Probably because English is my second language and I learned it through grammar first, I find German to be very similar to English.Learning a new language for me has been hell haha.
Been living in germany for the past 5 years and my german is trash lol. I would say my level is A2 at the moment. Lovely country, but what a hard language to learn, plus I work exclusively in english. (IT project management)
I’m hopefully that it clicks someday.
Total immersion. Read and watch as much as possible in Thai. If you can tell your girlfriend to speak to you only in Thai, if not full-time than at least during a specific time slot. Make her CORRECT you, it is much easier to make small improvements this way instead of saying the thing wrongly 100 times - your neural pathways will make it difficult to unlearn.For someone wanting to learn a language, what is the best method?
Within reason of course. I'm not willing to move to another country even though that is best.
But I see a ton of apps, books, videos, programs, blah blah blah.
I'd love to learn Thai for my girlfriend. Being able to understand what she says and say it back is probably all I want.
But learning a language seems so daunting. How do I get to at least a basic conversational level?
The best way is to be consistent, which also means not overburdening yourself. It's very easy to burn out and end up not getting anywhere.For someone wanting to learn a language, what is the best method?
Within reason of course. I'm not willing to move to another country even though that is best.
But I see a ton of apps, books, videos, programs, blah blah blah.
I'd love to learn Thai for my girlfriend. Being able to understand what she says and say it back is probably all I want.
But learning a language seems so daunting. How do I get to at least a basic conversational level?
As an English speaker learning French. I can appreciate some of the simplicity of the English language but then some of the insanity.I'm 42 and learning English. Believe me it's a pain my assholes like Borat says.
This is the same experience I had with Spanish at community college when I was about 30 years old. It was only 2 semesters because it was “concentrated” and they try and teach you everything but the kitchen sink. The professors hated the book and the course because they knew how ridiculous it was and that none of us were going to remember all of those details. It would have been so much more enjoyable had they just Stu into the basic, practical things. Anyone who was interested furthering their knowledge or learning how to speak perfect Spanish could have gone out in their own from there. But nooooo they were going to force all of that in this 2 semester course and make us hate the language forever.I tried to learn french as an adult and boy was that an utter train wreck. I only did it because because my college had foreign language requirement.(4 semesters of torment.) Admittedly I didn't really appreciate how onerous that would become when I started it but by the end I truly despised those courses.(I did not do well.) I'd rather take far easier and more interesting courses like physics and organic chemistry. Turns out shoving this bilge down my figurative throat is not a particular good way to engender an appreciation for it. Of course it didn't help that the school would claim how important it was to gain fluency but then do everything to belie that assertion. (Let's see, you claim it's important but funny how the full blown professors don't teach these super import courses. Should I point out that they had so few sessions of the 4th semester that it was actually difficult to get into a class to complete the requirement?) Anyway I managed to complete the requirement only because they let us take a version where you only had to be able to read it.(That I could do, speaking it I was hopeless. The Stranger still sucks, Maigret mysteries were ok though.) Once I was done of course I did the most sensible thing and never have anything ever to do with it again to help it be full erased from my mind. I am happy to report I've forgotten everything from those complete wastes of time. Oh and of course I've made it a point in my life to never under any circumstance take another foreign language class.(Thank you scumbags at my school.) But hey other can learn from my mistakes, I make it a point to tell all my friends and family if you go to college avoid foreign languages and requirements at all costs, nothing good will come of it. I wish I still had the books from those classes so I could burn them.
DNS66 on android will take care of the ads for you.Check out an app called Duolingo. It's pretty damn good. Free, but with ads.
Me too. I'm pretty good with reading and writing, but it's still really difficult to understand someone speaking. I need a second to repeat the words to myself slower in my head, and by that time, the person I'm talking to thinks I don't understand at all.DNS66 on android will take care of the ads for you.
I've been using Duolingo for nearly 3 years now to learn Spanish and I struggle to hear when it's spoken at full speed. Reading I can do pretty well, even if I don't know some of the words I can get the gist of what's going on. I've tried the cheesy tele novellas on Netflix and they help but they're so bad that I lose interest fairly quickly.
You're right. However I was a French student back in the day and when it comes to pronunciation in French let me tell you.As an English speaker learning French. I can appreciate some of the simplicity of the English language but then some of the insanity.
read read
Lead lead
which witch
rough cough
through though
is it a soft g or a hard g etc
Yeah I’m struggling with French pronunciation also with the way the written is different from the spokenYou're right. However I was a French student back in the day and when it comes to pronunciation in French let me tell you.
Yeah I’m struggling with French pronunciation also with the way the written is different from the spoken
usually I find now in French I don’t really pronounce the whole word. I leave the last few letters out. I don’t get it sometimes I feel the French made the language as complex as possible even native French speakers have told me don’t worry about being completely right a lost of French speakers are not. Lol
Coffee break French is the one I listen to. But yeah must make it a habit to keep on itActually I learned French too. I found it way easier when I just learned through podcasts (Coffee Break French is 10/10) and videos rather than reading and writing.
Whereas with Korean the opposite holds true for me because 한글/Hanguel (the alphabet) is completely phonetic.
I'm a language teacher.For someone wanting to learn a language, what is the best method?
Within reason of course. I'm not willing to move to another country even though that is best.
But I see a ton of apps, books, videos, programs, blah blah blah.
I'd love to learn Thai for my girlfriend. Being able to understand what she says and say it back is probably all I want.
But learning a language seems so daunting. How do I get to at least a basic conversational level?
Yeah I have the same approach. I thought about learning Japanese, but it would take an insane amount of time to learn. I wish I had a chance to pick the second language in high school. I was forced to learn German and I hated it, I haven't used it in my adult life so I've pretty much forgotten most of it.Would love to learn Spanish, Japanese, Italian, but life is short and it should be money-related to force me to learn anything extra.
Spanish for my fiance. I once knew French pretty well but it's amazing how quickly I forgot it when I no longer used it.