@@snogger211 üstelik Türkçeyi kırık konuşan yabancı insanları dinlemeyi de çok severiz değil mi, mesela bir yabancı " geliyorum " yerine " gellorumi " dese daha çok severiz, tatlı gelir
We find people with incorrect Turkish pronunciation more lovable. We don't explain this much to encourage you, but in fact, those who speak incorrectly are loved more.
@@dacay Sometimes it is difficult for us to understand people who come from other cities in Turkey. This is because there may be names that the locals decide or accept among themselves for anything there, and we don't know them Decently. Let me give an example: "Little bit" is meaning "Azıcık" in Turkish but in my city... we are saying sometimes (and old persons are saying generally) "iiicük". Im living in Zonguldak but if i go to İstanbul and say it to another guy... he will say "Yo bro, What do you mean? Speak Turkish! :D".
I have used Duolingo for a year trying to learn Spanish, and just like Genesia stated it would be extremely beneficial if there was a grammar section that explained things as opposed to guessing. I was forced to seek out other (paid) classes in order to get a better understanding and have some basic questions answered.
Next! Julia learn Indonesia and speak Indonesia mean while Genesia learn Spanish and speak Spanish then they having convertation between each other. This gonna be fun
It's always so good when you put an spanish and portuguese speaker together, Julia is so good and friendly, in Asia i like the japonese language, but i use Internet and especially TH-cam to learn languages
Turkish may feel challenging at first, but it’s much more approachable than it seems. Its grammar is highly systematic, with very few irregularities, and its agglutinative nature (similar to Korean, Japanese, Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian and so on) allows for flexible word order. Once you learn to recognize word roots, understanding and building vocabulary becomes like solving a fun puzzle. One area that might be challenging is that understanding vowel harmony, which creates versions of suffixes based on the last syllable in the word. But with practice, it may become second nature. Turkish also has no gendered words or articles, making it simpler than languages like English, German, or Spanish in many ways. Pronunciation is generally balanced, without total soft or harsh sounds. Plus, some sounds that will feel familiar, like Ü, Ö (from German or French), R (Softer Spanish R) and Ş, Ç, J, and R'at the end (similar to Slavic languages). The only truly unique sound is I/ı (dotless i), which is similar to the English "schwa" sound or Russian "bl". Being a master can be difficult, but I believe that it can broaden one's horizons to languages in a different way with its unique and different features.
@@Bemrecprk I am Brazilian and I found out about vowel harmony when learning Turkish, i didn't know about it before that but recently i discovered that in my Accent (which is an specific Accent from northeast which covers several states countryside) we actually speak with vowel harmony, But it's only spoken though. i did it naturally my whole Life and i didn't even know about hahaha
@@danbarbosa6940 Wow, I have heard that some languages using a lot of suffixes (usually affixes) have vowel harmony or some similar logic. Unfortunately, I have no experience with Portuguese but I have been studying Spanish for a long time and I know that all tense suffixes change depending on the end of the verb (-ar, er- ir). But if you are talking about whole words in your accent, including nouns and adverbs. Certainly, it sounds very interesting. Because when I checked the wikipedia about this issue, Portuguese was not on the list.
Bir Türk olarak bu güzel Türkçemizde en zor şey bence ekler. Çünkü dilimizde çok fazla ek var. Mesela bazı yurtdışından gelen turistler Türkçe konuşurken "Ben ekmek yemek" diyor. (Örnek) Bu eklerin çok fazla versiyonu var. Bu da Türkçeyi çok çok zor bir dil haline getiriyor. Ve öğrenenler için gerçekten çok fazla baş ağrıtıyor. Üstelik Türkçe'deki bir diğer zor olan şeyin resmi ve çoğul konuşma kısmı olduğunu düşünüyorum. Mesela "Merhaba, Nasılsınız?" hem o yerde birden fazla kişi varken de kullanabilirsin ve tanımadığın bir kişiyle resmi şekilde kullanırken de. Üstelik İspanyolca öğrenmeye çalışıyorum. Gerçekten Türkler için kolay bir dil. Türksen zaten avantajın var bir sürü dil öğrenmeye. Mesela Türkler Korece, Japonca, Moğolca, Azerbaycanca, İngilizce, İspanyolca, Portekizce öğrenmekte o kadar zorlanmıyor. Fakat benim için Almanca, Felemenkçe ve Fransızca gerçekten çok zor diller. İngilizce konuşanlar için çok kolay olmalarına rağmen. Bunun nedeni bizim dilimizin yazıldığı gibi okunabilir olmasıdır. Fakat bu bahsettiğim diller yazıldığı gibi okunmuyor. Mesela Fransızca'da "comment" kelimesi "kumon" olarak telaffuz ediliyor. Okuduğunuz için teşekkür ederim. Türkçe öğrenenlere başarılar dilerim, bol şanslar.
Rather than for beginning a language, for me Duolingo is good for practising, revising and expanding vocabulary for a language I already learn(t) and it also helps with some more colloquial things when you know only the 'high' written forms in some languages. For grammar it is useless which is why I would use it alongside another course
Do you have any other app recommendation for learning other languages beside english? The grammar has been a problem for me but i still couldn't find any other app (there's so many to try and im not sure which one that actually has it)
i'm brazilian and i'm learning turkish but i'm still very basic i just know some phrases. pronunciation is not hard once you learn the sounds and for me as a portuguese speaker we share a lot of sounds but the structure is very different from portuguese. turkçe ogreniyorum ama turkçe zor i'm learning turkish but turkish is hard tô aprendendo turco mas turco é difícil i love languages though :)
Yess you are right the structure is different but we have like thousands french/latin words like strüktür (structure) so it can be helpful for you and about accent I think armenian, georgian and greek people have the best accent after that it is portuguese and spanish. Your pronunciation and rhythm are similar to ours. Btw my name is Bora and my brazilian friend told me that bora means lets go in brazilian portuguese. soo bora bora continue to study Turkish :)))
@@boraa1234that's cool yeah, bora means let's go haha Sometimes I find some words in Turkish that are written the same as Portuguese words but means different things like "gel" for example Oh and I learned the word "fakir" very quick cuz it looks like "falir" in Portuguese which means "to go bankrupt" hahah
@@kyrakia5507because of pronunciation aspect, Arabic has some sounds that don't exist most of world's languages, and those sounds are like the language root so they are everywhere even in basic day to day words
7:30 I agree with Genesia. There is some similarities between English and German. As French, I'm so confused by the fact there are two verbs for "to be" in Spanish and the fact a sentence becomes all feminine/masculine and singular/plural depending on the subject. Like "how much" becomes "cuanta(s) / cuanto(s)", so you have to think of the subject before mention it.
Julia, although it is a difficult language, you speak Turkish very well. (Julia, zor bir dil olmasına rağmen Türkçeyi çok iyi konuşuyorsun.) and you are so sweet-julia (ve çok tatlısın julia)
I'm learning japanese since last year on Duo, but I recognize I need a native person for practice and learning more basic conversation Duolingo is teaching something like I would need for a trip to the country, like "tourist conversation" But my sensei is always so proud of how quick I learn new words
As a Turkish girl who's polyglot ( C1 English,B1 German, A2 Korean, A1 French) Turkish is one of the easiest in grammar wise but pronounciation can be hard for foreigners because they don't pronounce the words directly in their native languaces and a lot of them don't have the letters "ğ,ö,ü,".
I'm from Calamba City Laguna in the Philippines and I learned Bahasa Indonesia using Duolingo for more than a year since March 2023 😊😊 Since I dream to visit Indonesia someday, learning Bahasa Indonesia was my first priority but one problem was, there is no language school in Calamba City so my solution was to use language app on my phone and the application was chosen is Duolingo 😊😊 As of now, I learned Bahasa Indonesia since 2023 even some mistakes, but I need to practice more 😊😊 Today, I learned and spoken three languages: Tagalog, English and Bahasa Indonesia 😊😊
Semangat belajarnya ya, bang! I want to learn Tagalog since both B. Indo and Tagalog are in the same language family (also bc my male vtuber oshi sometimes have Tagalog streams :'). But there's no Tagalog/Filipino in Duolingo...
The thing I don't really like so far after almost a month (45-60min per day) is that it doesn't know that you have a problem area. Like for me in Dutch, I struggle with heb, hebben, heeft. I will get 4 or 5 questions wrong in a row, then it says "lesson complete, well done!". Like no. Let's go back and teach me this stuff. It really needs to teach you about infinitums and stems. Otherwise all you're doing is assembling a puzzle without knowing why the pieces are cut that way. Do I use "de" or "het"? I have no idea but "het" is the only option, so I pick that, without understanding anything. If I can't tell which one to use, have I even learned the meaning? Does it even count as a vocabulary list? And we get weird sentences like (and this is literally one of them) "Did the cow read the newspaper"
I have the same issue with genesia. Personally, fuo is good if you're already familiar with the language, but the app itself doesn't really give u an explanation for how the grammar or things you need to deeply understand the language. It's basically you learning new words, putting it together and guess what it means (at least that's what i get from trying to learn spanish n Chinese from it) I tried english course, but because I already familiarize myself with English bc i also learn it at school I don't have much problem but still, no grammar explanation (as far as i remember)
For the Verbs in Spanish, you basically have to differentiate between Perfect aspect and imperfect aspect; between indicative mode and subjunctive mode; and between 1°, 2° and 3rd conjugation of Verbs. Once you understand that, and you memorized the different endings, depending of the Verbal Tense, you Will just struggle with the irregular verbs
Just like Genesia, I am Indonesian and have been using Duolingo for years and trying different languages including French, German, Spanish, etc. According to Duolingo, I am at level B1 in German, but in reality, I can't speak German and barely understand when Germans speak in their language, LOL. So I agree that unfortunately our language skills in the app don't translate well to real life. 😅
Completely agree with that. The only way to really learn a language is by actually using that language and to do that is always easier when talking to native speakers because they will point out things that aren't in books but is part of the language
işte biz bu yüzden okullarda türkçe dersi görüyoruz fiilimsileri öğrenmek için örnek mek mak gibi ye-mek or yap-mak "yap" mean "do" "yapmak" its mean "to do" "ye" its mean "eat" "yemek" mean "food"
@elifakaantoinette yemek olarak da food deniliyor eğer yemekten dersen evet to eat gibi oluyor ama çeviride "from food" yazıyor Eğer yemek yemekten diyorsan "From eating food" oluyor
i agree with genesia that the problem w duolingo is that no explanations are given, it's just glorified memory cards. i don't learn that way, i need to understand the whys for me to internalize something
I used the app, the most basic-quickest mode to learn I think, like weeks before I went to... Vietnam & China. right, tonal languages and def not the easiest ones to learn in a very short time. Genesia summed up the overall experience with the app pretty well. (I still think the app would works a bit better for non-tonal languages tho) (like, I could learn saying Laura es tan linda, and the native speakers would got it right away)
Duolingo Dutch is trash, I translated "farewell" as "doei" and it refused my answer. But "doei" is farewell in Dutch. It put me off wanting to use the app for my real study language, Mandarin. If it can't get basic stuff right like common usage, then it is not a worthwhile app.
Seventh day of requesting this idea: Hello! It will be really nice if you guys made a video of comparing different Chinese dialects like the Hokkien dialect, hakka dialect, and cantonese dialect with Korean and Japanese. And get these people who speak it from China specifically. You can find some majority of hokkien speaking people in the Fujian province of China. You can find majority of Hakka speaking people from Guangdong province in China. You can find majority of Cantonese speaking people from Guangdong province in China. This is because these dialects are closer to old and Middle Chinese. So there will be more similarities when you compare Korean, japanese. I’ve been wanting someone to make a video like that for a long time.
I did Portuguese for about 8 months in Duolingo. It was fun while I did it but I retained nothing. I’ve learned more by listening to music and translating the lyrics to English.
Omg my Turkish friends also tell me that my pronunciation is 💯 spot on Turkish 😅 now I know what they mean. Turkish people are the best 😊
@@snogger211 üstelik Türkçeyi kırık konuşan yabancı insanları dinlemeyi de çok severiz değil mi, mesela bir yabancı " geliyorum " yerine " gellorumi " dese daha çok severiz, tatlı gelir
We find people with incorrect Turkish pronunciation more lovable. We don't explain this much to encourage you, but in fact, those who speak incorrectly are loved more.
I know Turkish natives with worse pronunciation :) I think this statement alone speaks a lot.
@@dacay Sometimes it is difficult for us to understand people who come from other cities in Turkey. This is because there may be names that the locals decide or accept among themselves for anything there, and we don't know them Decently. Let me give an example: "Little bit" is meaning "Azıcık" in Turkish but in my city... we are saying sometimes (and old persons are saying generally) "iiicük". Im living in Zonguldak but if i go to İstanbul and say it to another guy... he will say "Yo bro, What do you mean? Speak Turkish! :D".
@@yenibolumofficial Exactly :)
Ahhh I wish I could do better!! I should continue learning Spanish 😆
@@GESTEofficial that would be nice, it is a beautiful language and most Spanish speaker will like it
When Genesia included, the videos its always having more knowledgeable somehow and i like it.
Julia speaking Turkish is so cute❤🇹🇷
Genesia definitely has language teacher mind, the way she explains and break down things and analyzing it remind me to my english lecturers.
A Julia nunca decepcionando com a variedade fashion dela. Muito bom! < 3
Genesia and Julia 👍🤩
I have used Duolingo for a year trying to learn Spanish, and just like Genesia stated it would be extremely beneficial if there was a grammar section that explained things as opposed to guessing. I was forced to seek out other (paid) classes in order to get a better understanding and have some basic questions answered.
As a turk, i love how the brazilian girl talk turkish its so cute ❤
I love Julia's energy 🎀😭
As a Turk, I love Julia A really fun person 💕🫶🏻🇧🇷
Turkish deserves more recognition for its unique sounding language 😊
Next!
Julia learn Indonesia and speak Indonesia mean while Genesia learn Spanish and speak Spanish then they having convertation between each other. This gonna be fun
gene should learn portuguese, cz Julia speak portuguese
Julia speak portuguese
Ahh.. right I forgot
Julia`s Türkish accent is acctually so good
Maybe be cuz the fonetic are similar between these languages, I'm brazilian and I guess it's not difficult for us pronunce turkey language
It's always so good when you put an spanish and portuguese speaker together, Julia is so good and friendly, in Asia i like the japonese language, but i use Internet and especially TH-cam to learn languages
I fell in love with Julia's glasses (and her obv) where can I find it pleaseee??
Irmak is so pretty 😻
Irmakı is so cute
Turkish may feel challenging at first, but it’s much more approachable than it seems. Its grammar is highly systematic, with very few irregularities, and its agglutinative nature (similar to Korean, Japanese, Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian and so on) allows for flexible word order. Once you learn to recognize word roots, understanding and building vocabulary becomes like solving a fun puzzle.
One area that might be challenging is that understanding vowel harmony, which creates versions of suffixes based on the last syllable in the word. But with practice, it may become second nature. Turkish also has no gendered words or articles, making it simpler than languages like English, German, or Spanish in many ways.
Pronunciation is generally balanced, without total soft or harsh sounds. Plus, some sounds that will feel familiar, like Ü, Ö (from German or French), R (Softer Spanish R) and Ş, Ç, J, and R'at the end (similar to Slavic languages). The only truly unique sound is I/ı (dotless i), which is similar to the English "schwa" sound or Russian "bl".
Being a master can be difficult, but I believe that it can broaden one's horizons to languages in a different way with its unique and different features.
@@Bemrecprk I am Brazilian and I found out about vowel harmony when learning Turkish, i didn't know about it before that but recently i discovered that in my Accent (which is an specific Accent from northeast which covers several states countryside) we actually speak with vowel harmony, But it's only spoken though.
i did it naturally my whole Life and i didn't even know about hahaha
@@danbarbosa6940 woww, that's really an interesting and a thrilling coincidence!
@@danbarbosa6940 Wow, I have heard that some languages using a lot of suffixes (usually affixes) have vowel harmony or some similar logic. Unfortunately, I have no experience with Portuguese but I have been studying Spanish for a long time and I know that all tense suffixes change depending on the end of the verb (-ar, er- ir). But if you are talking about whole words in your accent, including nouns and adverbs. Certainly, it sounds very interesting. Because when I checked the wikipedia about this issue, Portuguese was not on the list.
@@Bemrecprk it's just that especific accent from northeast of brazil
Bir Türk olarak bu güzel Türkçemizde en zor şey bence ekler. Çünkü dilimizde çok fazla ek var. Mesela bazı yurtdışından gelen turistler Türkçe konuşurken "Ben ekmek yemek" diyor. (Örnek) Bu eklerin çok fazla versiyonu var. Bu da Türkçeyi çok çok zor bir dil haline getiriyor. Ve öğrenenler için gerçekten çok fazla baş ağrıtıyor.
Üstelik Türkçe'deki bir diğer zor olan şeyin resmi ve çoğul konuşma kısmı olduğunu düşünüyorum. Mesela "Merhaba, Nasılsınız?" hem o yerde birden fazla kişi varken de kullanabilirsin ve tanımadığın bir kişiyle resmi şekilde kullanırken de.
Üstelik İspanyolca öğrenmeye çalışıyorum. Gerçekten Türkler için kolay bir dil. Türksen zaten avantajın var bir sürü dil öğrenmeye. Mesela Türkler Korece, Japonca, Moğolca, Azerbaycanca, İngilizce, İspanyolca, Portekizce öğrenmekte o kadar zorlanmıyor. Fakat benim için Almanca, Felemenkçe ve Fransızca gerçekten çok zor diller. İngilizce konuşanlar için çok kolay olmalarına rağmen. Bunun nedeni bizim dilimizin yazıldığı gibi okunabilir olmasıdır. Fakat bu bahsettiğim diller yazıldığı gibi okunmuyor. Mesela Fransızca'da "comment" kelimesi "kumon" olarak telaffuz ediliyor.
Okuduğunuz için teşekkür ederim. Türkçe öğrenenlere başarılar dilerim, bol şanslar.
So glad Laura is back on the channel, what a super cute Spanish girl.
Very nice. The girls is so cute. 😍😍
I learn Español for a couple of weeks using Duolingo, and for me it was easy at first but now it's become hard and harder
BEST DUO
finally genesia and julia the iconic duo!!!
Yeahhhh juliaaa is backkkkkkkkk❤❤❤❤❤
4:41 I was expecting "Hasta la vista, baby" hahahaha
Yeah the two girl Genesia and Julia is back
bu videolara bayılıyorumm
Rather than for beginning a language, for me Duolingo is good for practising, revising and expanding vocabulary for a language I already learn(t) and it also helps with some more colloquial things when you know only the 'high' written forms in some languages. For grammar it is useless which is why I would use it alongside another course
Do you have any other app recommendation for learning other languages beside english? The grammar has been a problem for me but i still couldn't find any other app (there's so many to try and im not sure which one that actually has it)
@oggysan5013 Try Busuu. I'm learning Japanese on it and it goes more into depth with explaining grammar and sentences structures
Thank you for 36 subscribe youtube family 🤲🤲
i'm brazilian and i'm learning turkish but i'm still very basic
i just know some phrases. pronunciation is not hard once you learn the sounds and for me as a portuguese speaker we share a lot of sounds but the structure is very different from portuguese.
turkçe ogreniyorum ama turkçe zor
i'm learning turkish but turkish is hard
tô aprendendo turco mas turco é difícil
i love languages though :)
Kolay gelsin. İyi çalışmalar
Türkiye’den selamlar :)
Yess you are right the structure is different but we have like thousands french/latin words like strüktür (structure) so it can be helpful for you and about accent I think armenian, georgian and greek people have the best accent after that it is portuguese and spanish. Your pronunciation and rhythm are similar to ours.
Btw my name is Bora and my brazilian friend told me that bora means lets go in brazilian portuguese. soo bora bora continue to study Turkish :)))
@@boraa1234that's cool
yeah, bora means let's go haha
Sometimes I find some words in Turkish that are written the same as Portuguese words but means different things like "gel" for example
Oh and I learned the word "fakir" very quick cuz it looks like "falir" in Portuguese which means "to go bankrupt" hahah
@@AnatolianTurk_ selam :)
Meanwhile, take Arabic on Duolingo for 7 days and it will still have you making random Arabic grunting noises with no meaning
Why? Because of the grammar or the writing system being too hard for learners or do you think it’s particularly bad compared to Turkish?
@@kyrakia5507because of pronunciation aspect, Arabic has some sounds that don't exist most of world's languages, and those sounds are like the language root so they are everywhere even in basic day to day words
Yeah I feel bad for the people who so innocent that spend a lot of time learning Arabic in duolingo 😂
Same. I can read Quran in arabic but when i learn arabic its hard to talk and grammar... 😂😂
@@user-cn7ls4hm9Alnajih That makes sense, someone using Duolingo for Arabic would do well to learn the pronunciation elsewhere
The owl is still after me 😂
The Brazilian girl always cracks me up, she seems so fun. And she cute af.
The best motivation to use Duolingo is the fear of having your pet kidnapped by that green bird!
Kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
spanish or vanish 💀
True
English or Spanish ?
Thank's, I love it
I love how how Julia is changing her styles in each video
I love Julia's energy❤❤❤
7:30 I agree with Genesia. There is some similarities between English and German. As French, I'm so confused by the fact there are two verbs for "to be" in Spanish and the fact a sentence becomes all feminine/masculine and singular/plural depending on the subject. Like "how much" becomes "cuanta(s) / cuanto(s)", so you have to think of the subject before mention it.
@@DecadeofDecay in Portuguese is also 2 (Ser and Estar)
Not just some similarities. English is the descendant of German.
literalmente I see Júlia, I click
Benim adım da Irmakkkk😂❤❤❤
My name is Irmak Toooooo❤❤❤❤❤😂
Julia was speaking very well
Não me admiro da Júlia aprender rápido e acertar bem fácil, ela é bastante inteligente.
Julia, although it is a difficult language, you speak Turkish very well.
(Julia, zor bir dil olmasına rağmen Türkçeyi çok iyi konuşuyorsun.)
and you are so sweet-julia
(ve çok tatlısın julia)
I'm learning japanese since last year on Duo, but I recognize I need a native person for practice and learning more basic conversation
Duolingo is teaching something like I would need for a trip to the country, like "tourist conversation"
But my sensei is always so proud of how quick I learn new words
I fell in love with Brazilian girl OMG she is pretty good 😍
De verdade, sou apaixonado por vocês todas!
Thanks to Irmak, "as bayraklari as as as"! 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷
🥺🥺
i see genesia and julia i click :D
They are so amazing 😍 🇧🇷🇮🇩
She is right...Indonesian is fairly easy and I think it would be easy to pronounce for Spanish speakers
You wrote Irmak's name wrong in the description you may want to fix it
I love when Julia or Genesia are participating in the video, I like their vibes.
As a Turkish girl who's polyglot ( C1 English,B1 German, A2 Korean, A1 French) Turkish is one of the easiest in grammar wise but pronounciation can be hard for foreigners because they don't pronounce the words directly in their native languaces and a lot of them don't have the letters "ğ,ö,ü,".
I'll always be here for you, Júlia! Tu carrega essa canal nas costas, garota! ❤
Julia encherga o mundo com apenas um olho......o outra só ve os cabelos 😅
La chica española no corregía los errores de la otra chica :(
This has to be an ad for Duolingo 😂
Julia te amo
Hello everyone im writing from turkey🎉🤜🤛
7 days with the green owl? You'll get an idea of the language and some basic sentences maybe!
Genesis and Julia my favorit duo
So me with Duo I learned English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese and Spanish, that's all.
I'm from Calamba City Laguna in the Philippines and I learned Bahasa Indonesia using Duolingo for more than a year since March 2023 😊😊
Since I dream to visit Indonesia someday, learning Bahasa Indonesia was my first priority but one problem was, there is no language school in Calamba City so my solution was to use language app on my phone and the application was chosen is Duolingo 😊😊
As of now, I learned Bahasa Indonesia since 2023 even some mistakes, but I need to practice more 😊😊
Today, I learned and spoken three languages: Tagalog, English and Bahasa Indonesia 😊😊
Semangat belajarnya ya, bang!
I want to learn Tagalog since both B. Indo and Tagalog are in the same language family (also bc my male vtuber oshi sometimes have Tagalog streams :'). But there's no Tagalog/Filipino in Duolingo...
@ Yes there is no Tagalog in Duolingo, but you can find some alternative app to learned Tagalog 😊😊
The thing I don't really like so far after almost a month (45-60min per day) is that it doesn't know that you have a problem area. Like for me in Dutch, I struggle with heb, hebben, heeft. I will get 4 or 5 questions wrong in a row, then it says "lesson complete, well done!". Like no. Let's go back and teach me this stuff. It really needs to teach you about infinitums and stems. Otherwise all you're doing is assembling a puzzle without knowing why the pieces are cut that way. Do I use "de" or "het"? I have no idea but "het" is the only option, so I pick that, without understanding anything. If I can't tell which one to use, have I even learned the meaning? Does it even count as a vocabulary list? And we get weird sentences like (and this is literally one of them) "Did the cow read the newspaper"
I have the same issue with genesia. Personally, fuo is good if you're already familiar with the language, but the app itself doesn't really give u an explanation for how the grammar or things you need to deeply understand the language.
It's basically you learning new words, putting it together and guess what it means (at least that's what i get from trying to learn spanish n Chinese from it)
I tried english course, but because I already familiarize myself with English bc i also learn it at school I don't have much problem but still, no grammar explanation (as far as i remember)
I use duolingo sometimes, it is not bad and it help me to improve my vocabulary.
🦅🦅TURKISH VIDEO YEAHHH🦅🦅
Okay, after that i will continue my duolingo streak again, cause I've been broken my streak for a month and now I forgot everything
The turkish girl is so coooool
Julia is amazing
For the Verbs in Spanish, you basically have to differentiate between Perfect aspect and imperfect aspect; between indicative mode and subjunctive mode; and between 1°, 2° and 3rd conjugation of Verbs.
Once you understand that, and you memorized the different endings, depending of the Verbal Tense, you Will just struggle with the irregular verbs
After you memorize the 18 ways a verb can tense you just need to memorize a bit more because why would a language follow rules 😅
I really want to learn spanish so bad, the accent is so sexy, especially when latina speak it😍🥰
Omg gensiaaaaaaa
Julia 😅😅😅
Just like Genesia, I am Indonesian and have been using Duolingo for years and trying different languages including French, German, Spanish, etc. According to Duolingo, I am at level B1 in German, but in reality, I can't speak German and barely understand when Germans speak in their language, LOL. So I agree that unfortunately our language skills in the app don't translate well to real life. 😅
Completely agree with that. The only way to really learn a language is by actually using that language and to do that is always easier when talking to native speakers because they will point out things that aren't in books but is part of the language
Queria ver agora elas aprendendo com o Busuu
Hii, I'm from Angola and i love this channel
Hello bro, I'm from Brazil and I love this channel too!
Hello guys, I am from Yemen and I also love this channel
@@Proud_Hadrami Hello friend! Nice to meet you 😁🇧🇷
@@MissHannahOfc ✨🤍yah
Nice🎉
julia cok tatlı ısırıcam :D
işte biz bu yüzden okullarda türkçe dersi görüyoruz fiilimsileri öğrenmek için örnek mek mak gibi ye-mek
or yap-mak
"yap" mean "do"
"yapmak" its mean "to do"
"ye" its mean "eat"
"yemek" mean "food"
fiil olan yemek yemekten bahsedeceksek 'to eat' kullanmamız lazım
@elifakaantoinette yemek olarak da food deniliyor eğer yemekten dersen evet to eat gibi oluyor ama çeviride "from food" yazıyor
Eğer yemek yemekten diyorsan "From eating food" oluyor
Tüm ülkelerde kendi anadillerinin dersi var okullarda aslında. Dili konuşmak zor değil ne dediğini bilmek zor 😂
If Julia is on the video I'm watching it don't even care about the theme it will always be fun with her
Who wants to have a short conversation in French with me
Precisamos de um canal da Júlia😅
Yes, it exists already! th-cam.com/video/Vslge-mV5fw/w-d-xo.html
when genesia said she forgot what's woman in spanish it is actually "mujer"
i agree with genesia that the problem w duolingo is that no explanations are given, it's just glorified memory cards. i don't learn that way, i need to understand the whys for me to internalize something
It shouldn't be this hard to get Turkish translations for these damn videos!!!!!!!!!
Did you know Spanish?
Only things I had heard in movies...
Hasta-la-vista!..baby!
Ahhh Finaly,Julia Again,we are well represented.
Duolingo is a great app
But very basic
I always wanted to learn spanish,but unfortunatelly for Polish speakers there is only English to learn on Duolingo
I used the app, the most basic-quickest mode to learn I think, like weeks before I went to... Vietnam & China. right, tonal languages and def not the easiest ones to learn in a very short time.
Genesia summed up the overall experience with the app pretty well. (I still think the app would works a bit better for non-tonal languages tho) (like, I could learn saying Laura es tan linda, and the native speakers would got it right away)
Duolingo Dutch is trash, I translated "farewell" as "doei" and it refused my answer. But "doei" is farewell in Dutch. It put me off wanting to use the app for my real study language, Mandarin. If it can't get basic stuff right like common usage, then it is not a worthwhile app.
Busuu >> duolingo. I have been learning mandarin well with Busuu
Hello
Hi
genesiaaa ::*
Türkçe yi çok iyi konusuyor
Seventh day of requesting this idea:
Hello! It will be really nice if you guys made a video of comparing different Chinese dialects like the Hokkien dialect, hakka dialect, and cantonese dialect with Korean and Japanese.
And get these people who speak it from China specifically.
You can find some majority of hokkien speaking people in the Fujian province of China.
You can find majority of Hakka speaking people from Guangdong province in China.
You can find majority of Cantonese speaking people from Guangdong province in China.
This is because these dialects are closer to old and Middle Chinese. So there will be more similarities when you compare Korean, japanese.
I’ve been wanting someone to make a video like that for a long time.
JULIA DE NOVO CARAL#OOO❤
I did Portuguese for about 8 months in Duolingo. It was fun while I did it but I retained nothing. I’ve learned more by listening to music and translating the lyrics to English.
O doulingo nem tem a pronúncia correta das palavras.
I am brazilian and I prefer Busuu. But it is paid, sadly
By the way I can teach you portuguese for 5 dollars/hour. First class is free