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estar vivo es lo mejor

@chiazoa / chiazoa.tumblr.com

chiazo / 18 / español igbo français langblr
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What I Did After Duolingo

I think this is one of the biggest struggles of the langblr community because once you’re done with duolingo it’s kind of like you’ve just been thrown out on your own with no direction. In all honesty it took me a LOOONG time to figure out what to do with myself and how to keep progressing once I finished the tree, but now I’m at a point in my language journey where I speak my L2 every single day with my native friends. I wouldn’t consider myself fluent, but I’m definitely conversational.

Do the reverse tree I seriously cannot stress this enough. Go through and do the reverse tree of your language (if it’s available, of course). What I mean by this is when I finished the Italian tree for English speakers, I went through and did the English tree for Italian speakers. It may seem redundent, but at least for those two trees, the vocabulary the two trees offered was actually quite different and I ended up learning loads of new vocabulary. Not just new vocabulary, but you’ll have access to the duolingo forums in your target language. You can ask questions to an unrestricted amount of natives, and you could possibly offer help to a bunch of natives who have questions. Also for all of the brave ones out there learning more than 1 language at a time, try to see if there’s a duolingo tree for your L2 to your L3 (for a while I was learning French for Italian speakers)

Flashcards & Vocab Remember to be SMART about the vocab you learn. Learn words that you’ll actually use in day-today conversation. IF you never speak in your native language about a topic, don’t waste your time learning the words in your target language. Vocab isn’t just about acquisition of words, it’s about acquisition of words you will actually need and use. Memrise is my go-to for new and GOOD vocabulary. All of the vocab lists are user-submitted, so you’re guaranteed to get good, commonly used, and NATURAL vocab words that have been put into lists created by native speakers! There are so many thousands of lists for hundreds of languages and it’s honestly a gold mine. They have a mobile app for which you can download lessons so that you have access to them when you’re offline (aka perfect when you don’t want to use cell data or you have crappy service) AND THE BEST PART IS THAT WHATEVER YOU DO OFFLINE GETS SAVED AND YOU CAN JUST PICK BACK UP WHERE YOU LEFT OFF. Not only that, but they have an “ignore” option so that you don’t have to repeat any words that you already know. I love memrise. I’ve even made a few of my own lists just because I’m a hoe for a good deck of flashcards and I love the repetition method of memrise. Also, Memrise is a lot like duo in the aspect that you can add a bunch of friends and it keeps track of your experience points so that you can compete with people if that’s something that helps keep you motivated. They even have different rankings once you accumulate a certain amount of experience (personally, this is a HUGE motivator for me). All in all I love memrise. ALSO it has lots of other things completely unrelated to languages, so even if you dont study languages I would still check it out! ALTERNATIVELY: Anki! Just find somewhere to MAKE FLASHCARDS AND STUDY THE DAMN THINGS. I’ve never used Anki before so I can’t really give a good review on it (however if someone who has used anki wants to shoot me a message, I can add their review to the post or smth). I, personally, used an app called StudyBlue (there’s a desktop version as well) when I was making flashcards because it would let me make decks of like 1,000 words and then I could take quizes (you have the option of doing multiple choice, true/false, and fill in the blanks) and it’ll keep track of your progress and stuff. Also, you have access to other user-submitted flashcard decks so it’s pretty cool in that sense!

LEARN THE DANG GRAMMATICAL STRUCTURES (Honestly you’d think this one would go without saying) I think people get too caught up in the accumulation of new words to stop and realize that knowing 8,000 fancy words is completely pointless if you don’t know how to put them in a sentence. To me, this is 900000000% more important than vocabulary, because if you don’t know a word you can quick do a simple search for a single word and slap it into a sentence, but if you don’t know an entire sentence structure you’re dead meat, kid. Please make notes and try to form simple sentences for all of the grammatical conventions, different verb tenses, etc. Also, don’t just learn HOW to use them, but WHEN to use them. — A really good website for explaining grammatical conventions in super simple terms is about.com. They have AMAZING resources! Lots of vocab lists, information on grammatical structures, verb conjugations, verb charts, etc. Plus, you can even sign up for newsletters, “word of the day” emails, and things of that nature. Here are the language subsections of the website that I’m aware of: Italian About, Spanish About, French About, German About. There might be more, but I’ve never checked. It should be easy to find out if they have a subsection for the website that you’re looking for, just type in “LANGUAGEHERE.about.com” into the browser and try your luck! — If there isn’t an about page for your language, google is your BEST FRIEND I PROMISE.

Switch to your target language This one is pretty simple: change your phone and all of your social media over to your target language. If you’re feeling really brave; change your entire computer over to your target language. This one didn’t particularly do a whole lot for me as far as learning new vocabulary and sentence structure, but I’ve always been really bad at trying to remember days of the week, names of the month, telling time, etc. and changing my phone over to my target language helped solidify that information in my brain and now I can throw out dates and times like I was born to do it. – ALSO: Since I know you’re on tumblr if you’re reading this post, FOLLOW BLOGS THAT POST CRAP IN YOUR TARGET LANGUAGE. I follow so many Italian blogs, and honestly it’s just super great exposure for my dash to be half Italian, half English.

YOUTUBE God I frickin love youtube. There are LOTS of super great language-learning youtubes out there, and lots of channels that have subtitles. BASICALLY YOUTUBE IS AN UNLIMITED BOX OF FOREIGN LANGUAGE LISTENING SKILLS. You like watching monthly favorites videos? Plug the line “my monthly favorites” (in your target language ofc) into the search bar and BOOM. You like watching pokemon letsplays? FIND U A DAMN POKEMON LETSPLAY SERIES IN YOUR TARGET LANGUAGE. You wont understand everything at first, but trust me just hearing the language makes life easier. One thing I like to do is listen to asmr videos in my target language because people tend to speak more slowly in ASMR vidoes and it’s far easier for me to understand them.

NETFLIX On the note of listening skills, WATCH NETFLIX IN YOUR TARGET LANGUAGE. There’s this really great google chrome extension called “Hola!” (the picture is a little flame with a face on it) that is basically a proxy extension so you can change what country you’re browsing the internet from, and–in turn–access netflix in different countries. This lets you have access to web-series’ and movies that might not be on the netflix in your country (fun fact, the first two Kung Fu Panda movies aren’t on America’s netflix list, but they’re on Italy’s netflix list in case you want to watch), and also access to films and series that were CREATED IN YOUR TARGET LANGUAGE!!! Not to mention access to subtitles, which is always a wonderful thing. (p.s. you can use Hola! for any website you want to, and it doesn’t slow your internet down ;) )

MUSIC PLEASE LISTEN TO MUSIC IN YOUR TARGET LANGUAGE. Not only will you feel super cool and empowered once you can start singing along to songs in a foreign language, but you’ll feel even MORE super cool and empowered when you start understanding the lyrics of the songs you’ve learned. Also: please, please, please look up the lyrics to the songs you’re listening to. It’ll prevent you from singing along and mis-singing (is that a word lmao) lyrics and making silly errors, you feel me. A big bonus of listening to music is that you inadvertently pick up pronunciation skills! It’s great fun, I love music. – One way you can find foreign music is through spotify. You can go to the top 50 charts of different countries, and that’s a great way to get exposure to boppin’ tunes in your target language. Just go to the main menu then to charts, and then click “top 50 by country” and find the country you’re looking for and TADA. // CONVERSELY: If you don’t like spotify, use pandora, or find some songs you like in your target language and plug them into the youtube search bar and then weed through the recommended videos on the sidebar and find new music that way!

Children’s books This might not be for everyone, but sincerely googling and reading children’s books in your target language is a great way to get used to sentence structure. You might not know all the words, but sometimes it’s just such a wonderful thing to read such simple sentences and to just practice that sort of stuff. – If reading children’s books isn’t your style, then read books that you ARE interested in. Read translations of your favorite books, read books that were written originally in your target language, just read books man.

ASK QUESTIONS PLS FOR THE LOVE OF GOD This one can get to be a little tricky because it might be hard to find someone to ask questions to, but please keep in mind that there are lots of different native languages in the langblr community and we’re all here for the sole purpose of helping each other out so please don’t be afraid of asking a native (or even someone who’s fluent) to explain something or to correct your sentences, etc.

Find speaking partners Personally, I think this should be the LAST thing on your list of priorities. I KNOW LOTS OF PEOPLE WILL DISAGREE WITH ME BUT HEAR ME OUT: I think it’s rather discouraging to try and pressure yourself to speak your target language and realize “wow I’m not as good as I thought I was”, or to feel like you’re bad because you know so many words and you study your verb tenses but you still can’t make good conversation, etc. I THINK YOU SHOULD WAIT A WHILE BEFORE FINDING A SPEAKING PARTNER, but you definitely need to do it. I would wait until you’re comfortable reading and understanding your target language as well as forming basic sentences and stuff like that. JUST A WARNING, FINDING A LANGUAGE PARTNER IS HARD AS HELL. IT’S LITERALLY A NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK ORDEAL. I used Hellotalk to find all of my language partners, however you could probably just as easily find language partners on other social media outlets like tumblr, facebook, twitter, etc. (Actually, using those types of social medias might be more comfortable for most people). A good way to find people on facebook is to join a bunch of language groups on facebook, and even if you don’t find language partners you can still see posts in your target language. REMEMBER IT’S ALL ABOUT EXPOSURE FOLKS. The more exposure the better. Like I mentioned: I do think you need to hold off a bit on finding a speaking partner, but I will say that for absolute certain speaking partners are astronomically more helpful than anything I’ve mentioned on this list. You can listen and read and make flashcards and write sentences to yourself, but at the end of the day is netflix REALLY going to fix that grammatical error you made?

Last but not least: please don’t be so hard on yourself. Making mistakes is ONLY NATURAL. Just think of learning a language like any other kind of skill; you make lots of mistakes when learning how to do anything but you learn from your mistakes and soon enough you stop making those mistakes and keep refining your skills. a quick vote of confidence for you all before you leave: I once confused the italian word for panties(mutande) with the word for snacks(merende) and basically told my friend “I BOUGHT SO MANY PANTIES IM GOING TO EAT THEM UNTIL I DIE”. And like two days ago I mixed up the word for the color lavender(lavanda) and the word for laundry(lavanderia) and told my friend she should wear a laundry-colored dress to her sister’s wedding. OKAY– in all seriousness, it’s really important to remember that mistakes are natural and they’re nothing to be ashamed of. In fact, once you learn that making mistakes is totally normal to do, you’ll enjoy yourself much more and learn way better. HAVE FUN AND STUDY HARD I BELIEVE IN YOU ALL.

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nerdinaomi

Vocab Lists

Basics

School and Academics

Weather and Seasons

Nature, Animals, and the Environment

Emotions/Feelings

Food

Activities and Actions

Travel and Politics

Miscellaneous

Grammar

Resources

Websites and Apps

TV and YouTube

Listening and Music

Reading

Miscellaneous

Blogs

@lucylangblr​

@sciogli-lingua​

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Avoir beau +infinitive

=even though

J’ai eu beau tout essayer, je n’ai pas réussi à le convaincre.

Even though I’ve tried everything, I couldn’t convince him.

Important: avoir beau is always in the first part of the sentence!

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formyfrench

i don't suppose you have a masterpost about writing French essays, and good vocab to use etc., by any chance? 💚

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reblogged

My entire linguistics drive (finally)

Well, I finally managed to get my entire linguistics folder onto a drive (all 610ish papers, slide shows, and language maps). Enjoy this. I put time into this. I literally spent most of yesterday organizing this. I will be updating once a week.

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‘5 a Day’ challenge (learn around 500 new words by 2018)

This wonderful post here got me thinking about how realistic and manageable learning five new words a day actually is, and I’ve come up with a challenge. It’s primarily aimed at language-learners, but if you have a butt-load of definitions to learn it could be useful (although, I recommend only learning 3 longer definitions a day) or for law cases if you just need the name and a sentence about the case eg - Ireland;Burstow (1997) - silent phone calls can be assault.

The challenge:

Starts - Monday 4th September Ends - Sunday 31st December

How it works:

  1. Monday to Saturday, you learn five new words each day, and on Sunday you revise the words and focus on the ones you find difficult.
  2. Monday to the next Saturday, you learn another five new words each day, and on Sunday you revise that week’s words AND the previous weeks’ words. 
  3. And so on.
  4. Each Sunday you revise all the previous words - just a brief check for those you know, and spend a little more time on those you don’t.

By the end you’re should have learned around 500 new words!

I’ll do this with French! Learning the words will include writing them into my vocabulary notebook, adding them to a quizlet set for the challenge, and inventing an example (a sentence in which the word is used). Revision will include testing myself by covering the word in my notebook and writing down the ones I don’t remember on an extra sheet, going through the quizlet set and reading the examples!

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languagie

French Literature- Intermediate (mostly short and all pretty approachable!)

La Vénus d'Ille- Prosper Merimée

Le Tour du monde en quatre-vingt jours- Jules Verne

L’Etranger- Albert Camus

L’Exil et le Royaume- Albert Camus

La Place- Annie Ernaux

Zazie dans le metro-  Raymond Queneau

L’Art and Le Dieu de Carnage- Yasmina Reza

French Literature- Advanced (worth a read, even if only in the English translation!)

Madame Bovary – Flaubert

Le père Goriot- Honoré de Balzac

Les Misérables -Victor Hugo

La guerre de Troie n’aura pas lieu- Jean Giradoux

A la récherche de temps perdu – Marcel Proust

Les liasions dangereuses- Choderlos de Laclos

Le comte de Monte Cristo- Alexandre Dumas

Le deuxième sexe- Simone de Beauvoir

French Poems

(I’mma put in individual poems but these poets are all great)

Le Balcon- Charles Baudelaire

Le Dormeur du Val- Artur Rimbaud

Il pleut- Guillaime Apollinaire

Graphic novels/children’s

Le Petit Prince- Antoine de Sainte-Exupéry

Persepolis- Marjane Satrapi

Harry Potter, all books- JK Rowling, translated by Jean-François Ménard (really good translations!!)

Harry Potter- Fanfiction- The When Everything Changes Series

(skyrock was the place for French fanfiction in the noughties)

English books in French- link to a post here

—————————————————————————————————-

These are mostly books that have been recommended to me by French people, or ones that I have come across during my first year of my degree. Inspired by this anon .

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languagegirl

Expanding my vocabulary in Italian

I was getting frustrated that my productive skills being less advanced than my receptive skills, so I was delighted when Learn Italian with Lucrezia uploaded her most recent video, “How to expand your vocabulary/Come espandere il tuo lessico”.

The activity she proposes in the video is to create a table of verbs with columns for the infinitive, noun/s, adjectives and past participle.

So far I have 31 verbs in my table, which looks something like this:

I’ve found it helpful for my confidence when speaking in Italian (which recently took a bit of a dip) and, of course, is generally helpful for language learning.

Note. This method is effective for me because of my learning style and preferences, so naturally, it’s not going to work for everyone.

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ukpuru
Anonymous asked:

what tips do you have for someone who wants to learn igbo? i am igbo but my parents didn't speak it to me enough when i was a baby to learn it

My parents also didn’t speak it to me, I learn’t it by myself (to a certain extent), although admittedly I lived in Nigeria for a bit, but that factor is unfortunately becoming irrelevant now. I hope you don’t mind a long answer, I think this may help others as well. First of all if there are any Igbo classes around you, try them.

1. The best way to learn any language is through immersion. I’m going to assume you know at least some Igbo, but can’t really understand a sentence? If so then I’ll recommend listening to music written in Igbo that you like (hopefully there are some, I don’t think there’s much metal or trance though if you’re into that, hehe) and try to memorise the lyrics (ask for help if you need) and recite those lyrics over and over again, making sure that you remember what the words mean. You don’t have to completely know what you’re saying, but trust me the reciting will help you sound natural and Igbo will start sounding natural to you. It also helps break down the language from that muddled sound; you’ll be pleased when you start recognising individual words, even if you may not necessarily know what they mean. Maybe start with Phyno (although his songs have a lot of slang peculiar to Enugu in them).

1.1 If you like Nollywood, there are Igbo films, if you hate it then forget films, there are random clips on Youtube of interviews and so.

2. Try and learn a new Igbo word within periods that will realistically work for you (daily, weekly, monthly, etc), get help in putting the word in a sentence for context. Start with words you’ll use everyday. You can decide the importance of words by comparing your learning with 1000 most common words in English, but be sure to understand that Igbo and English are very different, so just use it as a general guide.

3. Igbo is agglutinative, and you can easily see the verb root of each word, you can see how a lot of words have been formed (after you’ve learnt enough) and you can actually guess certain words you don’t know or a meaning of one that’s new to you. This is one of the major factors that propelled my learning. Igbo uses vowels and m/n as prefixes with verbs to form words for the most part, each vowel has a generally separate grammatical weight to them.

An example: for the word ché, ‘think’, íché means ‘to think’, òché means ‘him/it/they think’. Now ńchékasi is broken up as so: ń - prefix for the continuation of something, ché - ‘think’, - ‘continuing’, - suffix for thoroughness of the verb. So what does that mean? Overthinking and in extension depression. You can replace ché with any similar verb, like gbú, ‘kill’ and it, ńgbúkasi, will mean genocide or something like that. Learning this basic grammar can help you guess words from their verb roots

4. Mkpuruokwu is an online dictionary that is the most reliable and diverse Igbo dictionary I’ve had access to, printed or otherwise. Use it, I still learn Igbo words from there. When it’s up anyway. As of now the website isn’t functional, so this online draft of an Onitsha Igbo dictionary by Kay Williamson (PDF) before she died, can help, but many of the words are peculiar to Onitsha Igbo.

5. As I said before, look at videos of Igbo speakers speaking, even get your parents / other Igbo speakers to speak Igbo at you if you are still in contact with them. Internet forums are also a good place to look at peoples writing.

6. You should also try and learn the Igbo alphabet to understand written Igbo and to understand how the letters (and how sounds in Igbo are generally) pronounced. A good video to start with.

There are also a wealth of Igbo language learning tools online now, especially videos on YouTube, but to be honest I haven’t seen anyone whose learnt Igbo completely from these tools since the Igbo learning industry is still in a stage of infancy. The best thing is to learn as much form multiple videos.

Dialect is a whole new point and subject, but I don’t want to discourage you from learning because of that. Your family probably has an Igbo dialect peculiar to them, I say learn as much from what you have and then when you get a comfortable skill level then you can start picking up words from your own dialect. It’s better to speak a generic form of Igbo than not speak it all.

Persistence and passion is also important, without me really wanting to learn the language I wouldn’t have because it’s very easy for me not to. Overall, have a good time because the language is fun. Hopefully these tips work for you and you start to reclaim your gift.

Ijeọ́má.

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finnjasatlas

How to Create a Language Learning Schedule (+ Printable)

I recently set up a new language learning schedule for myself and I thought some of you might find my approach useful, so I decided to create a short guide and a printable (you can download it as a pdf here). Lots of people struggle with finding a way to study several languages at once (I do, too, as I’m currently learning 5 languages) and I think having a good plan is essential!

As you can see, it’s quite simple. Once you have downloaded the printable, you can create a perfect schedule for yourself in a few easy steps:

1. Define your goals

First of all, you should know why you need this schedule and for how long you want to stick with it. Do you want to plan your studies for next week, the next month or the entire term or (school) year? What exactly do you want to learn until the end of that time period? How many words, how many grammar topics, how many levels in your favorite language learning app? You need to answer these questions in order to be able to estimate how much time you should / can / want to spend on your target languages every day.

2. List your languages and resources

Secondly, you should make a list in which you mention the resources, methods and tools you want to use for each language. It should look something like this (the more detailed, the better):

3. Divide your resources into categories

I put six categories on the printable. Use a color code to show which resource belongs in which category:

4. Almost there…

There are a few things you should consider before creating the actual schedule:

  • How much work and time do you need to put in to reach your goals?
  • How much time do you actually have in a normal week? When do you want to study?
  • Are all of your target languages equally important? How often do you want to study language 1,2,3,…?
  • Do you have any classes that you have to prepare for / do homework for? If yes, you can include that in your schedule!
  • Do you want to avoid studying two similar languages in one day?
  • Do you want to focus on a special skill?

5. Set up your schedule!

Goals, resources, time management - you’re ready to make a detailed plan! Here is a random example:

In case you were wondering “why do the whole coloring thing and list your resources and everything” - I think this is a way to avoid procrastination. Let’s say it’s Friday, so you should be learning French vocab (orange) and practise listening (green) in Spanish. Now, if you never made a list with all your resources, you might end up wasting your time on tumblr or google searching for “Spanish listening practice” and reading arbitrary posts or watching videos you already know without really doing anything because you just don’t know what to do. If you consider your list, you will know that for Spanish, you will either have to watch a movie or listen to some music, and for French, you will have to do either Memrise or Anki. As I said before, this gets easier if your list is more detailed. Actual tasks like “watch a movie on website x about y with subtitles in language z” will force you to work with what you’ve got and use the methods and resources you already know. I read so many posts like “I keep downloading textbooks for that language but I never use any of them, I just keep downloading more” and this won’t happen to you if you use the list!

I guess that’s pretty much it… I hope you like the printable, enjoy your studies!

Source: finnjamaria
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reblogged

Words beginning with entre- in Spanish

  • Entreabierto. Half-open, ajar
  • Entreacto. Intermission (in a play)
  • Entrecejo. Space between the eyebrows
  • Entrecomillado. Text between quotation marks
  • Entrecortadamente. Breathlessly, falteringly
  • Entrecot. Fillet steak
  • Entrecruzar. To intertwine, to meet, to cross
  • Entreguerras. Interwar
  • Entrelazado. Intertwined, interlaced
  • Entremedias / Entremedio. In between, in the mean time
  • Entremés. Starter, appetizer
  • Entrepierna. Inner thigh, crotch
  • Entre semana. During the week, on weekdays
  • Entretanto. Meanwhile
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Everything I Use to Make Learning French Fun (Reading & Listening)

[[one of my followers asked how I immerse myself in French and the culture. all my favorites are starred. add your own and i’m open to specify more on certain categories. and i’m considering doing a post on listening and speaking]]

Books *Le petit prince *Petit nicolas *L'etranger Asterix Alice au pays des merveilles *Classic fairy tales! (I recommend that you read comics…lots of them)

Movies *A la folie…pas du tout Le petit prince *Amelie Les Choristes *Les Intouchables *Oss 117 *bienvenue à marly-gomont *il a déjà tes yeux *Une femme est une femme Paris je t'aime (this is barely in French but good for culture) *Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis LOL *Ratatouille

Music Anything by: *Stromae Indila *MHD Maitre Gims Coeur de pirate *Edith piaf *Zaho Zaz RIDSA *Tal Djany

TV Miraculous ladybug Lazytown Nina *T'choupi Disney movies *The get down (i usually just watch netflix series in french…they’re usually available) *The long long holiday *C'est mon choix *Extra french Parks and recreation Recherche appartement ou maison

Youtube Sananas *Shera Kerienski Damon and jo Comme une française *Antastesia So andy *Cyprien 7jours *(In general lyric prank videos!)

ALSO I SUGGEST LISTENING THE RADIO FRENCH RFI

Francaisfacile.com as well

Also don’t sleep on duolingo or memrise

And don’t neglect getting writing and speaking (including conversation–irl and/or online) practice!

Check the french tag on my blog as well

Thank you for this list!!

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puroespanol
Anonymous asked:

I am an adult trying to learn Spanish, but have been struggling. With a full time job and other life requirements I can't spend tons of time studying, but small daily amounts have not seemed to work. I've tried apps, podcasts, and flashcards but don't seem to retain much. After a short time I seem to lose most of what I thought I'd learned. Do you have any advice?

I understand the struggle of work and life requirements. I would recommend that you integrate Spanish into more of your daily life. In other words:

  • Change the settings on your phone and TV to Spanish.
  • Watch more Spanish news and television shows.
  • Listen to Spanish in your car through podcasts or music.
  • Find a language exchange partner and commit to a once a month or once a week meeting with him or her.
  • Translate vocabulary throughout your day. As you go about your day and see objects, translate them into Spanish in your head. You’ll find that you don’t know words for many things and you’ll get curious about looking them up.

I know that learning a language isn’t easy but when you’re a busy person you’re going to have to actively look for ways to integrate the language into your daily life. You might come to a point in your life when you can dedicate more time to language learning and imagine all the knowledge you will accumulate if you start off right now in these small ways. 

Best of luck!

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atejapan

For people who want to learn Japanese but don’t know how to start!

NOTE: This is not a post for resources. I mention some in this post, but you can find way more on posts like this or this. Also, keep in mind that these are just my personal opinions and methods. I tried many different things to get over that beginner hurdle, and I found that this method was most effective. Take away whatever you think will work best for you. Good luck!

1. Make some decisions

First, come up with a couple reasons why you want to learn Japanese. These reasons must be specific and meaningful enough to get you through those times of frustrations. Write them down somewhere. 

Next, decide whether or not you want to learn how to handwrite. Handwriting is definitely important and can help in the learning process, but it isn’t completely necessary in this digital age. It takes time out of learning other aspects of the language, and you probably won’t handwrite too often anyway. It really just depends on what your goals are and your reasons for learning.

Lastly, figure out which areas you want to focus on: reading, writing, listening, or speaking (any combination of them or all of them), depending on your reasons for learning. If your main goal is to be able to read Japanese books, you’d obviously want to work more on reading, and if your main goal is to be able to communicate with Japanese people, you’d want to concentrate most on speaking or writing. As with any language, input (reading and listening) is going to be much easier than output (writing and speaking). Of course, focusing on all four will be the best option, but realistically, it will take much longer to master all of them at once compared to focusing on specific ones. 

2. Learn hiragana and katakana

In my opinion, romaji (English spellings of Japanese) should not exist in any textbooks at all. The very first thing you should learn is Hiragana, the most basic writing system of the three, so you never have to rely on romaji. You can put off learning Katakana until a little later, but Katakana should be memorized fairly early on as well.

Here is a really good guide to Hiragana by Tofugu. They also have a guide for Katakana here. Use mnemonics! If you like to doodle, make up and draw your own mnemonics. This website is a good place to test yourself. There’s also this website.

For both, aim to be able to recall the character almost immediately after it pops up, in under 2 seconds. You want to be able to recognize them as well as you recognize ABC’s!

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movalentin

When studying French as a language it’s helpful to understand the culture behind it as well. If you take French as a high school or college course you’ve probably had a test on culture before, so I thought making this post could be useful for anyone enrolled in a French class or studying it independently but with the want for extra resources. This will mainly pertain to France with the bottom part of this post listing other French speaking countries. If anyone would like a similar post dedicated to one of the other French speaking countries, ask! Hope this helps!

Education System

L'école Maternelle (ages 2-5)

L'école Élémentaire  (ages 6-10)

Collège

Lycée  (ages 15-18)

BAC

CAP/BEP

Higher Education 

Geography
History (prehistory not included)
Politics
Social 
Good Books to Read on France/Set in France
  • Fragile Glory: A Portrait of France and the French (buy)
  • Sixty Million Frenchmen Can’t Be Wrong (buy)
  • Flirting With French: How a Language Charmed Me, Seduced Me, and Nearly Broke My Heart  (buy)
  • Citizens: A Chronicle of the French Revolution (buy)
  • When Paris Went Dark: The City of Light Under German Occupation (buy)
  • The Days of the French Revolution (buy)
  • The Hundred Years War: The English in France 1337-1453 (buy)
  • Chocolat (buy)
  • The Secret Life of France (buy)
  • A Moveable Feast (buy)
  • Swann’s Way (buy)
  • Dangerous Liasons (buy)
  • The Elegance of a Hedgehog (buy)
  • The House in France (buy)
Other French Speaking Countries
  • Belgium
  • Benin
  • Burkina
  • Burundi
  • Cameroon
  • Canada
  • Central African Republic
  • Chad
  • Comoros
  • Congo
  • Congo, Democratic Republic of
  • Cote d'Ivoire
  • Djibouti
  • France
  • Gabon
  • Guinea
  • Haiti
  • Luxembourg
  • Madagascar
  • Mali
  • Monaco
  • Niger
  • Rwanda
  • Senegal
  • Seychelles
  • Switzerland
  • Togo
  • Vanuatu 
  • Vietnam
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