!" Thus, they were called the Nazdar Battalion. My great grandfather served in that unit and didn't speak a word of French. The Czech and Slovak volunteers to the Foreign Legion were promised that France would help promote free Czech and Slovak territories from the Austro-Hungarian Empire if they won.
@Decamix300
@Decamix300 11 ай бұрын
That's what the treaty of Trianon did right ?
@DJHASDIMONDS
@DJHASDIMONDS 11 ай бұрын
@@Decamix300 and Saint-Germaine, austria and hungary were considered separate countries and had to sign their own peace treaties
@Jirka-j2g
@Jirka-j2g 11 ай бұрын
To be fair, the Nazdar company existed only from late august 1914 until the Battle of Arras in May 1915. The battle made them famous, but only 75 members survived and the company was disbanded, surviving members were scattered among different FFL companies and spoke French. And there were only two CzSk officers in Nazdar, the rest were French. The proper Czechoslovak legion in France formed in 1917 when transports with pow’s of serbians and romanians along with transports of thousands of easten front czechoslovak legionaries came to france. Thus 21st Czechoslovak rifle battalion was born, which was later made into the Czechoslovak brigade. But none of these were part of the French Foreign Legion, the brigade was part of the 53rd Infantry Division of the French army. Although they were Czechoslovak Legionaries from the Czechoslovak POV, they were not French Foreign Legionaries.
@weaselbusters
@weaselbusters 9 ай бұрын
Nazdar kamo!
@siretriste4045
@siretriste4045 10 ай бұрын
An interesting fact was let unmentionned: up to a fifth of the recruits are already French speaking. In line with the esprit de corps doctrine, they are meant to also teach their classmates, to correct them, help them improve. Failure to learn French from their classmates is weighted extra-heavy on their shoulders, and it works!
@rosswade3602
@rosswade3602 Жыл бұрын
Looks like the Legion has dialed it down a bit. I read a book called "Five years in the French Foreign Legion" by Simon Murray. Writing from the 60s, seems like everything was enforced through violence. Insufficient progress in French meant slaps, a buttstock to the guts, or a thrashing if you were really dragging. It was basically an organization of fugitives and adventure seekers, molded into a powerhouse military organization. Probably still the case!
@Sorel366
@Sorel366 11 ай бұрын
I had a friend who was a former Legionnaire in the 90s. He was paired with a Russian guy and tasked to teach him the language but the guy absolutely refused. The officer advised to beat him with a stool while he was asleep. My friend did exactly that and the next day the Russian guy started speaking a bit of French. My friend also got beat several times by groups of officers for insubordination. Nowadays it’s a different type of culture and they’ve stopped taking criminals also.
@Sorel366
@Sorel366 11 ай бұрын
I had another friend who was given the choice to be released from prison and serve the rest of his time in a semi disciplinary regiment, that’s one notch below the foreign legion. After a while he got enough of it and opted to be sent back to prison.
@alioshax7797
@alioshax7797 10 ай бұрын
Society in general changed a lot since the 60s; and militaries from all around the world followed. Violence is now rare in military units (I mean violence as a mean of training), even in the Legion.
@Kevinschart
@Kevinschart 2 ай бұрын
Really no different than any other special forces team. Most of these guys are savages
@RenéSaussy
@RenéSaussy Жыл бұрын
It would be cool to see more videos about central Asian and Siberian languages.
@nsevv
@nsevv Жыл бұрын
Yea especially Punjabi.
@zabaanshenaas
@zabaanshenaas Жыл бұрын
Yes, I would like to learn Chukchi.
@lightray9264
@lightray9264 Жыл бұрын
@@nsevvwe need a video on Indian languages in general. They’re the coolest languages in the world but none of them except Hindi are ever really given the light of day by language learners
@RenéSaussy
@RenéSaussy Жыл бұрын
@@lightray9264 especially the South Indian and Dravidian languages (Malayalam and kannada etc)
@RenéSaussy
@RenéSaussy Жыл бұрын
Chuvash, nganasan, sakha and ket are interesting
@solveiglecosaque9783
@solveiglecosaque9783 10 ай бұрын
In France we are we proud of the French Foreign Legion 🇨🇵⚜️💪🏻
@orboakin8074
@orboakin8074 8 ай бұрын
As a Nigerian who hopes to learn French, I support the French military. My country has been having several military drills and joint sessions with France.
@bh2615
@bh2615 Жыл бұрын
Excellent channel
@MajorDenisBloodnok
@MajorDenisBloodnok 11 ай бұрын
That's why the FFL needs French or other native French language speakers recruits. They helped their comrades with the language and with the life in France. The FFL usually tries to maintain around 10 to 25% of French or French language speakers. But those last years, the part of native French language speakers is very low, so, 3 or 4 years ago, the FFL organized a public recruitment campaign in France. Officially, French citizens are not allowed to enlist as legionnaire in the FFL, so they enlist as Swiss, Belgian or French Canadian citizens. And by the way, my great grandfather was an officer in the the FFL.
@laurentsteiner1744
@laurentsteiner1744 11 ай бұрын
You can perfectly be French and join the legion. You will just be given a convenience nationality (Belgian, Swiss, etc) during your time
@MajorDenisBloodnok
@MajorDenisBloodnok 11 ай бұрын
@@laurentsteiner1744 It is exactly what I said...
@laurentsteiner1744
@laurentsteiner1744 11 ай бұрын
@@MajorDenisBloodnok indeed I read a bit hastily what you wrote ! My bad 😉
@chrissiebotha8574
@chrissiebotha8574 11 ай бұрын
Fluency and good grammar cannot be separated.
@dumdum7099
@dumdum7099 11 ай бұрын
Really? Have you heard of Singaporean English, their grammar is not the best but they're fluent enough.
@ryhk3293
@ryhk3293 11 ай бұрын
Oh, that I don't know. Butchering grammar fluently not possible? Bet you it is.
@EdwardLindon
@EdwardLindon 11 ай бұрын
​@@dumdum7099The answer is that Singaporean English grammar is not the same as eg British English grammar. All language has grammar. It is a necessary facet of language because language is impossible without communal rules.
@dumdum7099
@dumdum7099 11 ай бұрын
@@EdwardLindon No they study British English grammar in school.
@Ketutar
@Ketutar 9 ай бұрын
LOL Good joke, Chrissie.
@happyslappy5203
@happyslappy5203 Жыл бұрын
FFL soldiers must speak because: - 90% of FFL officers are French. 10% of officers serving in the Foreign Legion served first as a legionnaire, then as a non-commissioned officer. - FFL must fight alongside French regular troops and must coordinate assaults in French language. - CAS delivered by fighter jets and assault helicopters piloted by French pilots speaking French.
@wulfhart2653
@wulfhart2653 11 ай бұрын
and loyalty, France wants soldiers, not mercenaries.
@siretriste4045
@siretriste4045 10 ай бұрын
FFL soldiers will also be granted French citizenship, eventually. So it's better for everyone that they do master French as a language, really
@davidknichal6629
@davidknichal6629 10 ай бұрын
French Techniques to Learn English for example.........a must see vid 🤣
@erenkur3832
@erenkur3832 11 ай бұрын
I could prefer this Method. It would be very hard though. My french teacher Was a french woman, she was not ordering us to make push ups but, she was speaking only in french. And I don't know but it was the fastest foreign language learning lessons I had. I would use French to ask questions and she would ansver in French
@sachinsah129
@sachinsah129 Жыл бұрын
Thanks you
@Just4FC
@Just4FC 10 ай бұрын
You don't dream in French since you don't sleep, you write out the dictionary throughout the night... lol. Was a legionnaire for 11 years
@herrberg8962
@herrberg8962 10 ай бұрын
Nice to see Thomas Gast on another channel. :)
@nexusdu06
@nexusdu06 10 ай бұрын
There seems to be an error in the translation at 6:25, it should be “I told you to hold the canoe, not to move it forward.”
@discreteloner9573
@discreteloner9573 11 ай бұрын
Thanks KZbin algorithms for recommending this. Your method seem very effective and not boring. I will try to apply to my situation. I am looking to learn French. I don't have platoon leaders to tell me to do do push up. 😂 I really like the part that the teaching focus on everyday life stuff.
@izacgalvao6316
@izacgalvao6316 8 ай бұрын
I`m so Tankful that Exist this kind of channel. thank you olly
@rockk3y413
@rockk3y413 Жыл бұрын
Hey Olly, I got your beginning french book! I love it 10/10 recommend.
@adamczajkowski2665
@adamczajkowski2665 Жыл бұрын
"Kurwa" seems to be very common word in french nowodays. #polishculturalsupremacy
@underwatercrypto
@underwatercrypto Жыл бұрын
Being a native French speaker, I can tell you that the level of spoken French in this video is really low, even for those who seem to speak well. Anyway, thanks for sharing
@copiouscat
@copiouscat Жыл бұрын
See that’s the thing, the point I noticed and what illy is explaining is not achieving ultimate fluency, it’s about actively speaking with confidence and minimum comprehension to listen and respond! Lol
@underwatercrypto
@underwatercrypto Жыл бұрын
True but the words are wrong, and I wouldn't have understood if I had only heard the audio. At one point, he said 'Pompééé' in reference to 'push-ups,' but the correct pronunciation is 'pump.'" The thing is, it's the trainer who gets it wrong, not the soldiers.
@jmwild22
@jmwild22 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. @@copiouscat
@jmwild22
@jmwild22 Жыл бұрын
Didn't you get the part about the foreign legion having its own dialect? @@underwatercrypto
@cleanthe3276
@cleanthe3276 Жыл бұрын
I had the same feeling listening to them. It was sometimes hard to understand what they were saying, the teacher even made a pronoun mistake once. I suppose, as long as they understand each other, it's the most important.
@maryjanerx
@maryjanerx Жыл бұрын
This looks so fun
@leoncordell6165
@leoncordell6165 11 ай бұрын
Active immersion with comprehensible input, who knew.
@EdwardLindon
@EdwardLindon 11 ай бұрын
feutre/foutre lol. There's a minimal pair you want to get right...
@parkash9999
@parkash9999 11 ай бұрын
Nice. I love English language British accent. ❤❤
@reginapolo3357
@reginapolo3357 11 ай бұрын
I just love your pop up inserts! 😂 they are too funny
@briquetaverne
@briquetaverne 11 ай бұрын
I learned French because of my late French mother who lived through the second world war, suffered a lot of humiliations while suffering under 4 years of occupation and loss of a normal childhood. Half of her house was blown away by B-17 bombs that missed their target luckily while she was in church. ***** My brother's first name was that of her former 15 year old boyfriend who was at the wrong place at the wrong time, pulled out of a bakery along with four other customers and lined up against the wall and machine gunned because some German was found dead in the vicinity. ***** My French isn't all that great but I can speak, read and write it if you'll excuse my frequent mixing of Le & La. ***** I masculinize almost everything (or talk in plurals so that I can eliminate the feminin ). When listening to others using pronouns like il and elle rather than direct nouns, I'm often tricked into looking for humans not lifeless items like chairs, cars, roadways, The Sun, The Moon, the mountain or the river (which depending on its length and width can be either masculine or feminine) ie "Le Fleuve Loir, "Il" est Grand... or La Rivière, Loire, "elle" est peu profonde". (It's the same G.D. river but upstream its a girl and down stream it became a boy) .... but even farther upstream when it's just a trickle of a 'brook' "Le Ruisseau" it becomes a boy again, "il" ? ****** My favorite BTW is that girls have masculine vaginas "Le Vagin" while boys have feminin Prostates "La prostate". The song that the Legionnaire was singing at the end of this clip had words that they obviously changed to suit the Legion for its own purposes. I was taught this song which was a throw back to the 19th century and its Lyrics (after one line of a trumpet playing the melody) went like this: As tu vu la casquette, la casquette, - Have you seen the cap, the cap As tu vu la casquette au père Bugeaud? - have you seen the cap of Father Bugeaud? Elle est faite la casquette, la casquette, - [she] It is made, the cap, the cap Elle est faite avec du poil de chameau. - It is made [from] with the hair of Camel. As tu vu la casquette, la casquette, -Have you seen the cap, the cap As tu vu la casquett' au père Bugeaud? - have you seen the cap of Father Bugeaud? Elle est faite la casquette, la casquette, - [she] it is made, the cap, the cap Elle est faite avec du poil de chameau. - it is made [from] with the hair of Camel. A final thought... Imagine you walked into the Church of Father Bugeaud. You see people looking under pews, behind the alter, up in the balcony and around the seats of the choir, and behind doors and you asked. "what are you all doing" to which someone replies "we're looking for her" - she's small and black". As an anglophone wouldn't you believe that everyone was looking for a little black girl, perhaps a toddler? Not a hat!
@eimat67
@eimat67 Жыл бұрын
Someone needs to use some of this in Quebec.
@f_bara2310
@f_bara2310 Жыл бұрын
I'm French and I think I will do this with Chinese, I'm struggling with this language because I don't spend enough time practicing…
@ryhk3293
@ryhk3293 11 ай бұрын
I'm sure the Taiwanese armed forces are more than willing to take on a warm body!
@barrelrole
@barrelrole 11 ай бұрын
加油
@Kannot2023
@Kannot2023 11 ай бұрын
Ask yourself for what you will use it. And focus on that
@mariapiasd2569
@mariapiasd2569 11 ай бұрын
🤣The words on the board at 3:15 !
@pdterre5496
@pdterre5496 11 ай бұрын
With my current (slow) french learning I might consider joining ..
@kfelix2934
@kfelix2934 10 ай бұрын
In reality, I think in foreign legion candidates have some basic French. The candidates that come thru have to know some basic French. This is why the Spanish Legion recruits candidates from a "Spanish Country or Colony". French is one of my favorite languages, I just can't speak it correctly. I did learn a lot while working in Central Africa and my ex-wife is a Francophone speaker. She was brutal in correcting me, and with my bad French.
@GORANJOVIC631
@GORANJOVIC631 10 ай бұрын
If you're Spanish it should not take that much time to learn French as it have the same roots as Spanish and Italian. I'm French and i've learned Spanish and German at school. Spanish was way easier for me, as you can mostly read Spanish and understand it even if you don't speak it, lot of smiilarities with French. I think that we should all have basic in the 3 most spoken Europeans language, because they are spoken all arround the world. French/English/Spanish.
@MultiSciGeek
@MultiSciGeek 11 ай бұрын
Imagine the guy teaching you French speaking worse than you. Gosh what a nightmare.
@riksim4242
@riksim4242 10 ай бұрын
this is how a language should be taught !!!
@grandrequin111
@grandrequin111 10 ай бұрын
It's functional and it works. After their five years they are fluent. The legion also uses the mother tongues of the légionnaires to communicate with the local populations.
@mathewweeks9069
@mathewweeks9069 9 ай бұрын
Your awesome video be safe out there
@thinker646
@thinker646 Жыл бұрын
The ultimate TPR
@johnmartin2464
@johnmartin2464 11 ай бұрын
Well seing as the Foreign Legion is part of the French Army and the operating language is French, it makes perfect sense.
@LumocolorARTnr1319
@LumocolorARTnr1319 9 ай бұрын
When I was 15 years old we had to learn 50 words in English every week as regular homework, you had to know at least 35 of them to pass the minimum on the weekly test. 500 words in 16 weeks is normal speed.
@Ketutar
@Ketutar 9 ай бұрын
my reaction exactly.
@Briselance
@Briselance 11 ай бұрын
Would I be willing to learn languages this way? With drill sergeants, military training, and all? HELL YEAH!!
@umaliensincero5475
@umaliensincero5475 10 ай бұрын
Ou você aprende ou apanha até aprender (definitivamente uma tecnica eficiente)
@yeetyeet7070
@yeetyeet7070 10 ай бұрын
lol 7:05 "le feutre ou..."
@dunodolien674
@dunodolien674 11 ай бұрын
I am a native French speaker and most of people who speak French in this video are incomprehensible🥴😪. Hopefully I'm not recruited in this famous battalion called "legion étrangère".😅 Great video though 😊 Thanks for the tips and I will recommend it to my language partners who are English speakers. Thanks 👍
@leneanderthalien
@leneanderthalien 11 ай бұрын
Yes at debut some spellings are very difficult to understand, but they improve more and more over the time (progress is variable, the best results are if in the binome, one of them speak native french, in some cases, legionnaires who no speak one word french at entering, speak after some years fluent and correct french with only a light accent ...
@Luggruff
@Luggruff 10 ай бұрын
Moved to Greece FIVE years ago, and I still do not speak conversational Greek. I studied a few months before coming to Greece, and just recently started trying again with Duolingo. My girlfriend is Greek, but never, ever, tries to teach me anything (despite hundreds of attempts throughout the last three years, to tell her I want her to push me). When I came to Greece, I lived in a neighborhood where everyone was Scandinavian like me, and everyone I hung out with, was Scandinavian, and everywhere you go in Greece, you can get by with English. On rare occasion, someone will not speak Greek, but then you will manage with English and pointing etc. anyways. I know people who have come here not knowing English, and learned to become fluid in a year, simply because they had no other choice. I cannot express how jealous I am of that - really. After work etc. it is hard to say "I am now going to completely immerse myself in Greek" as I am also studying things like computer science, and when we watch movies or series, they are in English. If I were to immerse myself in Greek, I would have very little life outside of work.
@caincawkwell8092
@caincawkwell8092 10 ай бұрын
I have a similar situation, GF is Greek after 4 years still can barely chime in to Greek conversations because they speak so fast. I use duolingo and if I ask she will try and teach me words but due to studying etc, it’s not to often I get any sort of help with a native speaker.
@Luggruff
@Luggruff 9 ай бұрын
@@caincawkwell8092 that sucks man. The GF is doing Duolingo too for Norwegian, and I guess since she already knows English, it is much, much easier for her to pick it up in a usable way. She understands most of what I say already after about a year, and she can form her own sentences etc.
@KeisTravel
@KeisTravel 11 ай бұрын
Wow. It's very strict. That's the army! But I think this is one of the good ways to learn languages.
@MultiSciGeek
@MultiSciGeek 11 ай бұрын
At this rate the Legion will soon produce a brand new language unintelligible with actual French, kinda like a creole.
@ZEtruckipu
@ZEtruckipu 11 ай бұрын
Not exactly, eventhough it's true that légionnaires do use a lot of FFL slang, the same is true for any other french army unit. The Legionnaires need to be able to communicate fluently with native speakers since when they are deployed, they operate interdependently with other units (CAS, artillery support, logistics...) And these guys are native Frenchmen.
@sanjivjhangiani3243
@sanjivjhangiani3243 11 ай бұрын
If only I had joined the Legion! I could have had amazing adventures and improved my conversational French. 😅 3:13
@Queridasweet
@Queridasweet Жыл бұрын
Hahaha. This was SO FUNNY! Very lovely video. Thanks for making it👍🏾👌🏾
@legrognard2238
@legrognard2238 11 ай бұрын
Vive la France 💪🏻🇨🇵.
@mas.theface
@mas.theface Жыл бұрын
Can you do a video on Navajo?
@jessecortez9449
@jessecortez9449 Жыл бұрын
I second this request. Not enough is done to promote learning languages like Navajo, Comanche, Nahuatl... These are considered endangered languages on the brink of becoming dead and while they might not be as wide spread and used as a second or third most spoken languages they do deserve being kept alive.
@mas.theface
@mas.theface Жыл бұрын
@@jessecortez9449 agree, and it has such intresting/unique grammer.
@lisanarramore222
@lisanarramore222 Жыл бұрын
TEAM STORYLEARNING: We have two videos talking about Navajo: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qpKznHx9bapnmqcsi=ZMcVPzDvVkeBpiWV kzbin.info/www/bejne/o6XOd6N7d55jp6s Enjoy :)
@mas.theface
@mas.theface 11 ай бұрын
@@lisanarramore222 not in depth
@SalaF90
@SalaF90 11 ай бұрын
I never learned grammar on English now I'm C1 😅 so yes most of this just listening and vocabulary
@EricEngle-f1q
@EricEngle-f1q 10 ай бұрын
You get to b1 maybe b2 in 4 months. Our main instructor was the lt.
@astermaris9908
@astermaris9908 11 ай бұрын
« Tiens, voilà du boudin, voilà du boudin. Pour les alsaciens, les suisses et les lo-rrains… » It’s stuck in my head now so thanks for that 😂 great video ^^
@davidlacoste
@davidlacoste 11 ай бұрын
"Pour les Belges, y' en a plus, ce sont des tireurs au cul."
@WineSippingCowboy
@WineSippingCowboy 11 ай бұрын
This is more harsh than the US military. Here (in the USA 🇺🇸), military personnel apply to the DSLI in Monterey (south of my hometown San Francisco 🌉) , California (my home state). The Foreign Legion uses Pavlovian psychology to an extreme. Recruits learn because of survival instinct. I learned some words of languages I speak from being lost 🙄. Those situations forced me to speak in those languages. Good 👍 episode 👏
@ryhk3293
@ryhk3293 11 ай бұрын
DSLI? You mean DLI? DLI's language training is entirely for a different purpose than the FFL's recruit language training.
@laudemar-A.B.6386
@laudemar-A.B.6386 11 ай бұрын
I didn't know there was a city called Monterey in California 🤔
@WineSippingCowboy
@WineSippingCowboy 11 ай бұрын
Monterey, close to Santa Cruz, is different than Monterrey, which is the 2nd most populated city in Mexico 🇲🇽. Late Stanford 🌲 dropout and famous writer John Steinbeck had Monterey as background for his book Cannery Row. 📖 . The Army had a base at Fort Ord, east of the city. Monterey is more famous for its aquarium. 🐟 I visited that many times as well as Ft. Ord, when it was a base. The notorious politicians passed the Closure and Realignment Act of 1990. Ft Ord was 1 of many California bases which were closed. Certain politicians bought some of the land. Greedy SOBs 😈
@laudemar-A.B.6386
@laudemar-A.B.6386 11 ай бұрын
​@@WineSippingCowboyThe only Monterey I know is in Mexico 🤷 and as you say, it is the second most populous city in Mexico and is the capital of the state of Nuevo León 😎
@WineSippingCowboy
@WineSippingCowboy 11 ай бұрын
Ok. 👌 If you ever visit Northern California, you should include Monterey to the itinerary along with San Francisco 🌉 my hometown, Santa Cruz, Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley and San Jose.
@lorih2249
@lorih2249 11 ай бұрын
I learned Spanish with this technique. By week 5 I was dreaming in Spanish.
@shlacked2690
@shlacked2690 11 ай бұрын
how
@titnesovic4522
@titnesovic4522 11 ай бұрын
One word I certainly learned here, without even visiting the foreign legion: pomper!
@dakinoytc986
@dakinoytc986 11 ай бұрын
Très intéressant
@kingofdjembe
@kingofdjembe 9 ай бұрын
4:20 J'en peux plus les mots sur le tableau "binouse, pinard, casser les couilles" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@kingofdjembe
@kingofdjembe 9 ай бұрын
I should be like this with my students. If they had to do pushup everytime they speak their mother language, they'd learn faster for sure.
@sylvainduret9880
@sylvainduret9880 11 ай бұрын
Learn French, join the Legion 🇲🇫✨
@ha_seldon7985
@ha_seldon7985 11 ай бұрын
They may speak French, but they swear in their own language 1:18 you can clearly hear the Polish "kurwa"
@pitkafka
@pitkafka 9 ай бұрын
exactly ;)
@Morocco.Barbara_67
@Morocco.Barbara_67 6 ай бұрын
Actually it's just their accent
@jonaspete
@jonaspete 11 ай бұрын
Very physical and mental demanding
@fred9267
@fred9267 11 ай бұрын
Excellent mec :)
@deebrown360
@deebrown360 11 ай бұрын
I liked your page when you were learning new languages and having us along on the journey. I am unsure what your aim is these days.
@guymarcgagne7630
@guymarcgagne7630 11 ай бұрын
Sacrés Légionnaires! It is eminently practical and efficient - do not mess with success! A little positive reinforcement can be quite motivating! After all, you do want to earn your képi blanc, right!? Be well & stay safe
@jeancharland3858
@jeancharland3858 11 ай бұрын
La meilleure methode pour faire apprendre le francais a McGill et Concordia.
@Elriverside
@Elriverside 11 ай бұрын
Ah! But speaking French without the romance…it’s like English without the cricket or football without a ball. Quel chagrin! But using consequences does work. It builds confidence. The fear factor of the error is lessened; the mistakes been made. That spring in the mind that bounces to reject a move is less likely to ping. The shame’s been suffered in the classroom so the error of repeating in public diminishes itself. If only I could get that year 10 cohort doing press-ups!…they’d sail through their orals with flying colours (Or even better to polish my shoes😂)
@yodaz101
@yodaz101 11 ай бұрын
Yes brutal.... radical french.. I served with french on my flank as NATO Ally....the don't muck About... Well trained.
@ryhk3293
@ryhk3293 11 ай бұрын
Meh. They're okay. Foreign Legion are a mixed bag. All the NATO militaries have had ups and downs since the fall of the Iron Curtain. IMO, only Poland has really taken the idea of the national defense seriously for all 30 of the past three decades. That's why they're ahead of the curve now and first in line in getting the new South Korean tanks, self propelled artillery and rocket artillery, all more technologically advanced and capable than the American equipment.
@francoispicard8507
@francoispicard8507 9 ай бұрын
Food for though for the few Anglophones in Québec refusing to learn French :)
@Guitarman973
@Guitarman973 9 ай бұрын
Actually it seems like there is some progress in military language. Heard from one Ukranian historian that in Austro-Hungarian Army soldier wasn't obliged to know German but he must know 80 words. In Foreign French Legion soldier must know as much as 500 words. Definetely times have changed)
@Skiamakhos
@Skiamakhos 11 ай бұрын
I daresay they couldn't do this in an ordinary UK school - but a boarding school perhaps, like a military academy? You'd get *so* fit.
@EdwardLindon
@EdwardLindon 11 ай бұрын
Yes, drilling students in the future/foutre distinction while they crawl through mud would probably be frowned upon. Political correctness gone mad...
@Renee-Heal-The-Eagle
@Renee-Heal-The-Eagle 11 ай бұрын
Yes you will suffer...we agree!😂
@narrom21
@narrom21 Жыл бұрын
aun no he leido un comentario del metodo, Powell Janaulus es real? se puede considerar metodo de aprendizaje acelerado?
@dannyroosenboom3640
@dannyroosenboom3640 10 ай бұрын
once you know some basics, you learn most on the go meaning by using the language. this way i learned english, french and german while my natif language is Dutch. no really I speak a flemish diaalect but dutch is the official language beside french in Belgium. a word you don't understand? just ask to explain the word.
@WisdomTrad
@WisdomTrad 11 ай бұрын
I feel like this is a repeat video- I watched something about French foreign legion a few months ago...
@kumoric
@kumoric 11 ай бұрын
it would be nice to see some videos like this but with more non-European languages, or just more videos in general focusing on languages from other countries than countries from Europe
@Rocky-bi5dv
@Rocky-bi5dv 8 ай бұрын
Sumo wrestlers from Europe and Mongol can acquire Japanese so quickly & perfectly that we often take them as Japanese natives by mistake.
@Shansky
@Shansky 9 ай бұрын
7:02 the sentence ont top mean "the felt or the c*m"
@Scalpaxos
@Scalpaxos 10 ай бұрын
I'm not sure the method is the only thing to credit in this case, it matters of course but at the end of the day what counts is how much you're motivated, and as in any elite military force, if you don't have the motivation you're out, so the results are skewed here, the guys who can't learn French well enough are probably weeded out anyway and aren't accounted for, can't afford having a soldier unable to communicate in life or death situations. There's also the similarities between your own language and the language you want to learn, French for instance isn't the hardest language to learn for a native English speaker, English itself being like 30% French, for example the word "language" itself is a French word, literally, and if you add the words that have common Latin roots, a smart native English speaker can sometimes understand French with 0 French knowledge.
@RabdoInternetGuy
@RabdoInternetGuy 9 ай бұрын
Duolingo: French or the Trench! Foreign Legion: French and you're digging the Trench.
@EricEngle-f1q
@EricEngle-f1q 10 ай бұрын
I did the legion and that's how I learned French.
@lugo_9969
@lugo_9969 Жыл бұрын
C'mon Olly. When will you do books & audio in the Frisian language ? It will be popular for EVERY WORLDWIDE student of 'Old English' ...... and that is millions of students.
@1964_AMU
@1964_AMU 10 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed on the pannel 3'17" : all slang : pinard, pognon, casser les couilles....
@jean-paulboyer5800
@jean-paulboyer5800 Жыл бұрын
what is the meaning of ''EVLE'' on the carnet du legionnaire?
@remoraexocet
@remoraexocet Жыл бұрын
je tente une hypothèse: Engagé volontaire de la légion étrangère
@castletransport
@castletransport 10 ай бұрын
Sounds a bit like learning by acquiring the language. Learning by seeing and repeating the words. That's what i'm doing now to learn Bisaya. I'm drawing the items or seeing pictures of them and copying the words I hear
@BF-I-II-V-V-III-VII
@BF-I-II-V-V-III-VII 9 ай бұрын
Couille, clochard et pognon! Des mot essenciel a apprendre! 😂
10 Languages with IMPOSSIBLE Alphabets
22:38
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 4,2 М.
US Military Techniques to Learn a Language FAST
10:52
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 59 М.
Every parent is like this ❤️💚💚💜💙
00:10
Like Asiya
Рет қаралды 19 МЛН
РОДИТЕЛИ НА ШКОЛЬНОМ ПРАЗДНИКЕ
01:00
SIDELNIKOVVV
Рет қаралды 3,2 МЛН
Language Review: French
11:07
Language Simp
Рет қаралды 810 М.
How The French Foreign Legion Learns Languages Fast
29:14
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
How Serena Williams Learned French
19:02
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 92 М.
7 Languages You Can Learn FAST
22:31
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 43 М.
French Foreign Legion | Training to Mali (Marine Reacts)
21:31
Jamesons Travels
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН
How Professional Spies Learn Languages FAST
22:53
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 160 М.
Joining the Foreign Legion
10:56
Best Documentary
Рет қаралды 2,3 МЛН
Here's how to NEVER LEARN A LANGUAGE!
16:22
Days and Words
Рет қаралды 15 М.
Where did French come from?
10:16
The Travelling Linguist
Рет қаралды 603 М.
How I Learned French
12:46
Olly Richards
Рет қаралды 142 М.
Every parent is like this ❤️💚💚💜💙
00:10
Like Asiya
Рет қаралды 19 МЛН