- 127
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TheLanguageBro
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 17 พ.ค. 2023
I’m Alex, and I’m an undergraduate at UNLV. As I major in Spanish, I want to share my educational perspectives on languages because I’m passionate about them and have never quite had the chance to share my ideas on education overall.
I’m fluent in Russian, Hebrew, and English, and I’m learning Spanish and German. I’m almost a polyglot, and I’m here to help. I want to try and explain the concept of learning entertainingly and educationally, along with my critical thinking skills, on how learning languages is easier than people think. Currently, I'm focused on showing the grammar of languages as a basis to start learning, but it will change in the future to different content.
Feel free to subscribe and give feedback. :)
I’m fluent in Russian, Hebrew, and English, and I’m learning Spanish and German. I’m almost a polyglot, and I’m here to help. I want to try and explain the concept of learning entertainingly and educationally, along with my critical thinking skills, on how learning languages is easier than people think. Currently, I'm focused on showing the grammar of languages as a basis to start learning, but it will change in the future to different content.
Feel free to subscribe and give feedback. :)
Things To Know Before Learning German
In this video, I explain things to know before learning German. Before fully diving into German, it’s important to understand the distinctive nuances that exist in the language which is what I show. The following are deviations in German, compared to English:
1. German 3 grammatical genders: masculine, feminine, neuter (neutral)
2. German capitalizes ALL nouns (it’s the only language that does so)
3. German has no sense of progression ( ̶i̶n̶g̶s̶ ̶a̶t̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶e̶n̶d̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶p̶a̶r̶t̶i̶c̶i̶p̶l̶e̶s̶)
4. German has compound nouns (combining smaller words into one word)
5. German has a flexible sentence structure and word order
6. German puts a large emphasis on verb placement
7. German has 4 grammatical cases with declensions (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive)
Feel free to correct any mistake I could have made while explaining, and feel free to share this video with many people. I appreciate the support.
About me:
I’m Alex, and I’m a student at UNLV. As I major in Spanish, I advance in my linguistic skills, learn new concepts, and understand how learning within languages works. I’m fluent in Russian, Hebrew, and English, and I’m learning Spanish and German. I’m just trying to make languages seem very easy.
My social media outlets, if you want to check them out:
Subscribe to the channel - www.youtube.com/@TheLanguageBro
My Gmail, in case you need it - anylanghack@gmail.com
My Instagram account - langbro1
1. German 3 grammatical genders: masculine, feminine, neuter (neutral)
2. German capitalizes ALL nouns (it’s the only language that does so)
3. German has no sense of progression ( ̶i̶n̶g̶s̶ ̶a̶t̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶e̶n̶d̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶p̶a̶r̶t̶i̶c̶i̶p̶l̶e̶s̶)
4. German has compound nouns (combining smaller words into one word)
5. German has a flexible sentence structure and word order
6. German puts a large emphasis on verb placement
7. German has 4 grammatical cases with declensions (nominative, accusative, dative, genitive)
Feel free to correct any mistake I could have made while explaining, and feel free to share this video with many people. I appreciate the support.
About me:
I’m Alex, and I’m a student at UNLV. As I major in Spanish, I advance in my linguistic skills, learn new concepts, and understand how learning within languages works. I’m fluent in Russian, Hebrew, and English, and I’m learning Spanish and German. I’m just trying to make languages seem very easy.
My social media outlets, if you want to check them out:
Subscribe to the channel - www.youtube.com/@TheLanguageBro
My Gmail, in case you need it - anylanghack@gmail.com
My Instagram account - langbro1
มุมมอง: 244
วีดีโอ
A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In English (The Conclusion)
มุมมอง 48221 วันที่ผ่านมา
This video is a long compilation of all of my previous videos that show and explain each English grammatical concept individually. This video has every English concept, idea, principle, and fundamental that one would need to understand the basis of English. I begin the video with a short introduction as to what this long video brings and conclude it with the idea that I mention all the time: Re...
English - Informal Contractions Explained
มุมมอง 7821 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this video, I explain informal contractions in English which are short forms of words that people use when speaking English casually and conversationally. I cover contractions like ain’t, gimme, gonna, gotta, kinda, lemme, wanna, watcha, coulda, shoulda, woulda, and ya, while providing many useful examples on the way. Feel free to correct any mistake I could have made while explaining, and f...
English - Connected Speech Explained
มุมมอง 9821 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this video, I explain connected speech in English. This concept presents words that are connected in a continuous spoken language, and it’s very frequently heard in typical English conversations. There are 5 types of connected speech: Catenation/Linking, intrusion, elision, assimilation, and geminates. In the video, I explain each concept thoroughly while providing many useful examples. The ...
English - Active & Passive Voices Explained
มุมมอง 45921 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this video, I explain the active and passive voices in English. These voices are 2 grammatical structures that have distinctive purposes in speech and writing. The active voice focuses on the subject of the sentence who performs the action of the verb, making a direct expression (ex: The cat ate the food). The passive voice is used when the subject receives the action of the verb, emphasizin...
English - The Subjunctive Explained
มุมมอง 136หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the English subjunctive. The subjunctive is a grammatical mood that expresses hypothetical situations and outcomes. I begin by thoroughly explaining its purpose, and later, I present examples and heavily emphasize the distinction between “was” and “were,” as it’s the most practical concept to understand in the mood. For further explanation on the English subjunctive: ww...
English - The Imperative Mood (Commands) Explained
มุมมอง 64หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the imperative mood in English. The imperative in English is a verb form used to make a command, demand, request, or give advice and instructions. Imperative verbs take the infinitive form (clean your room, walk the dog, get out, etc). In the video, I present many examples, along with other concepts like negation, first person (let’s/let us), and the indicative. Feel fr...
English - The Conditionals (If-Clauses) Explained
มุมมอง 96หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain all the conditionals in English. A conditional sentence (also known as an if-clause) expresses possibilities, hypothetical situations, and consequences; there are 4 types. Type 0 expresses facts and truths, Type 1 shows real possibilities, Type 2 represents unreal or improbable situations, and Type 3 exhibits past hypothetical possibilities. In the video, I cover every ...
English - The Future Perfect Tense Explained
มุมมอง 80หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the future perfect tense in English. This tense is used for actions that will be completed between now and some other point in the future, emphasizing the completion of an action before another future action. It uses the auxiliary verb “will” with “have” and a past participle. The pattern is a [subject] [will have] [past participle] - Ex: I will have left at eight o’clo...
English - The Future Tense Explained
มุมมอง 59หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the future simple tense in English. This tense describes actions that will happen at some point in the future, expressing willingness and predictions. It uses the auxiliary verb “will” with a main verb that stays in its base form. The pattern is a [subject] [will] [main verb] - Ex: I will learn a new language. In the video, I cover other concepts that further describe t...
English - The Past Perfect Tense Explained
มุมมอง 129หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the past perfect tense in English. This verb tense is used for past actions that began in and continued in the past, coming before other actions that already happened. They’re used with the auxiliary verb “to have” and past participles. The pattern is a [subject] [had] [past participle] - Ex: I had eaten before I went to school. In the video, I go through numerous conce...
English - The Present Perfect Tense Explained
มุมมอง 251หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain the present perfect tense in English. This verb tense is used for past actions that began in the past but are continued in the present; they’re very common with the auxiliary verb “to have” and past participles. The pattern is a [subject] [have/has] [past participle] - Ex: I have eaten. In the video, I go through multiple concepts that further describe this tense, such ...
English - Participial Adjectives Explained
มุมมอง 95หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain how past participles act as adjectives in English. Known as participial adjectives, these words explain the state of something (mainly using “ed”) or say that something is related to an action (using “ing”). I begin by explaining their function with many examples, and in the end, I extend their concept through rephrasing, comparatives, and superlatives. Feel free to cor...
English - How Negation Works in the Language
มุมมอง 185หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain how negation works in English. I begin by explaining the adverb “not” and how it correlates with many English verbs. Then, I lay out the foundational verbs of English negation, such as the auxiliary verb “do” and an infinitive of a verb (Ex: I do not like this movie). At last, I analyze double negatives with many more English negative words and rules. Feel free to corre...
English - Comparatives & Superlatives Explained
มุมมอง 102หลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, I explain comparatives and superlatives in English. Comparative adjectives explain a noun by comparing it to another noun, showing a change, and often using “than.” The basic pattern for comparatives is “er” (ex. small → smaller), although there are special spelling rules. Superlative adjectives describe a noun when comparing it to two or more nouns to the highest degree, making ...
English - Prepositional Verbs Explained
มุมมอง 261หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Prepositional Verbs Explained
English - Irregular Past Verb Conjugation Explained
มุมมอง 85หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Irregular Past Verb Conjugation Explained
English - Regular Past Verb Conjugation Explained
มุมมอง 882 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Regular Past Verb Conjugation Explained
English - Prepositional Phrases Explained
มุมมอง 2622 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Prepositional Phrases Explained
English - Demonstrative Pronouns & Determiners Explained
มุมมอง 1292 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Demonstrative Pronouns & Determiners Explained
English - Possessive Adjectives & Pronouns Explained
มุมมอง 1282 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Possessive Adjectives & Pronouns Explained
English - Descriptive Adjectives Explained
มุมมอง 1282 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Descriptive Adjectives Explained
English - The Progressive & Present Participles Explained
มุมมอง 1413 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - The Progressive & Present Participles Explained
English - Sentence Structures, Clauses, and Word Order
มุมมอง 1423 หลายเดือนก่อน
English - Sentence Structures, Clauses, and Word Order
I would like to say that this is such an amazing video. this literally covers basically everything I use this video from time to time to review since I don't have time to study. BUT I will say one thing. You put stress on so many parts where there isn't. I'm at a relatively mediocre russian level, but it feels wrong to hear you say certain words....
Take a good look at every imperfect tense suffix and every imperfect tense form of the verb “ir.” The “-ar” verb suffixes include a “b” but the “-er” and “-ir” ones do not. Why is that? A Spanish etymology dictionary I have says that the “b” got dropped from the “-er” and “-ir” verb imperfect tense suffixes because of dissimilation in “-er” and “-ir” verbs with a stem ending in a “b,” so those suffixes replace the “b” with an accent/tilde over the “i.” “Ir” is the only “-ir” verb that keeps the “b” probably because that verb doesn’t have a stem and shouldn’t look like nothing but suffixes when conjugated in any case (and we already know that no “-er” verbs keep the “b”). I think the reason “ser” and “ver” are irregular is because a consonant not followed by any vowels might not be enough of a stem for “-er” and “-ir” verbs.
Yessss theres german thank youuuu sooo muchhhh😊
I think the words that you classified as prepositions are actually conjunctions
And those "adverbs" too
When I first heard about the fact, that you learned german I was really excited. I can speak german already and am genuinly interested how you're gonna explain the language. Your pronounciation is really good too.
Thank you!
The langbro in the flesh. Hope you did well in your exams👍
Hello please can u upload the full long complete course of German please?
There isn't one yet
The full complete course will be complete after all other videos are made
When’re you predicting the end of German Grammar? Your videos are awesome and I’m in need of German specifically - keep up the hard work!! 😄
What exactly do you mean with the "end"?
@ like how he made a vid of all Spanish and Russian
Ah I get it. Well if he explains every case, every tense and the passive forms, then that's gonna be a long video.
German grammar will probably end in March-April, maybe May. German will require a lot of videos, so watch out for that :)
Love your style of teaching, can't wait for the videos to come
OHHHH MY GOD!!!! HOLY SCHEIẞE WOOOOOOOOOO!
No se como llegué acá la verdad debería edtar durmiendo xd
I'm starting your Spanish video tomorrow and then your Russian one. I'm learning Polish too!
For German This year I'll be using a 3 month approach to study 4 languages such as Russian, German, Portuguese and french! I decided to go with Russian first as you already have it on your channel and later I'll be studying German Thank you for doing German ❤
Thanks for sharing ya knowledge with us :D Through my language learning journey, I haven't found anyone who could explain anything as concisely as you, man. I'm currently using your spanish grammar guide and it's deffo worth every single second; I can understand each topic so easily with ur explanation, so... keep it up! ur helping out many people out there including me!
Amazing! Glad you're learning something; thank you for the feedback! :)
Bro, thank you. You obviously spent a lot of time compiling and organizing this information. It is a very comprehensive, straightforward and digestible product. It is a masterpiece. You are helping everyone that has been at other channels and, we now see, have wasted their time. Your are giving this away, free? This is worth a fortune. Move over Rosetta Stone and Duolingo, the big dog has come to town. Thanks again, Bro.
I have one thing to say 7:00 yeh its formal, but depends on the relationship too, if your the younger sister talking to the older sister you dont have to do it but if youre a doughter or son yo always said 'usted' for your parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, teachers, and strangers if theyre older, we use 'Voz' (Where im from) for our siblings, friends, and usually people from the same or almost the same age as us. For example if you wanna said 'You liked' then something else like a place or movie for casual like he said could be like, 'A usted le gusto' then if its for like ya know it could be, 'A voz te gusto..' (Also gusta and gusto are different but I aint gonna get to that im too lazy lmao)
I got better in my Spanish since I started using Immersive translate app. The progress was so fast.
Too fast¡!!!¡!!!
Bro, thank you. You obviously spent a lot of time compiling and organizing this information. It is a very comprehensive, straightforward and digestible product. It is a masterpiece. You are helping everyone that has been at other channels and, we now see, have wasted their time. Your are giving this away, free? This is worth a fortune. Move over Rosetta Stone and Duolingo, the big dog has come to town. Thanks again, Bro.
Wow I love that this video exists
Too short and too slow.😆
Thank you, this is great explanation. Although, I would rather have it explained in 5 minutes but with you talking slower :)
Wonderful video! As an aspiring polyglot myself, I appreciate the work you put in!
Current revision need. 1 4:08 revise. - needs revision still
You meant to say б can turn into п at 26:26, right??
Yes, Б’s counterpart is П, NOT T. I have a timestamp for this mistake in the description.
@@TheLanguageBroah I see! Thank you 🙇♂️ Didn’t take a look yet
Thank you very much, dazzling Amigo! I've learned Spanish on Duo and just know the basic vocabularies. But watching this video takes me further than that. Mucho gracias! I've always wanted to learn Spanish, but the Spanish native speaker speaks so fast I can barely understand them 😂 I'm not on that level yet hehe
This is actually really useful, im learning russian right now so its a big help I understand more how the russian sentence structure is now So constructing russian sentences will be a bit more easy Thx bro
I'm learning German, I cannot express how jealous I am right now.
In your case i would it speak more faster. Its uncredible how you destroyed the video with your running voice. You got a timelimit of youtube or what
This Mf a genius thxxx buddy
Хахпха а у меня русский просто заспавнился в голове
Learning Russian as a 7th language
god bless
Like to Dislike ratio of over 500 is insane
Thank you so much for making these videos; they're so helpful!
Very helpful video
amazing video thanks god bless you
39:00
Bro is learning Spanish with the Italian Flag is a crazy on the banner.
With all due respect, if you actually pay attention to the channel's banner, you'll see that it's Mexico's flag with the Golden Eagle in the center
@TheLanguageBro Shit u got me🤣
❤❤
hello everyone im trying understand everything in one night wish me luck will update 🤞
Duolingo has a ton of "le, les" which you didn't mention at all 😢
you pronounce "e" as "eh" but it's supposed to be pronounced "ay"
Depends on the accent of the person. My wife who's a native speaker pronounces it both ways.
maybe you should try imitating native speaker pronunciation that helps me
Amazing video brother, so clear and so concise. Love your work 🙏🙏
Thank u so much .
how this is not in the toooppp?
Hello Sir could you make full intermediate Spanish grammar vedios
I actually already have such videos; they're put into one long video, like this one
Sir your vedios are so helpful for me plz make more vedios ❤❤😊😊
he is reading from a book