THIS is the Best Book on Language Learning I've Ever Read: HERE'S WHAT IT SAYS

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LetThemTalkTV

LetThemTalkTV

Күн бұрын

Here are some tricks for making rapid progress in learning one, two or three languages at the same time. The information I'm sharing is from The Loom of Language by Frederic Bodmer written in 1941. It's the best book I've ever read on learning a language and change the way I studied.
The Loom of Language: An Approach to the Mastery of Many Languages by Frederic Bodmer edited by Lancelot Hogben
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Пікірлер: 2 800
@ddpnh8223
@ddpnh8223 3 жыл бұрын
Never thought I’d have Julius Caesar himself teaching me so much about language.
@laraebner7166
@laraebner7166 3 жыл бұрын
hahahaha
@shivashakti991
@shivashakti991 3 жыл бұрын
Wtf XD
@KamilaSousamusic
@KamilaSousamusic 3 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha that's such a privilege
@carloscarpinteyro332
@carloscarpinteyro332 3 жыл бұрын
Put on a Toga and say "pizza, pizza."
@pier9501
@pier9501 3 жыл бұрын
😁😁
@StardustMonkey
@StardustMonkey 2 жыл бұрын
As an English speaker who achieved very high proficiency in Chinese I feel the key to learning a language that is very different than your own is starting to immediately associate the new word with its image in your mind and the real world instead of with the English word. So when learning a word like apple to imagine over and over that the thing has 2 names now “ping guo” and “apple” instead of trying to memorize that apple =ping guo
@veriukakamutati3062
@veriukakamutati3062 Жыл бұрын
Interesting perspective. I will definitely give it a try.
@miltonorellana4557
@miltonorellana4557 Жыл бұрын
This is how I learned English. Just like you said, when learning a new word like "apple", I imagine the actual fruit, not the word in my native language. A word like "walk" I imagine myself "walking", the only problem I have found with this method is that when I learn new word, sometimes I don't bother to look up the meaning in my native language,so I end up only knowing the meaning on English.
@StardustMonkey
@StardustMonkey Жыл бұрын
@@miltonorellana4557 yes… I found that I spoke fluently very fast but took a lot of Mental power to act as a translator
@miltonorellana4557
@miltonorellana4557 Жыл бұрын
@@StardustMonkey yes, it does take a lot of effort to translate.
@bemcem16
@bemcem16 Жыл бұрын
That's a great tip bro thanks
@adrianwhyatt1425
@adrianwhyatt1425 Жыл бұрын
My rough summary: Learn particles first (about 180 words (conjunctions and prepositions). How learning several related languages comparatively (Romance or Germanic (or even Hellenistic (Greek, Pontian, etc) may be more effective, especially for reading them (particularly for English-speaking learners). As well as recommending a classic 1944 book on language learning tactics, in the comments Mikhail Petrunin's "Comparative Grammar of Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French: Learn and Compare 4 Languages simultaneously" comes highly recommended! Absolutely brilliant video. No excuses for the English-speaking world not to become polyglots (at least as far as reading is concerned). Recommended book: "The Loom of Language Learning" by Frederick Bodmeer, edited by Lancelot Hogmeral (1944).
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 Жыл бұрын
I've tried this method and it's far too abstract for my brain. Maybe it works for some people. I can only learn particles if they are close to 1:1 with an English one or once I know enough other vocab and grammar to be able to put them to use in sentences.
@adrianwhyatt1425
@adrianwhyatt1425 Жыл бұрын
@@andrewdunbar828 One size never fits all! We're all wonderfully different!
@Ana-ib4or
@Ana-ib4or Жыл бұрын
Amazing point
@evilassjitnem
@evilassjitnem Жыл бұрын
Isn't pontian just a Greek dialect?
@unclerogerANKI
@unclerogerANKI Жыл бұрын
Sorry, I don't buy the "English native speaker have an advantage" narrative. All the evidence and the reality point to the contrary. Yes, English vocabulary rests on both romance and germanic languages so it means you don't start from zero in either of them, for that one aspect. But there's much more than that to learning a language. Verb conjugation in romance languages is a massive challenge for an English native. It's like going from 1 to 3 dimensions. Nouns and adjectives also need to be matched for gender and number, with a number of specificities, whereas English mostly just adds an -S for plural. For anything other than phonetics and correspondence between graphemes and phonemes, English is such an uncomplicated and convenient language that most other languages you look at will be harder to learn for an English native than for a native of other language.
@livelife5947
@livelife5947 3 жыл бұрын
“Do you speak the bastard tongue?” lol I’m soo stealing that one.
@imnotkarlimcarl
@imnotkarlimcarl 3 жыл бұрын
This man looks straight out of a 16th century French Painting
@ADeeSHUPA
@ADeeSHUPA 3 жыл бұрын
@Vindexproeliator uP
@ivyaquila9136
@ivyaquila9136 3 жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly, I even thought the thumbnail was not a real person😹
@therealpinkyskull
@therealpinkyskull 3 жыл бұрын
lol
@revermightstar8004
@revermightstar8004 3 жыл бұрын
He looks like a playing card soldier from alice in wonderland
@mariogonzalez4928
@mariogonzalez4928 3 жыл бұрын
True, really
@TheCompleteGuitarist
@TheCompleteGuitarist 4 жыл бұрын
I spent 5 years in a spanish speaking country unable to speak the language well if at all. When Michel Thomas explained the similiarities between English and Spanish the penny dropped :o As a language teacher I think it's important to understand that we don't learn languages, we acquire them. The next time you're singing along to your favourite pop song, ask yourself if you sat down and studied the lyrics so that you could sing along or if you just picked them up. Language starts with the brain decoding sounds it's heard a multitude of times. Meaning comes later. And if you don't trust that approach ask yourself this. How many words do you know in your native tongue? Did you look up the meaning of all of them in a dictionary? I bet you barely checked 1% of them yet you have no doubt about the meaning of most of them. Trust your brain. Participate in the language by listening and reading. You just need relevant context such as something you are interested in. The rest comes effortlessly with time.
@coffeemachtspass
@coffeemachtspass 4 жыл бұрын
Hi, you seem to be saying slightly contradictory things here and thought I should point it out for you to clarify. If you spent five years surrounded by Spanish, yet didn’t master the language, it seems to contradict the notion of learning by simple exposure without overt study. Michel Thomas disagrees rather vehemently with both traditional study (rote memorization and grammar) as well as with mere communicative strategies (Krashen). Thomas also claims to ‘give a functional use of a language in a matter of hours’, which is not generally claimed by other methods. What was the effect of Thomas’s method on yourself? How did you change your methods and what was your progress like afterwards?
@TheCompleteGuitarist
@TheCompleteGuitarist 4 жыл бұрын
@@coffeemachtspass 1. You have no idea why I was not able to take advantage of being surrounded by native speakers, but Krashen does. I agree with Krashen. 2. Michel gave me the concept that there is an immense overlap between spanish and english that I was ignorant of. I never said he told me to learn in a traditional manner. But when he made me aware that arroz was rice and azucar sugar I started to make connections that helped. Ultimately what helped me was simply having a necessity to communicate so I went out to find the language I needed. What hindered me was having native speakers who had no idea how to modify the way they spoke so that I could understand and ultimately that is what makes a good teacher. The onus of the communication is on the communicator, not the reciever. Alternatively as a language acquirer you need to know how to reduce what you hear into packets or chunks so that your brain can begin to make sense of them. If you want to know how languages are learnt go find a two year old and watch listen learn. They will be your best guide.
@TheCompleteGuitarist
@TheCompleteGuitarist 4 жыл бұрын
@@coffeemachtspass Although I was in a a spanish speaking country I was surrounded by English which prevented/reduced the need to communicate in spanish. I blame my wife.
@alejandranovello3274
@alejandranovello3274 3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely true. I always put every effort in my lessons to make my students go through that acquisition process, because it s the efficient way to do it AND so enjoyable, too .
@meekscs6369
@meekscs6369 3 жыл бұрын
Brilliant comment mate!
@ajrollo1437
@ajrollo1437 3 жыл бұрын
I own a copy of this book, and the thing is just about to fall apart. It really is a fantastic book. The idea is to learn just enough of general linguistics to not be scared of a language.
@russmitchellmovement
@russmitchellmovement Жыл бұрын
I saw the video and pulled it off my shelf, and am going to try it again, but for some reason I can't get the approach to stick. I would absolutely love it if somehow this approach could be broken out into lesson plans, because at some point, I just can't seem to brain it and retain it.
@Smegead
@Smegead Жыл бұрын
Scan it and release pdf onto the internet. A favour to the world.
@PacoSkippin
@PacoSkippin Жыл бұрын
@@Smegead ^ agree
@sujoynath1743
@sujoynath1743 Жыл бұрын
@@Smegead i got a pdf, not sure if its the exact one though
@gertlanghoff624
@gertlanghoff624 Жыл бұрын
@@sujoynath1743 please put a link op here..
@TheStrataminor
@TheStrataminor Жыл бұрын
As a person who has studied linguistics and fascinated by language,,,I can actually honestly say that this is how I picked up Koine Greek (biblical Greek) fast, by not over stressing endless verb conjugations (but yes the main 3 or 4 such as present, future, past or participles) and letting the article, pronouns and articles fill in the gaps. That way you get to enjoy reading so much faster, then later you can go deeper and fill in the gaps....honestly so much more satisfying than the way I tried to learn Japanese...and after 10 years, still sucked (I started learning before we had easy access to the internet). This video is a rare example of actual useful advice!!
@rhalfik
@rhalfik 4 жыл бұрын
The squareness of your shoulders is unparalleled.
@compilationsmania451
@compilationsmania451 4 жыл бұрын
Ooh, "unparalleled", I see what you did there.
@stumbling
@stumbling 4 жыл бұрын
Perpendicularised. Now to check if that's a real word.
@rhalfik
@rhalfik 4 жыл бұрын
@@stumbling Is it?
@Kj16V
@Kj16V 4 жыл бұрын
I'd say they're about 5° off parallel :D
@k4milek82
@k4milek82 4 жыл бұрын
Now i can't unsee it.
@alieshamay
@alieshamay 3 жыл бұрын
I highly recommend "Comparative Grammar of Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and French: Learn & Compare 4 Languages Simultaneously" by Mikhail Petrunin.
@esmeraldaaguayo8529
@esmeraldaaguayo8529 3 жыл бұрын
I found your comment in the right time. As I read your comment I went to google it and I just bought it haha thank you so much. I'm pretty excited and eager to read it.
@LS485II
@LS485II 3 жыл бұрын
I NEED this! Thank you very very much!
@andrehinonmyway1809
@andrehinonmyway1809 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Aliesha! Were you learning any of those languages before finding the book? I'd love to know how it actually helped you in the process...
@alieshamay
@alieshamay 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrehinonmyway1809 Hi Andrea! I am a native English speaker from the USA. I have lived in Sweden and studied Swedish for 8 years. I found this book while looking for a resource for learning Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian simultaneously. I studied one year of Spanish and four years of French in high school. I am using this book to brush up on French, learn more Spanish, and learn Portuguese from scratch. I love the Romance languages and am driven to learn them to transcribe and translate genealogical records and also travel to my ancestral lands. This book is a great resource. I think it is great whether you are a beginner or have a preexisting understanding of one or more of these languages. This book really feels like a labor of love. The author provides many charts and tables and intersperses cool tidbits throughout. It is comprehensive but broken down into digestible bits. I studied the Introduction (Alphabet), and then Chapters 10 (Interjections), 7 (Numbers, Time and Dates), and 3 (Adverbs), and am now reading the remaining chapters (1 & 2, 4-6, 8 & 9) sequentially. I am currently on Chapter 5, and taking it slowly. So, the process is ongoing, and I'm sure I will return to this book time and again for reference after I've completed it.
@andrehinonmyway1809
@andrehinonmyway1809 3 жыл бұрын
@@alieshamay Thank you so much again. I'm a native Spanish speaker, currently studying French and this video plus your recommendation make me realize I can take full advantage of the process with this resources, so I'll give it a try ☺️ Muchas gracias y éxitos con tu proceso en español 👍
@thomaswebster444
@thomaswebster444 3 жыл бұрын
Dear Sir, When I began using our public library as a young teenager in the early 1960's, I discovered Loom of Language which opened the world of foreign languages to me. In later years, when I became more proficient in the study of foreign languages several things happened. I found my knowledge of Arabic aided me in learning how to read Persian. Hebrew and German aided me in learning Yiddish. Arabic and Persian along with Hindi and Sanskrit has aided me in learning Urdu. I have not had much of a desire in learning to speak foreign languages, but mostly in learning to read them. Also in the late 1980's and 1990's, I taught to learning to read Chinese through learning the Chinese ideograms. Sometimes I enjoy reading Japanese, but really I must learn the katakana and hiragana along with Japanese grammar!
@yousifabdalhalim7993
@yousifabdalhalim7993 Жыл бұрын
Not a coincidence you're a Webester
@christywells2707
@christywells2707 Жыл бұрын
Please proofread before posting you said you "taught to learning to read Chinese." Please clarify.
@WHALEBOY777
@WHALEBOY777 Жыл бұрын
@@christywells2707 Please increase your reading comprehension, he meant "I taught myself to learn to read Chinese" Even though this statement still sounds awkward, you can't rely on everyone to proofread everything that they've written on the internet. It is unreasonable to expect that. The onus is on you to make sense of it.
@so-tz8lp
@so-tz8lp Жыл бұрын
@@WHALEBOY777 you killed him, good job
@monkey1504
@monkey1504 3 жыл бұрын
This is the language learning equivalent of getting your eyes tested and finally being able to see everything clearly. Simply brilliant. Thank you!!
@charleswhite758
@charleswhite758 Жыл бұрын
All you need to do is learn Latin. But the Labour Party doesn't want to let children do that as they feel it's "elitist". Wouldn't be elitist if all children learned it. Then bureaucrats and administrators might recover the ability to write properly.
@r-man3864
@r-man3864 3 жыл бұрын
- How to became a polyglot? - Learn a lot languages.
@nobody-fp5is
@nobody-fp5is 3 жыл бұрын
you are a genius
@kati_18
@kati_18 3 жыл бұрын
Really? :o
@antinoofromgreece6560
@antinoofromgreece6560 3 жыл бұрын
Wow Incredible. is it serious ?
@coldonylum
@coldonylum 3 жыл бұрын
I would've never expected that
@krukrok5218
@krukrok5218 3 жыл бұрын
Wow thank you for this useless tip. Thank you.
@gastondotta7294
@gastondotta7294 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a 23 y/o male, native spanish speaker, english is my second, Portuguese my third and i'm going for russian now. Couldn't have done it without having an actual native or proficient user of the languages by my side to copy. To me a fundamental strategy to learn a language is exposure. Exposures to culture, non verbal expressions, voice tones, pronunciation and ways of expression. Every language has something unique of its own referring to how you view the world from the meaning of the words. I just do this for fun
@linguatolfak
@linguatolfak Жыл бұрын
Yes! I believe in exposure too, but I love to call it ‘immersion' because it's the most natural way I can think of. Immersion leads to acquiring the language, not learning(and I don't care what behaviorists have to say about this😂, my experiences taught me so ) The difference: By acquiring you'll adopt tones, nonverbal cues, and language fillers unconsciously, while most learners might not get those without trying! On my 4th language now and I can differentiate between the languages I learned and those I acquired.
@eze.reynoso
@eze.reynoso Жыл бұрын
Idéntico en tus primeros 3, portugués quizá a la mitad por lo que decís, poca exposición a la cultura
@PuddingRun
@PuddingRun 3 жыл бұрын
I wanted to say thank you to you for your video. Just over a month ago, I watched this video and once I understood that by speaking English, I already knew a lot of French words, I decided to give French another go. ( I barely got a C at GCSE so assumed I was bad at languages. ) This time I did more research and discovered I am a visual learner, so changed how I learn and that made all the difference. I have made good progress in French in only a month. Halfway through, I tried Italian just for fun and my brain began picking up the patterns in the language even though I had never studied Italian before. I was amazed. Learning French was helping me to learn Italian. I now have a new love for languages and will not stop until I'm fluent. I wanted to say a big thank you to you as it was your video that sparked this all off and made me realise I can actually be good at languages.
@ThirrinDiamond
@ThirrinDiamond 2 жыл бұрын
This is so sweet! How's it going? If it's halted, this is me encouraging you to start again! 💗
@billgreen576
@billgreen576 2 жыл бұрын
There are no bad students but there are an awful lot of bad teachers.
@blessyne
@blessyne Жыл бұрын
What helped you to make such progress, please share.
@christywells2707
@christywells2707 Жыл бұрын
I've been working on Spanish. I'll try Latin too. Withdrew from it in college, and Americans (i.e. Thomas Jefferson) used to speak several languages. Miamians frequently do whether they're generational Americans or Cuban Americans. I understand Melania Trump speaks several languages.
@snakejuce
@snakejuce Жыл бұрын
Its been 2 years. You fluent yet?
@thomaslilly5834
@thomaslilly5834 Жыл бұрын
For all GERMANS: The german translation of this book is called "Die Sprachen der Welt". It's very well known in Germany also and still in print. Fun fact: The translator removed the chapter about German language and added some chapters about English instead, plus an extra list of German words with latin origin. Fun fact 2: Frederick Bodmer (with a "k" at the end of the first name) is originally from Swizerland, hence his mother tongue was German.
@brownmasao
@brownmasao 4 ай бұрын
Omg danke vielmals! habe als ich das erste Mal das Video gsucht hab, des Buch in Englisch gsucht! LG aus Wien
@haluktataroglu9209
@haluktataroglu9209 3 жыл бұрын
6:58 : In the quote of Churchill, there is only one word from French which is "surrender" . That was really funny 😂😂😂
@markonekic1917
@markonekic1917 3 жыл бұрын
@Marta Aldama Cervantes ah, women...
@shadrach6299
@shadrach6299 3 жыл бұрын
It makes me mad that Churchill said that. Europe was broken after WWI. They didn’t have the means to fight the Germans. England would have fallen if we had not helped them. The Treaty of Versailles destroyed Europe economically. It is costly to fight a war.
@fairfeatherfiend
@fairfeatherfiend 3 жыл бұрын
And I guessed right.
@elchaposexcitingadventures1674
@elchaposexcitingadventures1674 3 жыл бұрын
shadrach I can understand how you think this but I could also say if it wasn’t for the British we would all be speaking German.Churchill’s quote here is how the British responded. They are amazing people. Despite the constant bombing they kept positive and that positivity allowed them to never give up. “Keep calm and carry on” We can’t imagine what it would have been like to be under such devastating destruction. And this spirit is still in the British today.
@7184610369
@7184610369 3 жыл бұрын
France, the only country to surrender 3 times in 1 war.
@alfredobarrios1095
@alfredobarrios1095 3 жыл бұрын
You are very smart and you look like a Roman magistrate!
@PersonManManManMan
@PersonManManManMan 3 жыл бұрын
Indeed he does
@user-zj2iu4lu1z
@user-zj2iu4lu1z 3 жыл бұрын
no he doesn't
@Gadavillers-Panoir
@Gadavillers-Panoir 3 жыл бұрын
@@user-zj2iu4lu1z yeah, you are right. He looks more like a Roman Emperor actually. He's what I imagine Julius Caesar would have looked like.
@twujstary856
@twujstary856 3 жыл бұрын
rabini się wypowiedzieli
@user-zj2iu4lu1z
@user-zj2iu4lu1z 3 жыл бұрын
@@Gadavillers-Panoir "he looks more like Roman emperor" No he actually in fact most truly doesn't indeed look like Roman emperor, let alone with your ridiculous "more". He looks Anatolian, Indid and Armenian.
@darklibertario5001
@darklibertario5001 3 жыл бұрын
This man came straight from the conquest of Gaul to teach me about languages
@56932982
@56932982 3 жыл бұрын
All of this sounds so logical and familiar. I am a native German speaker and I am fluent in English. For a long time I had the "wired" idea to learn French. (I live just an hour car drive away from France.) Then by accident I clicked on a a french KZbin video. It had subtitles. In French of course. Using my English I could almost read some sentences. I was quite surprised. I signed up to a French course on Duolingo a few days later. I am 230 days into it and I am now able to somewhat read French Wikipedia articles. Given my experience with first learning English at school then acquiring English by reading lots of it, I, without doubt, will be able to communicate in French some day. Surprise: I even can read some Spanish utilizing my miniscule French. Now I am tempted to start Spanish or Latin once I am done with Duolingo.
@WeirdSnakeGal
@WeirdSnakeGal Жыл бұрын
I speak French and English and I always compare the two as a lot of words are almost the same. English even borrows a lot of French words. Funny anecdote, French is actually my first language, but free 5 years in England I had almost forgotten how to speak French and I had a bit of a British accent when I got back. I would also make the same typical mistakes like saying "la garçon and le fille" now I rarely make this mistake but it still happens. I also use English words in French that to me sound like they could be used in French too and people make fun of me cause to them I make no sense 😂
@alexj.denton7453
@alexj.denton7453 Жыл бұрын
Dude 230 days and you can somewhat read Wikipedia articles, you are wasting your time, use Anki and learn the most frequent words and buy a book on basic grammar and try to tie french with your daily life. For example traveling, or watching movies or series in french with French subs or no subs at all
@poladelarosa8399
@poladelarosa8399 Жыл бұрын
Go for it!
@lilyrosepunkunicorm9871
@lilyrosepunkunicorm9871 Жыл бұрын
Hi native speaker of English here, wired is a completely different from the word weird which is what I thought you meant. Just so you know hope this helps!!
@UberOcelot
@UberOcelot 3 жыл бұрын
"... if you're smart, you can handle that." Honestly it's refreshing to speak to the best in one's potential. So often material tries to find the lowest common denominator to hoist any person into a subject, but honestly it's always best to give people more credit and provide a more robust and honest approach in offering people learning material. Almost no kid is told they can learn multiple languages at a time, yet nobody bats an eye at kids growing up naturally in multi-lingual families. Who said one's individual education can't be multi-lingual?
@Danielle-zq7kb
@Danielle-zq7kb 3 жыл бұрын
UberOcelot Conversely, I have also met people afraid to speak multiple languages in front of infants and toddlers. Babies sort things out very easily and if there is any language delay, it will be weeks or a few months and hey will jump to the level of their peers and also surpass them. I have known many bilingual children and a few multilingual ones. Don’t let anyone make you afraid to give this gift to your child. Also, any child who is slow to verbalize can be taught sign language - this is a legitimate language and also has many benefits for brain development.
@user-vn2on9tz9g
@user-vn2on9tz9g Жыл бұрын
You're extremely right, our education is so often unified to the low-medium level, all the stuff you read online and all the stuff you are told by the teachers and all these experts from online schools and stuff are suitable for the average person, having problems with language learning, but there are definitely part of these average people with language learning problems, who are perfectly able to learn languages easily. I myself learned English with no connection with native speakers and other stuff, I had good understanding of grammar, thank to my school teacher, basic vocabulary and nothing more by the end of the school, now I can perfectly communicate with anybody in English and there's no any language barrier
@carlgrove8793
@carlgrove8793 Жыл бұрын
Well, I think I'm reasonably smart, got a couple of degrees, but I was never able to learn a foreign language. Failed at French, got thrown out of the Latin class because I was so hopeless. Since then I had another go at Latin -- that didn't last long -- tried a course using audio tapes for Spanish, managed quite well at first, learned nearly a thousand words, but then I hit a Spanish tense that has no correspondence with English, gave up for a couple of weeks, decided to try again then found I'd forgotten all of those words apart from two! It would have to be an uncannily brilliant book to help me learn another language, never mind two at the same time!
@user-vn2on9tz9g
@user-vn2on9tz9g Жыл бұрын
@@carlgrove8793 learn Scots as a foreign language :)
@carlgrove8793
@carlgrove8793 Жыл бұрын
@@user-vn2on9tz9g When I was doing canvassing calls for a charity I found I could do quite good Scots and not bad Northern. However, I spoke to one guy in Glasgow, and he had no idea what I was saying.
@ElenaGarcia-de7pq
@ElenaGarcia-de7pq 4 жыл бұрын
I love this vídeo. I'm bilingual: Català and Spanish. I used to study French at school. Once, when I went to Switzerland, in a restaurant I heard a couple talking very similar to Catalan and they were talking Romance, one of the officials languages of the country. We talked together and we could understand us really well. It was great. I can understand a little Italian and Portuguese without to study it. Now, I'm trying to study English, I'm 61, my goal is not to have a grade for a job, perhaps only I would like to read some books, or to watch some films in the original language. By the way, verbs are my nightmare! Thanks a lot.
@LetThemTalkTV
@LetThemTalkTV 4 жыл бұрын
Very interesting story thanks
@coleabrahams9331
@coleabrahams9331 3 жыл бұрын
Your English is great!
@coleabrahams9331
@coleabrahams9331 3 жыл бұрын
@LetThemTalkTV Could you please summarize the video? I still don’t understand what I must do now to learn my next two languages
@Selyucida
@Selyucida 3 жыл бұрын
I am a native spanish speaker, I binge-watched a couple of years ago a series in Catalan (never heard the language before), 3 seasons, by the time I got to the last season I barely needed subtitles. It took me two weeks to get to understand like 95% of everything said. I'm still shocked at how so similar both languages are. And it for sure changed the way I think about learning similar languages
@giovanniacuto2688
@giovanniacuto2688 3 жыл бұрын
A few years ago I had a holiday in Barcelona. The friend I went with had studied Spanish (or should I say Castilian) at school. In a restaurant she ordered something in Spanish. The waiter looked at her blankly. Then I ordered the same dish in Catala. He understood at once. My friend said to me "you bastard! You never told me you could speak Catala". As an elaborate practical joke I had been studying a Catala phrasebook during my lunch breaks at work for a month before the start of our holiday.
@si_vis_pacempara_bellum4906
@si_vis_pacempara_bellum4906 3 жыл бұрын
My native language is Chinese and my second language is English, learned it through conversing and understanding contexts. I came to America barely spoke a word of English and in three years I got C1 from IELTS without memorizing a single word or preparing for the test. I just started to learn Japanese and so far it's making a lot of sense 😂
@rollingdownfalling
@rollingdownfalling Жыл бұрын
This may work with English, but it certainly won't work with harder languages like German. I tried similar approaches but failed miserably. Currently, I am learning new approaches coming from varies language experts, one aspect of it was inspired by Michel Thomas.
@harmandon
@harmandon Жыл бұрын
@@rollingdownfalling i disagree. english isn’t inherently easier or harder than german. that’s not how languages work…
@rollingdownfalling
@rollingdownfalling Жыл бұрын
@@harmandon Have you tested out with different languages. My experience in German (like most other fellow students who's learning German) is definitely the sentence structure (der Satzbau) and as a result it also affects listening comprehension. It's just very difficult to overcome the B1 barrier without some intensity, unlike English, even though I make plenty of mistakes at intermediate level, but never have I constantly having trouble forming or finishing a sentence. Not only you have to get used to constantly splitting a sentence into fragments and drastically change the verb position, some sentences required very alien forms of reflexive and preposition combo which requires memorisation. An example that is very simple can be: There is nothing to worry about. Es gibt nichts, worüber man sich Sorgen machen müsste. (Literally) It gives nothing, what over one themselves Worry making should/would have to. Only if I can overcome that without too much thinking can I get fluent like a normal B2.
@harmandon
@harmandon Жыл бұрын
@@rollingdownfalling yes i am a polyglot (i think), keep in mind i said the word "inherently". english comes easy to most people because they are constantly surrounded and bombarded by it by virtue of it being the language of the internet and global affairs. i felt this when i learnt dutch. dutch word order drove me a little crazy because i was not used to it nor had i ever encountered something similar. this doesn't mean dutch is necessarily "harder" to learn. i'm not sure if that makes sense. but in terms of the native language, a child learning dutch will have no more trouble than a child learning english, despite dutch having many more exceptions to its word order.
@harmandon
@harmandon Жыл бұрын
@@maalikserebryakov you entirely missed the point.
@roundknittles
@roundknittles Жыл бұрын
Love the loom of language. Dad had it on the shelf when i was still in single digits. Read it many many times. Helped me sooo much.
@MrHimanshun
@MrHimanshun 3 жыл бұрын
_the character designer did a splendid job at designing him_
@Moonlight-px6sz
@Moonlight-px6sz 4 жыл бұрын
This video came up at the right moment. I'm going to university where I will learn six languages at the same time! Cheer me with 👍🏾
@LetThemTalkTV
@LetThemTalkTV 4 жыл бұрын
Wow! I hop they are related languages
@Moonlight-px6sz
@Moonlight-px6sz 4 жыл бұрын
@@LetThemTalkTV Not really 😅 Arabic, French (or Portuguese), Norwegian, Latin, ancient Greek, old Slavonic, and English(I know it pretty well) ( Oh, seven😸) and Russian as my native language To tell the truth, I doubt I can handle it😬
@Aalpine001
@Aalpine001 4 жыл бұрын
@@Moonlight-px6sz Where this university is?
@gluon8760
@gluon8760 4 жыл бұрын
this gives me hopes to learn my 3rd one ... super hard
@Moonlight-px6sz
@Moonlight-px6sz 4 жыл бұрын
@@Aalpine001 St.-Petersburg
@SuperParatech
@SuperParatech 3 жыл бұрын
What an absolute pleasure to listen to you and hear your explanations. You speak as a calm and confident educator, inspiring students and confidence to proceed into new areas. I really enjoyed this and will look at your other contributions. PS: subscribed
@teresabaptista7016
@teresabaptista7016 Жыл бұрын
Just join your channel, Professor. I am loving it. Being native Portuguese and not a linguistics expert at all (my expertise is marketing and communication), my experience is Portuguese idiom give me all the advantages you just mentioned. Actually, I learned English on my own at a young age (which I hope escuses my "french"). I learned by exposure. Same with Spanish and Italian. Now that I am an old lady :))))))) I am learning Slavic languages... Turns out there are lots of Slavic words with Latin and Greek roots and most neologisms are commun to Portuguese, or English or French! Amazing! Cheers from Lisbon. Thanks you so much for your amazing videos.
@anetaostaszewska
@anetaostaszewska 4 жыл бұрын
I am just speechless! This episode is so interesting, so inspiring... full of everything I love about learning languages! I am so happy to subscribe your channel. Take care of yourself :)
@LetThemTalkTV
@LetThemTalkTV 4 жыл бұрын
I'm so happy you subscribed.
@piruz3243
@piruz3243 3 жыл бұрын
Speechless! 😁😁😁
@jackmallory7996
@jackmallory7996 3 жыл бұрын
Being speechless isn't going to help you speak languages better!
@shane7647
@shane7647 3 жыл бұрын
This is the most engaging and interesting video i've ever seen on explaining language learning, of any sort. Great work.
@chuggingCoffee_
@chuggingCoffee_ 3 жыл бұрын
Completely agree. This blew my mind.
@dirk600
@dirk600 Жыл бұрын
I have been waiting for this video, you answered so many questions I had. Great job as always!
@KasperZERO
@KasperZERO Жыл бұрын
The easiest way to learn many languages: etymology: the history and evolution of words. Learn lots of alphabets, learn lots of languages that go with it. And like he said, small condensed lists of pronouns and articles.
@laurabee2669
@laurabee2669 3 жыл бұрын
LOVE LOVE LOVE this video, i know the basics of Italian and my mother tongue is Spanish so when you were explaining the variation of the words from Latin I was speechless bc it really makes it MUCH more easier
@AvrahamYairStern
@AvrahamYairStern 3 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with learning particles first. When I first started learning Spanish, I learned 'este', 'es', 'con', 'sin', 'ese' etc. and within a week, I could read a fair amount of Spanish.
@weave4247
@weave4247 3 жыл бұрын
Yes but what exactly ARE particles and where can I find a list of them (I'm trying to learn French )
@AvrahamYairStern
@AvrahamYairStern 3 жыл бұрын
@@weave4247 they're your words for articles, connectives that sort of stuff. In English for example, some particles would be: the; a; an; this; that; here; there; they; those; these etc. In French, to learn particles, learn thise equivalents and more. K believe French has three words for definite articles and two for indefinite articles, meaning 3 words for 'the' (le, la, les) and two words for 'a/an' (un, une).
@gaelledveleumen5346
@gaelledveleumen5346 3 жыл бұрын
Hi sir, I m a friend speaker But I m learning English since 2 years but it isn't able to speak what is my problem.
@otaviamonaco436
@otaviamonaco436 3 жыл бұрын
So true, I'm a Portuguese native speaker trying to learn German and can understand and/or guess verbs and subjects pretty easily (based on English), but get seriously stuck in the "particles".
@_Fisher54
@_Fisher54 3 жыл бұрын
@@gaelledveleumen5346 you need to surround yourself in an English environment. Go live in an English speaking country for a few months to a year
@saltysnot
@saltysnot Жыл бұрын
This by far the most interesting video on language I have ever watched on KZbin! Amazing work!
@Supervalu89
@Supervalu89 Жыл бұрын
This may possibly be the best book recommendation I’ve ever had. Thank you so much man!
@saberliberta
@saberliberta 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, I was looking for this book for some years and then unexpectedly I came across a book published in Portuguese and to my great surprise I discovered that it was a translation of The Loom of Language. Even it's hard red cover is similar.
@V21bh
@V21bh 4 жыл бұрын
I’m learning french and portuguese and they help me out so much. If something doesn’t make sense in one the answer is usually in the other. I already speak Spanish too so it helps. I say if someone can go to college and take 5-6 classes you can learn more than one language at once.
@guilhermemoreira9947
@guilhermemoreira9947 3 жыл бұрын
Não desista do português, bro! No KZbin há o canal "Curso em Vídeo" com inúmeras aulas de programação.
@lariosleandro6536
@lariosleandro6536 Жыл бұрын
Si te chamuyo yo no cazas una no cazas ma que español habla boncha ? Has comprendido ? 😃
@carc.sync0
@carc.sync0 Жыл бұрын
I had heard other polyglots recommend focusing on a single language at a time, but this video convinced me to try with two since I am learning Portuguese (for fun) and French (for work). What I find the most bothersome is learning all the mannerisms native speakers use in conversation because you need them to sound "natural", but they are only really learned (and quickly forgotten) after a lot of real-world practice. Sometimes, I even wonder whether it's possible to have a high speaking ability in several languages for a person in "normal" circumstances (i.e., no foreign language speaking parent, no international school, no immigré granpa, etc.)
@seenonyt2210
@seenonyt2210 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating book! Great that you are putting it in the spotlight!
@coffeemachtspass
@coffeemachtspass 4 жыл бұрын
I found a copy of the Loom of Language in a used book sale around 1995. What a great discovery that was! In fact, I used the ‘museum’ appendices as a starting point for learning Spanish, French, Italian, and German. The lists also gave me organized topics that I could use for learning any language I’d like, though with the aid of a dictionary and good grammar/usage resources for choosing among synonyms.
@andersaxmark5871
@andersaxmark5871 4 жыл бұрын
I speak five languages, including French, but my favorite thing to do when in France is to pretend I don't speak French, to mangle French words horribly, to speak loudly with an American accent, and then claim to be from Quebec.
@Yalookin
@Yalookin 4 жыл бұрын
xD
@gplussux2624
@gplussux2624 4 жыл бұрын
Simpson you're diabolical.
@georgethakur
@georgethakur 4 жыл бұрын
Absolute madgars
@sulekha3771
@sulekha3771 3 жыл бұрын
Looool
@ogunsadebenjaminadeiyin2729
@ogunsadebenjaminadeiyin2729 3 жыл бұрын
Lolllll
@connorgioiafigliu
@connorgioiafigliu 3 жыл бұрын
Great tip about the history of os → ô and s → é in French! It's really helped me with memorizing French vocabulary over the past few months!
@61Ldf
@61Ldf 2 жыл бұрын
I read The Loom of Language more than 10 years ago the first time snd it helped me to understand Bulgarian) One of the greatest learning books on languages, indeed.
@waynehendricks1529
@waynehendricks1529 3 жыл бұрын
Excellent info, you've helped to reignite my excitement for language learning. Thanks.
@QBRX
@QBRX 4 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you so much...I'm gonna start learning all the French, Italian, and Spanish particles.
@Martin-ep8dy
@Martin-ep8dy 3 жыл бұрын
Great video, I am from Germany and I had big problems with learning English in school because I was forced to. I needed to repeat a class because of my bad English and Latin. Today I speak really good English because I need it for my job. During staying in Souther America for half a year I also started to learn Spanish. Thanks for the great video, I am motivated to improve the languages I already speak and to learn new ones
@daveroan1942
@daveroan1942 Жыл бұрын
Loom of Language was reprinted as a paperback by the Merlin Press in 1996; I bought remainder copies for £2.00 each. As a language teacher I bought 12 copies and favoured friends have been given copies until I have only 2 copies left. A remarkable book.
@xiasuyang6556
@xiasuyang6556 4 жыл бұрын
6:58 “Notice that Churchill only uses one word of Latin origine, that’s ‘surrender’, which is from French ...” Was Churchill a troll?
@danielariza8921
@danielariza8921 4 жыл бұрын
exactly what I thought hahah
@einSteppenwolf
@einSteppenwolf 4 жыл бұрын
Street < Old English stret < Late Latin (via) strata = paved road Source: www.etymonline.com/search?q=street
@vangorp9056
@vangorp9056 4 жыл бұрын
Surrender is not a french word.. it's an English word on a 1,000 years old Norman basis. That doesn't make it a French word. By the way: "Despite our overwhelming superiority in men and hardware numbers, the french troops are counter-attacking in several places. I can't understand how those soldiers, sometimes fighting at one versus ten (or even one versus thirty in some areas), can find enough strength to assault us: this is simply amazing ! I see in those french soldiers the same energy than with the veterans of Verdun in 1916. For several days now, hundreds of bombers and guns are pounding the french defence. But, it's always the same thing: our infantry and panzers can't break through, despite some local and ephemeral successes. Dunkirk brings the proof that the french soldier is one of the best in the world. The french artillery, already dreaded in 1914, demonstrates once more its efficiency. Our losses are terrifying: numerous battallions have lost 60% of their men, sometimes even more ! By resisting ten days or more to our much bigger forces, the french army has accomplished, in Dunkirk, a superb achievement that you must pay tribute to. They have certainly saved Great-Britain from the defeat, by allowing the british professional army to reach the british coast." General Von Küchler commandant of the XVIII army during the last stand of the french army to cover the british at Dunkirk. “The Dunkirk episode was far worse than was ever realized … The men getting back to England were so demoralized they threw their rifles & equipment out of the windows of railway-carriages. Some sent for their wives & their civilian clothes, changed into these & walked home.” General Mason-Macfarlane, the head of military intelligence, summoned journalists & told them that they were to inform the British public to blame the French for “not fighting,” & to proclaim that the B.E.F. was “undefeated.” On May 30, 1940, the BBC announced that “men of the undefeated B.E.F. have been coming home from France. They did not come back in triumph, they have come back in glory.” Given the early British determination to discontinue the fighting & prepare for evacuation, the very low levels of casualties, it is a complete distortion of truth to “mock” the courage & commitment of the French forces to say they did not fight - particularly when they were fighting a completely new form of mobile warfare which the French High Command was completely un-prepared for. Hard to see how 90,000 killed meant “not fighting.” The British Expeditionary Force : 3,500 killed
@Guitarbarella
@Guitarbarella 4 жыл бұрын
VAN GORP doesn’t norman basis mean French?
@thetrollpatrol8799
@thetrollpatrol8799 4 жыл бұрын
He was very good with words
@anwyllonmusic
@anwyllonmusic 3 жыл бұрын
English = Water Afrikaans = Water Dutch = Water German = Wasser Russian = Vodka
@rickgauden
@rickgauden 3 жыл бұрын
Voda?
@justanotherweirdo11
@justanotherweirdo11 3 жыл бұрын
@@rickgauden it's a joke.
@kitszasz3971
@kitszasz3971 3 жыл бұрын
eau de vie
@joshuanun9651
@joshuanun9651 3 жыл бұрын
Net so my outie met n knerise Rum ne!!
@antinoofromgreece6560
@antinoofromgreece6560 3 жыл бұрын
You're completely right lol
@sebastianwalker1081
@sebastianwalker1081 2 жыл бұрын
This video (and your others) are a joy to watch. Thank you!
@universalmycelium9384
@universalmycelium9384 3 жыл бұрын
Sir, I have no words (in any language) to express how wonderful was to watch this video. Thank you ginormously!!!
@christophernuzzi2780
@christophernuzzi2780 3 жыл бұрын
I totally agree! I discovered this book in my high school library back in the 1980's and now have my own copy. I have read it many times, and I have learned more about languages and linguistics from this book than from any other.
@saiyajedi
@saiyajedi 3 жыл бұрын
5:10 Technically the native English word for “deer” is “hart”. “Deer” descends from the word that originally meant “animal” (before it was replaced by its French/Latin equivalent).
@LiaanZeeKun
@LiaanZeeKun 3 жыл бұрын
Intresting, the dutch word for "deer/hart" is "hert" and the dutch word for animal is indeed "dier" pronounced as "deer".
@kit922
@kit922 Жыл бұрын
"Tier" is animal in German
@tahiti1
@tahiti1 Жыл бұрын
I already have learnt Italian. Currently learning Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese. I do something similiar with tables and include Latin and formal English to try to find the connection & evolution. On paper it's straightforward but in everyday life it is so much harder not to mix up the romance languages when speaking, particularly when Italian is dominant in my brain, as the more fluent language. Also surprising how much genders vary between the romance languages.
@ricardoandrade3014
@ricardoandrade3014 Жыл бұрын
Try to learn actual Portuguese instead of Brazilian Portuguese, it is much better in sentence construction, vocabulary and verbs and so on. Brazilians actually recommend learning Original Portuguese because it is how it is meant to be spoken :) Have a nice day ;)
@angelinalabate6548
@angelinalabate6548 Жыл бұрын
Italiano? Anch'io, perchè hai imparato l'italiano?
@merial7
@merial7 Жыл бұрын
@@ricardoandrade3014 " original " but brazilian portuguese is more traditional the European Portugueses changed more than Brazilian Portuguese bc the Spanish influence.
@t.castro4493
@t.castro4493 Жыл бұрын
Te desejo boa sorte. Saudações do 🇧🇷 PS: Wouldn't say that European Portuguese is easier. It may actually be harder for you to learn due to the accents.
@valeriaaraujo9962
@valeriaaraujo9962 Жыл бұрын
I'm Brazilian and I never heard any other Brazilian giving the advice of learn the "original" portuguese. If you want to learn Brazilian Portuguese then you should learn it instead of other Portuguese, of course. There is many speakers out there and so much content, you aren't going to worry about finding material in our language at all.
@rmbc1971
@rmbc1971 Жыл бұрын
What a fabulously engaging man. Soooo interesting. I actually stopped, so I could take it all in. Thanks for the book recommendation.
@nandomax3
@nandomax3 3 жыл бұрын
I'm a native Portuguese speaker and I really felt it easier to learn German based on english
@gc2528
@gc2528 3 жыл бұрын
Eu também achei muito bacana, um dia vou começar o alemão também, pena que os idiomas asiáticos são completamente a parte desses padrões.
@alissanrocklove
@alissanrocklove 3 жыл бұрын
O mesmo para mim. Ainda quero aprender o Holandês também, que tem semelhanças com ambos o inglês e o alemão
@JoseSantos-el8nj
@JoseSantos-el8nj 3 жыл бұрын
Right but there's a problem when it comes to asian languages, they are so different that not even knowing English really facilitates the process. I'm learning japanese and I wish that applied here too :(
@nandomax3
@nandomax3 3 жыл бұрын
@@JoseSantos-el8nj maybe this will get better after the first Asian language you learn. Imagine if you knew Chinese, the Japanese kanji would get easier and also the Korean lang
@nandomax3
@nandomax3 3 жыл бұрын
@@alissanrocklove acho que depois de chegar no b2 do alemão, devo voltar pras línguas latinas e recuperar meu frances
@WINCHANDLE
@WINCHANDLE 3 жыл бұрын
I wondered about buffing up my Spanish along with learning French. There is a youtube teaching French with Spanish subtitles. This made sense because it attaches neural pathways in Spanish to new ones in French. I didn't explain that very well. While it seems really difficult, it actually links a lot together in your head. It's nice he validated this concept of learning two languages at once. Forget Portuguese though. With irregular verbs and non-intuitive pronunciation...does not compute...but maybe after a summer in Lisboa...
@Somefurfag
@Somefurfag 3 жыл бұрын
"Of course, English is not going to help you if you're learning an Asian language." Laughing from my island as loanwords run out of control.
@raidcrhonos
@raidcrhonos 3 жыл бұрын
LoL
@desireev.2227
@desireev.2227 3 жыл бұрын
tagalog?
@KasumiRINA
@KasumiRINA 3 жыл бұрын
Also, Singlish is a thing in Singapore and tons of Japanese words are straight up English transliterations.
@eleSDSU
@eleSDSU 2 жыл бұрын
[Joining the lauhging choir in Spanglish]
@matthewbartsh9167
@matthewbartsh9167 Жыл бұрын
@@KasumiRINA Singlish is not a foreign language. It is a dialect of English, even if widely regarded as not a good form of it.
@costinnitu3813
@costinnitu3813 3 жыл бұрын
I've stopped when he said "If you're smart".
@liverpooldublin9317
@liverpooldublin9317 3 жыл бұрын
then you aren"t
@costinnitu3813
@costinnitu3813 3 жыл бұрын
@@liverpooldublin9317 You know, pointing out the obvious doesn't make one smart, either.
@costinnitu3813
@costinnitu3813 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikel4879 With the unintended risk of disrespecting the rest of the commentators, a smart person doesn't search on youtube how to learn a second language (become a polyglot). They usually are polyglots already. So no, Mike, I am not a smart person.
@costinnitu3813
@costinnitu3813 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikel4879 "Mike" poti alege sa nu iei in serios/personal tot ce se spune pe net/youtube...dar ca sa fii tu mai impacat iti promit un lucru: daca se va adopta vreodata in Romani(c)a modelul de social credit score precum cel chinez, atunci imi voi masura cuvintele cu mai multa atentie. Pana atunci vorbele raman vorbe. Stii tu vorba aia celebra: "Why so serious?".
@costinnitu3813
@costinnitu3813 3 жыл бұрын
@@mikel4879 Asa este, "Mike". Ai dreptate. Nu stiu ce a fost in capul meu. Promit ca ma voi redresa. O zi buna!
@uniquechannelnames
@uniquechannelnames 4 жыл бұрын
Just a tip if you're travelling and speaking French. Instead of "hôtel" for a hostel, if they don't quite understand, "auberge" can also mean hostel. Youth hostel is an "auberge de jeunesse". This at least goes for French Canada, lol learned that trying to direct a cabby to a youth hostel in Montreal, trying to say "C'est comme un hôtel, mais c'est moin cher, avec beaucoup de personnes dans une chambre." haha.
@williamgifford83
@williamgifford83 3 жыл бұрын
75 years old now and still trying to learn a new language each year. And then I started Irish. Abandon hope. The lessons in this video I’ve lived with for decades and never heard of the book. Now I’ll look for it. Thanks.
@mohamedobay6077
@mohamedobay6077 Жыл бұрын
Your approach is brilliant, sir! Lots of thanks.
@user-jz1hy4gd3f
@user-jz1hy4gd3f 4 жыл бұрын
This is a kind of content that I admire every time I stumble upon one. I've been compensating my inability to attend to my English classes this past week by just surfing the internet looking for something to learn about it and your video gave me a bit of inspiration. Thank you, sir, I'm definitely your subscriber from now on
@cr612
@cr612 3 жыл бұрын
So many great points! I study italian, Spanish French and Portuguese. I’m super aware of the false friends and familiarity with style helps a lot for my brain to differentiate
@alexeru6154
@alexeru6154 3 жыл бұрын
Boa sorte e bom proveito a aprender todas as quatro línguas!
@cr612
@cr612 3 жыл бұрын
Alex Eru obrigado, eu gosto muito!
@slicksalmon6948
@slicksalmon6948 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. This is the most interesting language channel on KZbin. One aspect of this video that I'd like to highlight is the recommendation to concentrate on "particles" (articles, prepositions, conjunctions, etc.) early on in your language study. These are all the little words you can never seem to remember, and in my experience are the real rate limiters when you're reading. There are some of these words in French that I've looked up a thousand times and can never seem to remember. If anyone has written a book entitled, "The 200 Most Annoying Little French Words I Can Never Seem To Remember", please tell me. A set of flash cards and a drill tape would be helpful, too. Thanks.
@BookMattic
@BookMattic 3 жыл бұрын
I love the way you talk about the English language! It's amazing. Already subbed thank you very much
@LordMontystink
@LordMontystink 3 жыл бұрын
This is superb. The guy speaks really well, is succinct in his explanations, the topic is fascinating in its own right and the whole is inspirational for those of us who struggle. I shall return to my studies with renewed vigour. Whoever you are, Sir, thank you. That was brilliant.
@ginoisthename4427
@ginoisthename4427 3 жыл бұрын
You need to give life to every single word you learn and you will remember em forever.
@tomgiles1484
@tomgiles1484 3 жыл бұрын
Great, informative video. Thanks for posting! I was able to find the book at my local library. Whoo-hoo!
@iamwarlock1292
@iamwarlock1292 Жыл бұрын
I grew up not learning French until high school and by then everyone was so far ahead of me, the teacher just left me alone (and of course I failed) so I developed an intense dislike for the language. As an adult, my job took me weekly to Quebec so I made myself learn a few stock phrases and my co-workers down there did their best to help. I have tried and tried to learn French, even taking night courses but have never been satisfied with my slow progress. I recently gave it up and started to learn Dutch and Norwegian. Last week I totally surprised myself while shopping for a product, whose description was totally in French, by actually understanding almost the entire thing without having to resort to Google Translate. I am now back to my French lessons, this time with fervor. I guess more sank into my stubborn brain than I thought. I also think learning a completely different language opened up my brain's susceptibility to the much-feared French. Love your video!
@wowjef
@wowjef Жыл бұрын
Keep going!
@judithtaylor6916
@judithtaylor6916 Жыл бұрын
Duolingo app has helped me immensely with French. First year of high school, an honour in French. 2nd year-failed, due to a different teacher. So never bothered till I found 3 years ago and 50 odd years later, my heritage is french. And found a French relative. But the real winner is Alexa. She is the most amazing online Google teacher. I have learnt more from her Google podcasts, than having private French lessons.
@PauloHAndr
@PauloHAndr 3 жыл бұрын
Hello. I'm a polyglot from Brazil. Aside from English, I speak only Romance languages, i.e. Spanish, French, Italian and of course Portuguese. To be honest, I've studied roughly one at a time (with some overlap) in the traditional way, which took me over 15 years to absorb them, and I still have to bridge some gaps so it's a long way down the road, especially as for more advanced structures in French and Italian. Probably I would have made faster progress had I studied them at once (ES/FR/IT), as their grammar is very similar. Nevertheless, I must say that the more languages you learn, the easier it becomes.
@joseluizdurigon8893
@joseluizdurigon8893 Жыл бұрын
Igualmente. Sabendo português de forma nativa (br tmbm) italiano é muito fácil assim como espanhol. E sabendo tmbm inglês, a estrutura do alemão pra mim é algo quase que nativo em mim. Quem me desafia mais é o Russo que é totalmente diferente, mas possível claro.
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 Жыл бұрын
I think it does when the languages are closely related but less so the more distant the relationship or when they're not related at all. Since my conversational but not fluent Spanish has helped me many times in French, Italian, and Portuguese, I thought it would be fun to tackle Romanian. But spending three summers in Romania with all Romanian friends didn't get me to the level I am in French just off the back of my Spanish. And then trying something like Vietnamese or Khmer takes way more effort for way smaller results.
@PauloHAndr
@PauloHAndr Жыл бұрын
@@joseluizdurigon8893 Verdade. Alemão pra mim assusta um pouco rsrsrs, mas está na minha lista de futuros idiomas a aprender...
@PauloHAndr
@PauloHAndr Жыл бұрын
@@andrewdunbar828 I can barely understand anything at all in Romanian. On the other side, listening to and reading Catalan for me was kind of intelligible.
@annaw5604
@annaw5604 Жыл бұрын
I am not sure that your progress would be faster learning a few Roman languages at the same time. It is usually not recommended. Instead, unsimilar languages could be studied at the same rime. The reason? To avoid language transfer. I did Portuguese and Italian at the same time (I was proficient in French and Soanish before it). Portuguese is my weakest, and I think it was because I took it with Italian. I am a qualified language teacher and an experienced translator and interpreter with a few other than Roman languages.
@injujuan8993
@injujuan8993 4 жыл бұрын
First!💃 Love your channel, Gideon. Thank you ever so much for your reading tips and book picks. You're amazing 😍😍😍💖💖💖💜💜💜💖💖💖💜💜💜
@LetThemTalkTV
@LetThemTalkTV 4 жыл бұрын
You are amazing. I'm happy you enjoy them.
@agnessfox9983
@agnessfox9983 3 жыл бұрын
I'm Polish and I speak English and now learning Spanish and German. This video was very informative and inspiring- thank you ❤️❤️🇵🇱
@VictorMusique
@VictorMusique 3 жыл бұрын
Hello! I also like to learn foreign languages so much! I add different videos on my channel that relate to Russian language. And I want to add more videos about other languages in the future. I also add videos with my other hobbies: piano playing and skateboarding. Maybe if you find something interesting and helpful on my channel you can subscribe :)
@daianasheludkevych3335
@daianasheludkevych3335 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you so much for thus recommendation! I’ll definitely try to find this book and read it! Now I see that my desire to learn Spanish, Italian and Portuguese at the same time, having studied Latin, makes perfect sense after all…🤩🙌 and when I approach to the other Germanic languages, I’ll definitely try to learn it in set using this approach 👍
@andrewl14190
@andrewl14190 3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, Malcolm X recommends this book in his autobiography (if I remember correctly)
@skyrider828
@skyrider828 3 жыл бұрын
This book started me on the language journey more than 60 years ago!. It was republished by Merlin Press London in 1981.
@lorivalgomesmartello4592
@lorivalgomesmartello4592 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting, thanks for the very important suggestions! My mother tongue is Portuguese and I also speak Spanish with the same fluency. I had a good level of professional English (I am a sommelier), and I studied French (level A2) until shortly before coming to work in Austria, when I started to study German. From then on, my fluency in English and the little I had of French were overwhelmed by the strength of the German language, I suppose, or because I studied German too much. Now I need to regain my fluency in English, because I found a job in Spain, in a restaurant where I will surely have to speak English, and I hope I don't lose my B1 level in German. I usually study on my own, but it helps a lot to watch videos of smart people like you. Thank you very much!
@4himsanctified
@4himsanctified 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, I love this. So much of what I share with students. I encourage Spanish students that they will recognize more that what is truly foreign to them.
@simmo5
@simmo5 3 жыл бұрын
I bought a reprint of this book in 2000 after my German teacher recommended it. Very good book to have if you can get hold of a copy.
@stuartweston9978
@stuartweston9978 Жыл бұрын
I read the Loom of Language when I was at secondary school in the 60s. It fired my interest in the history of languages. As well as English, French and German (all Indo European languages) I speak Indonesian and Lao as I live in SE Asia. It is interesting to compare different families of languages!
@MikeJones-iz1qq
@MikeJones-iz1qq Жыл бұрын
This video was so fascinating. Thanks!
@ketanpakhale619
@ketanpakhale619 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for such detailed explanation.
@Suedeash
@Suedeash Жыл бұрын
I'm 23 and recently discovered that I have a bit of a knack for picking up different alphabets and scripts, I really enjoy languages that have entirely different scripts and currently I can read and write in English, German (though I'm a bit rusty, but like this video illustrates, Germanic languages are easier to grasp for primary English speakers), Hindi/Sanskrit and Japanese (still working on the Kanji). I think there's a framework to learning languages that I find quite intuitive and exciting... Looking to pick up Russian or Arabic next, but there is so much choice for us out there!
@280StJohnsPl
@280StJohnsPl Жыл бұрын
WOW....that is fantastic, good for you !
@kathytg446
@kathytg446 3 жыл бұрын
I noticed this similarity too after trying to learn Spanish. At the same time, I use the same method with east asian languages namely Mandarin Chinese, Japanese and Korean. I grew up speaking hokkien which is one of the ancient chinese dialects and I found a lot of similar words with korean and japanese which helped me learn it faster. However the problem I had with studying similar languages at the same time is that I tend mix up the words while talking 😅
@mohammedhalouachi9009
@mohammedhalouachi9009 3 жыл бұрын
This man has a good command of what he does. He provides us with good learning content.
@perrolaser
@perrolaser Жыл бұрын
Thank for that video Gabor Mate. Looking great BTW!!
@celsoneiva6104
@celsoneiva6104 4 жыл бұрын
Greetings. Thank you for the piece of advice. I bought the book.
@LetThemTalkTV
@LetThemTalkTV 4 жыл бұрын
I hope you enjoy it. Let us know.
@albertgrant1017
@albertgrant1017 4 жыл бұрын
You are correct it is the best book on the study of languages have read it for many years
@AsirAjmal
@AsirAjmal 3 жыл бұрын
It is quite freely available on Amazon. Has been reprinted as paperback.
@elnournassir6518
@elnournassir6518 3 жыл бұрын
This video is GOLD!
@claudiabamford4615
@claudiabamford4615 2 жыл бұрын
Super interesting! Thank you for making this video, as a French speaking German, I now live in the Uk and have found English very easy to learn….it all makes sense now.
@Ian..
@Ian.. Жыл бұрын
I’m a beginner and tips like “learn the particles” are gold. I wish it was easier to find a list of them though 😂
@gaufrid1956
@gaufrid1956 Жыл бұрын
What you said in this video also applies to learning Austronesian languages. I'm Australian, but I have lived for five years in Mindanao Philippines with my Filipina wife. She is a polyglot, fluent in English and five Filipino languages. Here in Mindanao the lingua franca is Mindanao Cebuano, or "Bisaya" as it is commonly known. Learning the particles in Bisaya has allowed me to also understand particles in Tagalog ("Filipino"). The languages share some vocabulary but most Tagalog speakers don't understand Bisaya. However, the grammar, sentence structure and particles are relatively similar. My wife's tribal language, Higaonon Binukid, shares some vocabulary with Bisaya and Tagalog but has a number of different particles. So far I have only been able to learn a few things in Higaonon Binukid. As for Bisaya and Tagalog, I can read and understand, have a conversation, and sing. Interestingly, I can also understand some things in Indonesian. This is because there is shared vocabulary, as it is also an Austronesian language. As for Mindanao Cebuano, we also use many words of Spanish origin. Telling time is in Spanish. Counting from 11 and up is in Spanish. A common sign on the back of a heavy vehicle is "Distancia amigo". Do I need to translate? I studied Latin and French to university level in Australia when I was young, so I had a heads up on Spanish.
@toodleselnoodos6738
@toodleselnoodos6738 Жыл бұрын
Learning Spanish has definitely help me remember some words in Filipino. Though I get surprised when friends laugh at me for using Tagalog instead of Filipino. For example, using awitin vs. kumanta/mag-sing.
@gaufrid1956
@gaufrid1956 Жыл бұрын
@@toodleselnoodos6738 I would use awitin too! Syempre sa Bisaya "magkanta" lang!
@heatherwood2664
@heatherwood2664 Жыл бұрын
*another stellar video! quick story on me: 1) I majored in German 2) before going to Sweden, I picked up a Berlitz book, and at least learned the rules of pronunciation. rather stupidly, I went to the PTT museum in Stockholm, and was shocked to find that all the signs were in Swedish. however, having paid for admittance, I stood there and sounded out the words, and noted their similarity to German words, and went on to enjoy the experience. keep up the good work!😃*
@white_cheshire
@white_cheshire Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this brilliant video!
@ncorva
@ncorva 3 жыл бұрын
Delightful video! I am a native spanish speaker that learned English at a very young age. So I guess I have a bit of a double edge. I LOVE learning languages. When I visited Europe some years ago, my girlfriend was amazed at how fast I picked up new languages and was able to read signs or understand simple phrases without having studied german or italian. After a week in Prague I was even speaking some basic Czech. She would ask "How are you doing that?". And for me it just...made sense. I guess that having wired my brain as bilingual at the age of 4 gave me an intuitive approach to language.
@skylark1772
@skylark1772 2 жыл бұрын
Sir, you were great in Monty Python and this is one of the most wonderfully instructive channels. Thank you so much for not wasting the internet!
@walterweiss7124
@walterweiss7124 Жыл бұрын
Monty Python, really?
@walterweiss7124
@walterweiss7124 Жыл бұрын
btw do you know the episode they were all talking german? ;)
@saadelmahi7513
@saadelmahi7513 Жыл бұрын
I am glad that KZbin recommended this video!
@silverstreettalks343
@silverstreettalks343 Жыл бұрын
I received a copy of "The Loom of Language" as a prize at high school in about 1961 or 62: it is still with me, and worth a look every now and then. Absolutely fascinating reading at the time. It inspired me to try to design a language of my own. Lots of fun. I don't quite know why I started Engineering after high school, though I saw the error of my ways after the university mathematics results came out. I can get by in conversational German and read a bit of French having done both at school and continued German at university, and get your point about English being a resource for both. The same applied to Greek in theological college, which I managed fairly easily. On the other hand, Hebrew was on the other hand... we rarely speak about that.
@delfinamoyanopicca
@delfinamoyanopicca 3 жыл бұрын
7:27 this is something that I’ve always thought about since I started understanding English. I noticed that the “fancy” words that people used to polish their speech were very similar to everyday words in Spanish.
@RogueReplicant
@RogueReplicant 3 жыл бұрын
Good point: friendly = amicable (Spanish "amigable"), often = frequently (frecuentemente), in love = enamored (enamorado), loving = amorous (amoroso), weapons = arms (armas), fair = just (justo), feeling = sentiment (sentimiento), punish = castigate (castigar), rich = prosperous (próspero), bad = malicious (malicioso), good = benevolent (benévolo), angry = furious (furioso), shy = timid (tímido), etc. There are literally hundreds, maybe thousands of examples like this.
@notvalidcharacters
@notvalidcharacters 3 жыл бұрын
That's because they (usually) come from French. French-derived words and the older Anglo-Saxon words, coexisting in the same place and time, got striated by social class, hence you could say "urine" to be polite or "piss" to be earthy.
@gerardomalazdrewicz7514
@gerardomalazdrewicz7514 Жыл бұрын
Read a story about a child, recently immigrated to USA from a Latin American country, doing very well in an english test, mostly vocabulary, despite barely knowing the language, while his classmates, didn't do so well. That was because, the test was mostly about words of Romance origin, which he knew better because of his background.
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