What is the best way to go about learning a new language?
What is the best way to go about learning a new language?
Duolingo.com
where is the blood?
good motivation
People don't bleed when they're dead, monkey.
Moving to an area that speaks it and forced apprehension.
Was censored by the indonesian goverment
I'd like to learn Spanish so that someday I can live in Brazil. Any tips?
but we dont speak spanish
>he bleeds when he's injured
heh
Jajajajajjajajaja
idk but i want to learn finnish!
>finnish
probably the most useless european language. even finns themselves use english in their everyday life
>says Netherlands
+ it's not that useless, i want to learn it because:
1. it's hard
2. i like northern countries like norway/sweden/finland/iceland, but norsk seems easy so want to learn something harder
You don't need speak finnish to go Finland, except if you will live in a Village in the Middle of nowhere
Is this a Reservoir Dogs remake or what?
probably shot in the heart. Blood stopped pumping immediately.. he died basically instantly too judging from the video, which happens when your heart stops.
So, the only blood to come out of his body was a bit of blood pressure and gravity because his heart wasn't pumping it out.
He's Russian.
No some Turk sperged out and killed the russian ambassador to turkey a few days ago.
It's a real picture.
Daily reminder that if you know english already, there's no good reason to learn another language.
using it
fuck you swampnigger
fuck you nigger
Learn just a handful of phrases so you can string them together infinitely naughtynomad.com
Then you live there and speak it F/T enough that you just pick up that language naturally like a kid does
i thought finland itself is a village in the middle of nowhere
Living in a country with multiple official languages.
>learn like this
>start getting confused over basic shit
>don't know why ils sont is used in some phrases and why ce sont is used in others
>don't know why some adjectives come before a word and why some go after a word
>and a hundred other dependencies
>can't point out the difference between and object and subject but I can spout 1000 arbitrarily memorized sentences
>can't write or speak anything in the language because I'm not sure when to use what specific words, and I constantly misinterpret things others are saying, always afraid I'm doing it wrong because I have no idea what the right way is
>basically like a retarded caveman trying to make sense of everything
>only very recently start sitting down and tackling textbooks
>realize all the guides are wrong and grammar isn't hard
>realize I'm a dumbass for ignoring textbooks that just straight up tell you how shit works so you're not left guessing yourself
>realize grammar has a lot of rules you can apply to other things like how many different tenses are just taking two simpler tenses and putting them together like lego blocks
>digging myself out of a roadblock I've been stuck in for months and finally seeing progress again after hitting the wall
I sincerely recommend people don't shy away from bookwork, it's tedious but it helps so much and it's not as hard as it first seems. When you get done with a concept and look back you'll feel dumb for thinking it was hard at first. You CAN communicate with people as a caveman, but it's painful and stressful and a big confusing mess.
Pick a language for the right reason. I've tried and given up on learning languages for various "practical" reasons and am now just learning Chinese with absolutely no plans or intention other than to have fun. I've consistently stayed on it for over a year now.
I like apps on my phone because it gives me something to do with idle moments. Fluentu is awesome for working on listening skills if they have your language. I've tried learning without a textbook but it's really best to use a textbook. I suggest you find an eTextbook and a flashcard app that lets you make custom lists or even better already has your book's chapter vocab built in.
And basically you just have to stick with it. Drilling vocab is a little boring, but apps like Fluentu give you a chance to use what you've learned. Use apps like Meetup to find groups to talk to people that way too.