học bất kỳ ngoại ngữ nào
học bất kỳ ngoại ngữ nào
học bất kỳ ngoại ngữ nào
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Listen to free audio-book downloads before going to bed. When was the last time someone
read you a bedtime story? Its incredibly relaxing.
Always carry an L2 book with you. Everywhere. Audio-books in conjunction with paper books
are awesome when you want to learn pronunciation.
Computer programs with any clout will have a slew of language options. Switch them to your
L2.
Buy an iPod touch or smartphone and download the Anki app and a dictionary. Youll be able to
study your flash cards anywhere.
Think in L2. Whenever I thought a thought in English, I did my best to rethink it in Japanese.
Eat your countrys cuisine. Life revolves around food in most countries, so being accustomed to
and knowledgeable about native foods will give you an automatic in when visiting.
YouTube
Movies but DO NOT use English subtitles! Theyre a crutch that prevent you from diving into
the language fully.
Step X: Prioritize
A typical unabridged Chinese character dictionary will have more than 40,000 independent entries. It
would take a lifetime to familiarize yourself with all of these characters, but thankfully languages
follow the rule of 80/20, a.k.a. the Pareto Principle. What this means is roughly 20% of those
characters are used 80% of the time. A well-educated Chinese student will recognize upwards of 7,000
characters, and reading a newspaper may require a working knowledge of 3,000 characters [1]. We can
find the same thing in English The Reading Teachers Book of Lists claims that the first 25 words make
up about one-third of all printed material in English, and that the first 100 make up about one-half of
all written material [2]. Using an SRS like Anki and a dictionary with good example sentences, the
initial effort of memorizing 100 words should take three days at most. Three days for 50%
comprehension! I know I know, that number is slightly overstated because many of those 100 words are
lemmas (more than one word like is can be He was, I am, You are etc.), but you see the
point Im trying to make right? By learning the common words first, you quickly increase your effective
comprehension of the language. Note: You can find the first 3000 common Japanese words in this post.
of vocabulary would be useless for anyone else, even most Japanese, but it was essential for me and
my situation.
During my most intense period of learning Japanese, I bought this calendar for 100 Yen ($1) at a thrift
store and used it as a daily visual reminder of my goal to become fluent. Each day I accomplished my
(small) goal, I took a big red marker and made an X on the day. The sense of accomplishment I felt
after each Xd day helped to create even more momentum for the next day.
Learning a language takes a lot of effort, so keep your goals small and achievable while finding ways to
keep them sustainable over long periods of time. A small effort every day for a month is far more
productive than three days of caffeine-induced cramming. After a few days of studying youll become
more aware of your physical limitations; its at that point you want to create a daily goal. Make your
goal achievable, but somewhat of a stretch. Too easy and youll end up cutting yourself short, too hard
and youll get disappointed by failure. The key is long-term sustainability.
In contrast to this, dont put an extended timeline on your goal to become fluent. When youre first
starting out you shouldnt worry about when youll arrive at your goal, or make baseless assumptions
about how long it should take you to acquire a 10,000 word vocabulary. Yes I know, the title of this post
is Learn any language in 6 months, but it may take some people longer and others shorter. Just start
walking the road and have a surprise party when you get to the end.
to put forth the effort to get the train started, but dont quite realize that the train will eventually
come to a slow stop if they dont keep shoveling the coal.