The thing about language learning is that... if you actually put in the work... you can get good at the language and attain fluency.... what a concept you guys
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The thing about language learning is that... if you actually put in the work... you can get good at the language and attain fluency.... what a concept you guys
I found this online and I love it.
My German textbook on emotions: 1. āTƶte mich bitte, beende mein Leidenā 2.Ā āIch reise durch den Hyperraum!!ā 3.Ā āIch weine oder niese, ich weiĆ es noch nichtā 4.Ā āWann sie ein bisschen frische Luft will und du vor einem Moment Pfefferminzgummi gekaut hastā
The Goethe Institut has a free e-libraryĀ with more than 23,000 books and movies and other learning content. I really like this series of early readers based on German classics. So far Iāve read FaustĀ and Die RƤuber at an A2 level, and now Iām going through some Grimmās fairy tales. I miss hanging out at Torontoās Goethe Institut so much, but this has been a really helpful way to read and study at home. Iād love to know what youāre reading.Ā
Reblog this if you are a langblr learning German!
japanese vocab: transport ā” Ā
ä¹ćē© ā¢ ć®ćć㮠⢠norimono ⢠vehiclesĀ
č» ā¢ ćć㾠⢠kuruma ⢠car
čŖč»¢č» ⢠ćć¦ććć ⢠jitensha ⢠bicycle
é»č» ⢠ć§ććć ⢠densha ⢠train
é£č”ę© ā¢ ć²ććć ⢠hikÅki ⢠airplane
ć㹠⢠basu ⢠bus
ćæćÆć·ć¼ ⢠takushÄ« ⢠taxi
ćć¤ćÆļ¼ćŖć¼ććć¤Ā  ⢠baikuļ¼ Åtobai  ⢠motorcycle
č¹ ā¢ ćµć ⢠fune ⢠ship
ćØćć ⢠yotto ⢠yacht
ććŖć³ććæć¼ ⢠herikoputÄ ā¢ helicopterĀ
feel free to correct me if anything is wrong ~ā
(credit to kai fine art for the great illustration)
10 unusual language learning tips !
i see a lot of the same (sometimes unhelpful) tips being thrown around, so hereās my two cents:
1. write shopping lists/to do lists in your target language - often you donāt learn this vocab but itās conversational & v useful! also writing yourself notes (lil pep talks on the bathroom mirror, for example) can work.
2. buy a small whiteboard and practice verb conjugation (esp. romantic languages) or script writingĀ
3. talk to pets in target language if possible!
4. look for quotes in your target language - often the turns of phrase areĀ more colloquial, and is a good opportunity to see how things are translated from your native languageĀ
5. find a fairly easy news headline (in target lang) and try to re-write it w/ vocab you already have. youāll quickly find gaps - this is a good thing! (if youāre feeling extra spicy, try writing a small subheading or description about the article).
6. create an imaginary friend who you speak with on the shower, or on the train, doing the laundry etc. talk w/ them in your target lang (in your head, obvs) about your day, future plans, etc etc.
~for more advanced learners~
7. when youāre more advanced, and have some grasp of past/future tenses, buy a childrenās/tweenās/YA book that youāve already read. highlight and annotate the shit out of it. youāll know the general gist already, which makes context clues easier to find.
8. change wikipedia settings into target language - same goes for any social media site. this can be a mega challenge, but is so good for vocab, plus youāre more likely to remember the info since you worked so hard for it.
9. write a review for a book/film/record/whatever youāve most recently consumed. maybe start a diary of them, or just have an ongoing word doc.
10. find a bilingual edition of poetry/literature if possible. you might find you can spot translation differences, but youāre sure to find some new vocab.
Some good ideas
There are so many out there. Find the right one for your learning journey.
The most useful part of this article is the table. I did research to find the highest quality language learning apps out there, all the languages they offer, the cost, etc. So you can search for a language you want to learn and the table will filter results based on whatās available for your target language!
Hello! I'm sorry if this has been asked before, but how do you become proficient at handling conversations in Japanese/handling grammar very well? I read your post on the JLPT, and it addressed issues I have been tip toe-ing around--indeed, passive actions such as listening or reading are easier than the active ones. How did you go about that? Did you write a bunch of sentences daily? Did you have a conversation partner? What would you rec. to someone who lives outside Japan? Thank you!
This is an excellent question, and one that I get asked a lot irl by Japanese people in particular. Letās talk about gaining fluency and the ways we can go about it!
How to Gain Fluency in Japanese (and Other Languages)
Speaking Fluency versus Accuracy
Language proficiency is divided into two separate categories:
Fluency: Although there are no widely agreed-upon definitions or measures of language fluency, someone is typically said to be fluent if their use of the language appears fluid, or natural, coherent, and easy as opposed to slow, halting use. In other words, fluency is often described as the ability to produce language on demand and be understood.
Accuracy: Correctness of language use, especially grammatical correctness and word choice.
By the above definitions, aĀ āfluentā speaker may make grammatical mistakes, but they can speak without having to stop and think too much about conjugations, word choice, etc.
AnĀ āaccurateā speaker can speak with nearly zero grammatical/word choice mistakes. However, the speed of their utterances isnāt generally taken into account, so it could take anĀ āaccurateā person twice as long to articulate the same idea as aĀ āfluentā person.Ā
Ideally, you need to strike a good balance between these two qualities when speaking. I have a boss, God bless him, who is 100% fluency and 0% accuracy andā¦man is it hard to understand what heās saying sometimes, but he can generally get his point across just barely.Ā I have another coworker who is 100% accuracy and takes about 3 minutes to form a sentence because he wants it to be perfect.Ā
How to Increase Speaking/Writing Accuracy
First, letās talk about the easiest thing to improve, which is accuracy. Itās also (in my opinion) the least fun thing to improve, because it means grammar books and vocabulary memorization.Ā
You can only use a language accurately if you know what is correct and what is incorrect, and you can only learn that by studying grammar and vocabulary (or if youāre a native speaker and picked it up innately, you lucky bastard).
So hereās some things you can do to increase your accuracy:
For example, if youāre having a hard time using the passive, you need to review that part of your textbook and find some exercises to drill it into your head.Ā
Say the correct thing aloud. Lots. Sometimes I just walk around my apartment and narrate everything I see/do like a crazy person, but thatās good practice.Ā
Write example sentences using the grammar youāre struggling with and say them aloud too.Ā
Thereās a bunch of cool apps that connect you with native speakers that can help correct you too! I used to use HelloTalk, I think.Ā
If youāre a creative soul, when I was studying for the JLPT, I took 1 grammar point and 5 vocabulary words from my JLPT study books and used them to write a 2-page short story about the adventures of ćć®, a stray black cat that smelled like green onions because she napped in an onion field. Then I had a Japanese friend check it over for me and mark mistakes. I hand-wrote them to improve my abysmal handwriting at the same time. It was really fun! I sometimes think about doing it again just for funsies.
When someone corrects you, donāt feel like your entire life is over and youāre a failure and youāll never get it right haha. Iāve seen people fall into that hopeless mindset, and thatās just nonsense. Itās a good opportunity for learning and nothing more! Say the correct thing youāve just been taught out loud, then write it down if you can. And, if possible, find a chance to use it in conversation asap.
How to Increase Speaking/Writing Fluency
Now this is the hard one. Especially for those learners who do not have native speakers nearby.Ā
Iām going to be dead honest with you. I started formally studying Japanese at uni, and I had a Japanese roommate/best friend since year one. I had a 4.0 GPA in my Japanese classes (and onlyĀ my Japanese classes lol) because I was and still am a MEGA NERD about it.Ā
ā¦But it wasnāt until I studied abroad in Japan my 4th year of uni that I gained fluency.Ā
There are a lot of things that can hold us back from fluency. An interesting thing Iāve noted is that Foreign Language is perhaps the only subject in which a studentās personality can directly affect their progress. To gain fluency, you have to go forth and speak, but if you are naturally a shy person, that is going to hinder you. If you are the kind of person who takes mistakes/failures poorly, you will be less likely to take risks and try to say harder sentences. In contrast, you can get full marks in math regardless of the above personality traits.Ā
Iām not saying that you have to be an outgoing explosion of a human being in order to gain fluency. But what I am saying is that you have to be willing to seek out conversations, and you have to be willing to take chances. Get out of your comfort zone. Use that new word you picked up the other day. Try to explain something that is difficult for you.Ā
My problem was that, while I lived with a native speaker who would have happily taught me anything I asked, her English proficiency was much higher than my Japanese proficiency. And when I struggled to say something in Japanese, Iād fall back onto English. And when she told me something I didnāt understand in Japanese, sheād repeat it in English instead of Japanese, because that was easier for us both. The same thing happened when I was in Japanese class as well. I always had the assurance that I could fall back on English.
But when I elected to study abroad in Japan for 3 months, I knew that this was my big chance. So on the host family form in theĀ āother requestsā area, I wrote that I specifically wanted a host family that could not speak English. I was setting fire to my crutches, and I was scared but excited to see them burn.Ā
By the end of my three months in Japan, I had gone fromĀ āChotto matte kudasaiā and needing a minute to form my reply, toĀ āOkay, yeah I see that movie too and I liked the action scenes, butĀ I didnāt care for the story little.ā (Iāve underlined mistakes that I would have made in Japanese, to show you that I sacrificed some accuracy to obtain higher fluency.)
So, in short, the easiest and quickest way to increase your spoken fluency is to throw away all the crutches you can and use the language as much as possible. Every single day. Even if youāre just having an imaginary conversation with yourself! And like I said, there are a bunch of cool apps that connect you with Japanese people who want to learn English and you can do language exchanges with them. I had a lot of fun with those in the past.Ā
As for increasing writing fluencyā¦well. Thatās a tough question with Japanese, because I can type Japanese at like 100 wpm, but my Japanese handwriting fluency is at a 10/100. I can read and type at the level of a native Japanese high school student, but I can only write the kanji that 7 year old can write. Thatās no exaggeration.
The big reason for that dichotomy is that my work is paper-free. 100% of my work is done on screen, so about the only time I have to write out something is when Iām filling out a form, which includes my name (katakana), address, and maybe occupation.Ā
If you want to increase your Japanese handwriting speed, just keep on writing. Write those little short stories about ćć® like I did, or find some writing prompts (I just started a side-blog with writing prompts yesterday btw) or keep a little diary. Make opportunities to write.Ā
How to Have Nice Handwriting in Japanese
Okay, full disclaimer: I am the absolute LAST person qualified to talk about this, because I have awful handwriting in Japanese.Ā
Unless you have prior experience with a different language that uses kanji, or you lack the keen eye of an artist, you will likely struggle to develop neat handwriting.Ā
Personally, I really like using this app called Japanese Kanji Sensei. Itās on Android (not sure about iOS), and if you pay just a few bucks you can make your own kanji sets and stuff. Anyways, it will show you how to write the characters prettily. It gives you a good frame of reference for what nice, pencil/pen-written characters (versus calligraphy characters). It has hiragana and katakana on it too!
I get a stylus and write out the characters on this app for the muscle memory, so my hands remember the sensation of writing a certain character. (The muscle memory is different if you only use your fingertip.) This muscle memory and repetition is how Japanese people learn how to internalize kanji as well. I really enjoy and recommend this app. Iām sure that there are others out there like it too.
Summary
TL;DR: Review your textbooks, take risks, use every resource available or make your own, and just have fun with it! š
In German we don't say āin the middle of nowhereā we say āam Arsch der Weltā which literally translates to āat the ass of the worldā and I think that's beautiful
This is a personal attack
Link to textbooks -Ā https://www.cambridge.org/core/what-we-publish/textbooks
Original tweet -Ā https://twitter.com/MiShee54/status/1239960873982144512
wow itās almost like textbooks never needed to cost absurd amounts of money to begin with
hi. do you have a masterpost of german books? not as in grammar books but normal ones, such as harry potter, thr hunger games, and stuff? Happy new year !
These are all the files Iāve hoarded over time.Ā
German Novels
Harry Potter
Harry Potter und der Stein der Weisen
Harry Potter und die Kammer des Schreckens
Harry Potter und der Gefangene von Askaban
Harry Potter und der Feuerkelch
Harry Potter und der Orden des Phƶnix
Harry Potter und der Halbblutprinz
Harry Potter und die Heiligtümer des Todes
The Lord of the Rings
The Hobbit
Der Herr der RingeĀ (all 3)
The Hunger Games
Todliche Spiele
Gefahrliche Liebe
Flammender Zorn
Sherlock Holmes
Das Reigate RƤtselĀ
Der Hund von Baskerville
Die Abenteuer Von Sherlock
The Chronocles of Narnia
Der Kƶnig von NarniaĀ
Prinz Kaspian von Narnia
Die Reise auf der MorgenrƶteĀ
Der silberne Sessel Ā Ā
Der Ritt nach Narnia Ā
Das Wunder von Narnia Ā
Der letzte Kampf Ā
Classics and Modern
P.S. Ich liebe Dich - Cecelia Ahern
Die Abtei von Northanger-Jane Austen
Fahrenheit 451-Ray Bradbury
Jane Eyre- Charlotte Bronte
Die Sturmhohe- Emily Bronte
Das krumme Haus - Agatha Christie
Mord im Orientexpress -Ā Agatha ChristieĀ
Herr der Diebe- Funke, CorneliaĀ
Eat Pray Love- Elizabeth Gilbert
Alles was wir geben mussten- Kazuo Ishiguro
Die Verwandlung - Franz Kafka
Der kleine Prinz -Ā Antoine de Saint Exupery
Gute Geister- Kathryn Stockett
Der Teufel tragt Prada- Lauren Weisberger
Die Bucherdiebin- Markus Zusak
Don Quijote (comic)
Geschichten aus 1001 Nacht (comic)
Madame Bovary (comic)
Odyssee (comic)
Other Books for Intermediate Students
1001 Nachtschichten
Adel und edle Steine
Anna
Brigitta
Das Feurschiff
Das Madchen mit dem die Kinder nicht verkehren durften
Der Gestiefelter Kater
Der Tote im See
Die Bergwerke von Falun
Die Blaumacherin
Die Rache des Computers
Ebbe und Flut
Effi Briest
Ein Mann zu viel
Erich ist verschwunden
Eva Wien
Gebrochene Herzen
Hamburg - hin und zuruck
Haus ohne Hoffnung
Lea? Nein danke!
Leipziger Allerlei
Mord auf dem Golfplatz
Till Eulenspiegel
Todlicher Schnee
Tor ohne Grenzen
Vera Heidelberg
Veronikas Geheimnis
Link to them all on Google Drive: Here
āBilinguals overwhelmingly report that they feel like different people in different languages. It is often assumed that the mother tongue is the language of the true self. (ā¦) But, if first languages are reservoirs of emotion, second languages can be rivers undammed, freeing their speakers to ride different currents.ā
ā Love in Translation by Lauren Collins from the New Yorker, August 8 & 15, 2016 Ā (via waltzingwithmidnight)
Hey guys! Could anyone recommend me some Taiwanese dramas to watch (preferrably in Taiwanese Mandarin, since thatās what Iām studying)?
I rlly need to increase my exposure. Also if you have anything else to recommend I would appreciate it.
I really liked ä½ ēå©åäøęÆä½ ēå©å (On Children). Itās a sci-fi-ish depiction of the stress and pressure Taiwanese students face from their parents. It gets very dark though (many episodes deal with self-harm, suicidal thoughts, or actual suicide), so be warned.
Another one would be ééå°å„³ (The Teenage Psychic). Itās about a 16 year old spirit medium who can talk to the dead and has to deal with the usual teenage drama on the side. They also speak a ton of Taiwanese in this one.
äøååęå® (A Thousand Goodnights) is a family drama about a young woman who travels through Taiwan to honor her father who recently passed away. I only watched a couple of episodes so far, but I did like it. Lots of beautiful landscape shots as well! Taiwan is beautiful.
If you prefer silly and cheesy, then maybe try ęē¬å„³ē (My Queen). Itās about a single woman over 30 (gasp) who falls in love with a guy 8 years younger than her. This was the first Taiwanese drama I watched from start to finish, and even though shows like that are really not my cup of tea, it was oddly addicting.
Hello! I'm sorry if this has been asked before, but how do you become proficient at handling conversations in Japanese/handling grammar very well? I read your post on the JLPT, and it addressed issues I have been tip toe-ing around--indeed, passive actions such as listening or reading are easier than the active ones. How did you go about that? Did you write a bunch of sentences daily? Did you have a conversation partner? What would you rec. to someone who lives outside Japan? Thank you!
This is an excellent question, and one that I get asked a lot irl by Japanese people in particular. Letās talk about gaining fluency and the ways we can go about it!
How to Gain Fluency in Japanese (and Other Languages)
Speaking Fluency versus Accuracy
Language proficiency is divided into two separate categories:
Fluency: Although there are no widely agreed-upon definitions or measures of language fluency, someone is typically said to be fluent if their use of the language appears fluid, or natural, coherent, and easy as opposed to slow, halting use. In other words, fluency is often described as the ability to produce language on demand and be understood.
Accuracy: Correctness of language use, especially grammatical correctness and word choice.
By the above definitions, aĀ āfluentā speaker may make grammatical mistakes, but they can speak without having to stop and think too much about conjugations, word choice, etc.
AnĀ āaccurateā speaker can speak with nearly zero grammatical/word choice mistakes. However, the speed of their utterances isnāt generally taken into account, so it could take anĀ āaccurateā person twice as long to articulate the same idea as aĀ āfluentā person.Ā
Ideally, you need to strike a good balance between these two qualities when speaking. I have a boss, God bless him, who is 100% fluency and 0% accuracy andā¦man is it hard to understand what heās saying sometimes, but he can generally get his point across just barely.Ā I have another coworker who is 100% accuracy and takes about 3 minutes to form a sentence because he wants it to be perfect.Ā
How to Increase Speaking/Writing Accuracy
First, letās talk about the easiest thing to improve, which is accuracy. Itās also (in my opinion) the least fun thing to improve, because it means grammar books and vocabulary memorization.Ā
You can only use a language accurately if you know what is correct and what is incorrect, and you can only learn that by studying grammar and vocabulary (or if youāre a native speaker and picked it up innately, you lucky bastard).
So hereās some things you can do to increase your accuracy:
For example, if youāre having a hard time using the passive, you need to review that part of your textbook and find some exercises to drill it into your head.Ā
Say the correct thing aloud. Lots. Sometimes I just walk around my apartment and narrate everything I see/do like a crazy person, but thatās good practice.Ā
Write example sentences using the grammar youāre struggling with and say them aloud too.Ā
Thereās a bunch of cool apps that connect you with native speakers that can help correct you too! I used to use HelloTalk, I think.Ā
If youāre a creative soul, when I was studying for the JLPT, I took 1 grammar point and 5 vocabulary words from my JLPT study books and used them to write a 2-page short story about the adventures of ćć®, a stray black cat that smelled like green onions because she napped in an onion field. Then I had a Japanese friend check it over for me and mark mistakes. I hand-wrote them to improve my abysmal handwriting at the same time. It was really fun! I sometimes think about doing it again just for funsies.
When someone corrects you, donāt feel like your entire life is over and youāre a failure and youāll never get it right haha. Iāve seen people fall into that hopeless mindset, and thatās just nonsense. Itās a good opportunity for learning and nothing more! Say the correct thing youāve just been taught out loud, then write it down if you can. And, if possible, find a chance to use it in conversation asap.
How to Increase Speaking/Writing Fluency
Now this is the hard one. Especially for those learners who do not have native speakers nearby.Ā
Iām going to be dead honest with you. I started formally studying Japanese at uni, and I had a Japanese roommate/best friend since year one. I had a 4.0 GPA in my Japanese classes (and onlyĀ my Japanese classes lol) because I was and still am a MEGA NERD about it.Ā
ā¦But it wasnāt until I studied abroad in Japan my 4th year of uni that I gained fluency.Ā
There are a lot of things that can hold us back from fluency. An interesting thing Iāve noted is that Foreign Language is perhaps the only subject in which a studentās personality can directly affect their progress. To gain fluency, you have to go forth and speak, but if you are naturally a shy person, that is going to hinder you. If you are the kind of person who takes mistakes/failures poorly, you will be less likely to take risks and try to say harder sentences. In contrast, you can get full marks in math regardless of the above personality traits.Ā
Iām not saying that you have to be an outgoing explosion of a human being in order to gain fluency. But what I am saying is that you have to be willing to seek out conversations, and you have to be willing to take chances. Get out of your comfort zone. Use that new word you picked up the other day. Try to explain something that is difficult for you.Ā
My problem was that, while I lived with a native speaker who would have happily taught me anything I asked, her English proficiency was much higher than my Japanese proficiency. And when I struggled to say something in Japanese, Iād fall back onto English. And when she told me something I didnāt understand in Japanese, sheād repeat it in English instead of Japanese, because that was easier for us both. The same thing happened when I was in Japanese class as well. I always had the assurance that I could fall back on English.
But when I elected to study abroad in Japan for 3 months, I knew that this was my big chance. So on the host family form in theĀ āother requestsā area, I wrote that I specifically wanted a host family that could not speak English. I was setting fire to my crutches, and I was scared but excited to see them burn.Ā
By the end of my three months in Japan, I had gone fromĀ āChotto matte kudasaiā and needing a minute to form my reply, toĀ āOkay, yeah I see that movie too and I liked the action scenes, butĀ I didnāt care for the story little.ā (Iāve underlined mistakes that I would have made in Japanese, to show you that I sacrificed some accuracy to obtain higher fluency.)
So, in short, the easiest and quickest way to increase your spoken fluency is to throw away all the crutches you can and use the language as much as possible. Every single day. Even if youāre just having an imaginary conversation with yourself! And like I said, there are a bunch of cool apps that connect you with Japanese people who want to learn English and you can do language exchanges with them. I had a lot of fun with those in the past.Ā
As for increasing writing fluencyā¦well. Thatās a tough question with Japanese, because I can type Japanese at like 100 wpm, but my Japanese handwriting fluency is at a 10/100. I can read and type at the level of a native Japanese high school student, but I can only write the kanji that 7 year old can write. Thatās no exaggeration.
The big reason for that dichotomy is that my work is paper-free. 100% of my work is done on screen, so about the only time I have to write out something is when Iām filling out a form, which includes my name (katakana), address, and maybe occupation.Ā
If you want to increase your Japanese handwriting speed, just keep on writing. Write those little short stories about ćć® like I did, or find some writing prompts (I just started a side-blog with writing prompts yesterday btw) or keep a little diary. Make opportunities to write.Ā
How to Have Nice Handwriting in Japanese
Okay, full disclaimer: I am the absolute LAST person qualified to talk about this, because I have awful handwriting in Japanese.Ā
Unless you have prior experience with a different language that uses kanji, or you lack the keen eye of an artist, you will likely struggle to develop neat handwriting.Ā
Personally, I really like using this app called Japanese Kanji Sensei. Itās on Android (not sure about iOS), and if you pay just a few bucks you can make your own kanji sets and stuff. Anyways, it will show you how to write the characters prettily. It gives you a good frame of reference for what nice, pencil/pen-written characters (versus calligraphy characters). It has hiragana and katakana on it too!
I get a stylus and write out the characters on this app for the muscle memory, so my hands remember the sensation of writing a certain character. (The muscle memory is different if you only use your fingertip.) This muscle memory and repetition is how Japanese people learn how to internalize kanji as well. I really enjoy and recommend this app. Iām sure that there are others out there like it too.
Summary
TL;DR: Review your textbooks, take risks, use every resource available or make your own, and just have fun with it! š