Yeğ / Yüğ = upper, superior Yeğ-mek > Yemek (to eat)= to add on oneself, to take it in one's essence Yeğ-im> Yem= provender, fodder > Yemiş= fruit Yüğ-le-mek > yeğlemek = to keep it on top of others, make it relatively superior, ~to prefer Yüğ-ka-yer-u > yukarı =(which side is on top) = Up Yüğ-ce > yüce = superior in level /sublime Yüğ-ce-al-mek > yücelmek = to achieve superiority in level Yüğ-sü-ek > yüksek = high Yüğ-sel > yüksel = exponential , superlative Yüğ-sü-al-mek> yükselmek = to rise to a high level, to ascend Yüğ-sük > yüzük =(ring)= jewelry worn on the finger top Yüğ-sü-en-mek > yüksünmek= to feel slighted / take offended Yüğ-ük > yük =(load)> carried on top, undertaken Yüğ-ün > yün =(wool)> the feathers that on sheep Yüğ-üt > yiğit =(valiant)> superior in character Yüğ-en > yüğen /yeğen =(nephew)> which is kept superior, held in high esteem, valued, precious (yüen > yen 元) Yüğ-en-cük > yüğençüğ > yinçi (inci) =(precious little thing)> pearl , 珍珠 Yüğengi >yengi> yeni =(new)> what's that coming on top , what's coming after Yüğenge > yenge =(brother's wife)> who's coming after, added to the family later (new bride) Yüğ-üne /Yeğ-ine > yine/ gene =again /over and over > yeniden = anew /once more Yüğ-en-mek> yenmek = to overcome, to cope with, to subdue Yüğ-en-el-mek > yenilmek= to be overcome, to be subdued, to show weakness Yüğengil > yengil =remains on top of, light, weak Şan= Glory, splendor 單于 > Şan-Yüğ =Exalted glorious Yormak=to tire= to arrive over someone (too many). (too much) to go onto (Yörmek)> Örmek=(to operate on something), to weave on top , to wrap around (Yörümek)> Yürümek= to go over something, to wander around (yöre=precincts) (yörük=nomad) Yürümek= to walk (yürü=go on) Yülümek=to go by slipping over something Yalamak= to lick >~to take swiping/ by scraping on something off Yolmak= to pluck=to pull by snatching off, tear off (~flatten the top) Yılmak=to throw down from the one's own top (~get bored), to hit the ground from above (yıldırım=lightning…yıldız=star) Yurmak= to pull onto, cover over (yur-ut>yurt=tabernacle) (yur-gan>yorgan=quilt) Yırmak=to bring it on top of, to take it off (yırışmak>yarışmak= to race> to overcome each other) (Yır-et-mak)>Yırtmak= to tear= to get it inside-out or bottom to top (by pulling from both sides) (~tide over, get rid of it) Yarmak= to split, to tear apart= go vertically from top to bottom, separate by cutting off Yermek=to pull down ,pull to the ground Germek=to tense= to pull it in all directions > Sermek= to spread it in all directions Yıkmak= to overthrow , take down from top to bottom, turn upside down Yığmak= to stack= put on top of each other, dump on top of each other (yığlamak=shed tears over and over, cry over) Yağmak=get rained on, get spilled on / to pour down from above Yakmak= to burn out=to purify matter by heating and removing mass , reduce its volume Yoğmak=make condensed=to tighten and purify, narrow by turning, get rid of own volume (~get dead) Yoğurmak= to knead=tighten and thicken , reduce volume, bring to consistency (Yogurt=thickened milk product) Yuğmak=to purify squeezing to clean (Yuğamak>yıkamak= to wash) Yiv = sharp, pointed (yivlemek= sharpen the tip) Yuvmak=to squeezing thin out, narrow (yuvka>yufka= thin dough) (yuvka>yuka=thin, shallow) (yuvuz>yavuz=thin, weak, delicate) Yuvarlamak=to round off=narrow by turning (yuva (smallest shelter)= nest) (yavru (smallest)= cub ) Yummak=to shut by squeezing, close tightly (Yumurmak=make it closes inward) (yumruk=fist) (yumurta= egg)
NATURAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS (akar-eser / eser-eger) EĞER-ISE = (EVEN-IF) (su AKAR- yel ESER) = water flows - wind blows İSE-EĞER = (IF-EVER) (yel ESER- ekin EĞER)= the wind blows and bows the crops EĞER-ISE and İSE-EĞER constructs are used to specify "conditions" and are often used interchangeably. İSE-EĞER: means "If ever" and indicates a condition that is more likely to occur. "If ever you need any help, just let me know." (Yardıma ihtiyacın olursa eğer, sadece haberim olsun) or (Herhangi bir yardıma ihtiyaç duyarsan, bana haber vermen yeterli) “If I'm not tired, we can visit them in the evening.” = “Yorgun değilsem eğer, akşamleyin onları ziyaret edebiliriz” EĞER-ISE: means "Even if" and indicates a condition that is less likely to occur. "Even if it rains tomorrow, I will go for a walk." (Yarın yürüyüşe çıkacağım, eğer yağmur yağıyor olsa da ) or (Yarın yağmur yağsa bile yürüyüşe çıkacağım.) “Why should i go to work, (even) if I'm not getting my salary” = Eğer maaşımı alamıyorsam, neden işe gideyim ki. DOĞAL KOŞULLAR ve ŞARTLAR (akar-eser / eser-eger) EĞER-ISE = (EVEN-IF) (su AKAR- yel ESER) = water flows - wind blows İSE-EĞER = (IF-EVER) (yel ESER- ekin EĞER)= the wind blows and bows the crops EĞER-ISE ve İSE-EĞER yapıları "koşul" belirtmek için kullanılır ve çoğunlukla birbirinin yerine kullanılabilirler. İSE-EĞER: "If ever" anlamına gelir ve gerçekleşme olasılığı daha yüksek olan bir koşulu ifade eder. "If ever you need any help, just let me know." (Yardıma ihtiyacın olursa eğer, haberim olsun) or (Herhangi bir yardıma ihtiyaç duyarsan, bana haber vermen yeterli) “If I'm not tired, we can visit them in the evening.” = “Yorgun değilsem eğer, akşamleyin onları ziyaret edebiliriz” EĞER-ISE: "Even if" anlamına gelir ve gerçekleşme olasılığı daha düşük olan bir koşulu ifade eder. "Even if it rains tomorrow, I will go for a walk." (Yarın yürüyüşe çıkacağım, eğer yağmur yağıyor olsa dahi ) or (Yarın yağmur yağsa bile yürüyüşe çıkacağım) “Why should i go to work, (even) if I'm not getting my salary” = Eğer maaşımı alamıyorsam, neden işe gideyim ki.
Personally, I really like Mango Languages. Really good depth on the "big" languages (Latin American Spanish has over 700 lessons), structured, a hands-free listening only mode, reading and listening comprehension exercises. Love it.
@@_cesarjoseph Pimsleur IMO is not good on it's own, but most language apps aren't either. Where Pimsleur excels is when you want to learn how to speak. I actually suggest not starting with Pimsleur until you maybe are an advanced A2 or beginner B1 level, build up your vocab and listening skills first, before you start learning how to produce output. Yes, easily God tier.
RIP Rooster unless he was spared. In all seriousness, I'm a firm Innovative Languages. It seems like it was made for people who can't just focus on one single long lesson at a time like Pimsleur or even Rocket Languages. The main "Path" is super linear, but I've found myself going into the library of content and just doing random 3 minute video lessons or listening to the "Current Events" section. There's almost no end to the content they packed in the JapanesePod site and I'll probably be using it for years before I get to some sort of endpoint.
Big thing for Mango is it is free w/ a library card, at least where I live. The Tagalog course is pretty short but it’s has some pros. Color coding grammar, flashcards and vocab list after the lesson, you can switch the lesson to audio only mode if you’re driving or working out.
I think Glossika is best for someone who's gone through another program and now wants to expand beyond the basics. I like the depth of the course, but how Glossika prioritizes and orders how vocabulary is introduced is puzzling. For example, in Latin American Spanish, I'm pretty sure you can work through the first 1,000 sentences and still not know the names of days of the week and months of the year or know the names of primary colors or count to fifty.
@@millyzaidan I have only used Latin American Spanish. That one definitely has enough vocabulary and practice sentences to reach B2, probably somewhere into C1. Other languages in Glossika may be different if they cover less vocabulary and have fewer sentences.
A super useful video and love your frank and honest assessments. This is one of the few videos that highlights whether the app is better for developing reading/writing or speaking/listening skills. This will help potential learners identify their objectives better and choose the right app. I love this video and your channel. Keep up the great work!
Langster is pretty good too at least in Spanish, not boring and bote sized articles based on real news. Not frustrating, you’d feel that you understands what you’re reading.
I have Pimsleur Japanese and Rocket Language Japanese. Pimsleur is awesome to get you to speak and understand, and make your pronunciation amazing. Rocket is it's father, it goes just like Pimsleur's approach, but it allows you to talk and check if what you said sounded good, plus all the extra content. Pimsleur Japanese can take about 5 months to complete, and Rocket will take about 2 years.
Absolutely love Pimsleur but not complete on its own. I'd argue that no app is complete on its own. The problem with most apps is you run out of content, or they are what I call "assistance" apps to help learn vocab, or something like that. Pimsleur is the best when you want to learn how to speak. Yes, God tier. btw: Never bought the app -- bought the CD version of Pimsleur for Brazilian Portuguese for $100 off of eBay. Love it!! On Rosetta Stone -- love RS!! -- If you're a visual learner it is an easy way to get you to A2 as a starter app. Always a believer is starting with a starter app. RS excels if you are a visual learner -- and just to say vocab apps are just as good -- shows a very poor understanding of Rosetta Stone. Fantastic app. The only thing I wish is -- I actually finished the RS course in Portuguese and then I was done -- and no more content to get me to B1. RS was a great way to get to advanced A2 -- just wish they had an advanced course in Portuguese. They do have advanced courses for some languages like English, Spanish, French, etc. -- but unfortunately not for Portuguese.
I used Rosetta Stone many years ago because a friend got it free through his job. I tried the Japanese, which was great because I am an extremely visual learner but what I used of it didn't teach me any Kanji and barely touched Kana. I wish there were good language learning apps that are tailored to visual learners. It is hard for me to sit down and focus for an hour straight on reading with no visual media to supplement it. Thankfully my college textbooks had a lot of examples due to the visual/tactile nature of my major
I actually used Rosetta for Spanish and German. In spanish I was familiar with Grammer and it was super helpful. I was able to talk without even noticing the progress I've made so fantastic experience :) In German I had no clue about the Grammer and Rosetta sucked, nothing is explained grammer wise. Also in Laptop version built in microphone is not satisfactory, they assumed you'll pay for a headset with microphone... Visuals are also 2 decades old :)
Immersive Translate is another great way to become fluent in another language. I use it to practice my Vietnamese every day, and I have to say, the more I use it, the closer I get to mastering another language.
@@loistalagrand Yeah, that would have been crazy $$$. Surprised you even looked at that many. btw: Your video was much better than most of the ones that I have seen this. At least you said a little bit about each app, while most people that do these language app tier lists -- just say a little BS about the app and then plop the language into whatever tier their opinion of it is.
Thanks for this video, it also would be interesting to list the languages available in each app (currently learning greek and ukrainian… the choices are not so big)
Hello Talk = God tier. Once you have a basic grasp of a language there is no better tool, just use a translator and learn the phrases you need/hear. Those other apps won't teach you real life conversation skills, except maybe the tutoring ones. If your goal is to have conversations and make friends then HT will be super motivating. If you just want to consume movies and books with zero human interaction, then sure HT is "Meh tier".
I agree. Hellotalk and Tandem and the like are absolutely amazing to practice speaking to natives, and most of them will also be more than happy to correct you if you say you would like that in group voice chats or private calls/chats. The voice recording feature is also a great way to communicate when you dont have the time or energy to jump into a live call. In Hellotalk you can also post Voice messages and ask people to correct your pronunciation and most of the time you will get pretty good and quick feedback as well. But if you arent at least beyond the point where you can actually speak to people without looking stuff up, then the progress with it is really not existant even if you find partners who are willing to teach. So once you are proficient enough to hold a conversation, I think these apps are the best. And they are 100% free.
Yes. In fact, this more comprehensive than Pimsleur. I just haven't had as many comments on my Rocket videos compared to the Pimsleur videos, mainly because Pimsleur is more popular.
@@loistalagrand the footages are from some really old version, and you didn’t mention any of its features like voicerooms, lives, tutors, pronunciation checks, it’s many translation features, the users submitted corrections feature, a social media like feed, language courses…
@@creed404yt9 True he totally did Tandem and especially HelloTalk dirty. The voicerooms are amaaazing speaking practice and they will actively correct every mistake you do while speaking if you want it most of the time. And in Hellotalk you can post texts which people will correct quickly and even audio files and ask for pronunciation feedback. When I posted I normally got really good feedback on it in a few hours at the most. And its 100% free. I dont think you can do much better than that for perfecting a language. (You want be able to use the translate feature without Pro version but copying the text into google translate takes literally 4 seconds) You do need to be at least proficient enough to hold a live conversation though for it to be effective.
@@loistalagrand It is not popular but free. Same methodology as Michel Thomas and Paul Noble. It includes a complete Swahili course which is rare to find anywhere.
Great video as always! One of the most used language courses used outside of the US for years was Assimil. They now have an app. I was wondering what you thought about that app, and the old school (books + MP3 audio file) versions of Assimil.
5:40 for a long time Memrise was my favourite app. But 1st they took away the community created flashcards, and then a few months ago they added the new AI chat bot. This chat bot is a complete arsehole who cancels the lesson if you say anything it doesn't like, and tries to tell you what you have to think and feel about topics. And so are the customer support staff. Very rude and arrogant.
@@AeneaSXI Yup, pretty much. It's the classic cack-handed shove TQ+ down your throat nonsense. Oh and it also cancelled a lesson because I said that cigarettes were a good souvenir to buy lol.
Thank you for this 👍🏾. Enjoyed going through all the apps. Just to say that if learning a language linked to a "smaller population" like European Portuguese, that in itself filters out the apps that are available. I had not heard of Rocket before (and Pimsleur, the price put me off) but will look into!
@@pimsleur since I posted this comment interestingly… I persevered with European Portuguese and realised I learned the most through the Pimsleur method. So I am on one of those subscriptions (thank you!). The only issue now is that it would be great if Pimsleur had more European Portuguese lessons please (it’s 30 at present). It’s proven very useful and has improved my Portuguese massively. The interactive games are also very handy. Appreciate you going through the comments 👍🏾
@@pimsleurOn the main website it says $14.95+tax after the free trial, then i get to the part to fill out my payment info and then its $20.95+tax a month after free trial?? Sleazy little money grab there
Links to the best apps I have mentioned:
GOD TIER
- Rocket Languages:
- Spanish: www.rocketlanguages.com/spanish/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Russian: www.rocketlanguages.com/russian/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Portuguese: www.rocketlanguages.com/portuguese/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Korean: www.rocketlanguages.com/korean/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Japanese: www.rocketlanguages.com/japanese/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Italian: www.rocketlanguages.com/italian/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Hindi: www.rocketlanguages.com/hindi/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- German: www.rocketlanguages.com/german/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- French: www.rocketlanguages.com/french/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Chinese: www.rocketlanguages.com/chinese/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Arabic: www.rocketlanguages.com/arabic/premium?type=freetrial&aff=langscien
- Pimsleur: imp.i271380.net/2rjjZQ
- Innovative Language Learning:
- JapanesePod101: www.japanesepod101.com/member/go.php?r=1611101&l=%2F
- SpanishPod101: www.spanishpod101.com/member/go.php?r=1028049&l=%2F
- FrenchPod101: www.frenchpod101.com/member/go.php?r=1420037&l=%2F
- RussianPod101: www.russianpod101.com/member/go.php?r=683461&l=%2F
- ItalianPod101: www.italianpod101.com/member/go.php?r=567042&l=%2F
GREAT
- LingoPie: lingopie.com/?ref=ndq5m2j&The+Language+Scientist&
- MosaLingua: academy.mosalingua.com/mosaweb/?ref=1824
- Beelinguapp: beelinguapp.com/
- FluentU: www.fluentu.com/?rfsn=7063252.13c7002
- LiveLingua: www.livelingua.com/?rid=LOISTAL
- LingoDeer: www.lingodeer.com/
- LingQ: www.lingq.com/?referral=the_language_scientist
- Glossika: ai.glossika.com/r/loistalagrand
Also, check out Fluent Falcon, the language learning app I am developing: forms.gle/9fmPMji4qYdNCoAw8
Yeğ / Yüğ = upper, superior
Yeğ-mek > Yemek (to eat)= to add on oneself, to take it in one's essence
Yeğ-im> Yem= provender, fodder > Yemiş= fruit
Yüğ-le-mek > yeğlemek = to keep it on top of others, make it relatively superior, ~to prefer
Yüğ-ka-yer-u > yukarı =(which side is on top) = Up
Yüğ-ce > yüce = superior in level /sublime
Yüğ-ce-al-mek > yücelmek = to achieve superiority in level
Yüğ-sü-ek > yüksek = high
Yüğ-sel > yüksel = exponential , superlative
Yüğ-sü-al-mek> yükselmek = to rise to a high level, to ascend
Yüğ-sük > yüzük =(ring)= jewelry worn on the finger top
Yüğ-sü-en-mek > yüksünmek= to feel slighted / take offended
Yüğ-ük > yük =(load)> carried on top, undertaken
Yüğ-ün > yün =(wool)> the feathers that on sheep
Yüğ-üt > yiğit =(valiant)> superior in character
Yüğ-en > yüğen /yeğen =(nephew)> which is kept superior, held in high esteem, valued, precious (yüen > yen 元)
Yüğ-en-cük > yüğençüğ > yinçi (inci) =(precious little thing)> pearl , 珍珠
Yüğengi >yengi> yeni =(new)> what's that coming on top , what's coming after
Yüğenge > yenge =(brother's wife)> who's coming after, added to the family later (new bride)
Yüğ-üne /Yeğ-ine > yine/ gene =again /over and over > yeniden = anew /once more
Yüğ-en-mek> yenmek = to overcome, to cope with, to subdue
Yüğ-en-el-mek > yenilmek= to be overcome, to be subdued, to show weakness
Yüğengil > yengil =remains on top of, light, weak
Şan= Glory, splendor 單于 > Şan-Yüğ =Exalted glorious
Yormak=to tire= to arrive over someone (too many). (too much) to go onto
(Yörmek)> Örmek=(to operate on something), to weave on top , to wrap around
(Yörümek)> Yürümek= to go over something, to wander around
(yöre=precincts) (yörük=nomad)
Yürümek= to walk (yürü=go on)
Yülümek=to go by slipping over something
Yalamak= to lick >~to take swiping/ by scraping on something off
Yolmak= to pluck=to pull by snatching off, tear off (~flatten the top)
Yılmak=to throw down from the one's own top (~get bored), to hit the ground from above (yıldırım=lightning…yıldız=star)
Yurmak= to pull onto, cover over (yur-ut>yurt=tabernacle) (yur-gan>yorgan=quilt)
Yırmak=to bring it on top of, to take it off (yırışmak>yarışmak= to race> to overcome each other)
(Yır-et-mak)>Yırtmak= to tear= to get it inside-out or bottom to top (by pulling from both sides) (~tide over, get rid of it)
Yarmak= to split, to tear apart= go vertically from top to bottom, separate by cutting off
Yermek=to pull down ,pull to the ground
Germek=to tense= to pull it in all directions > Sermek= to spread it in all directions
Yıkmak= to overthrow , take down from top to bottom, turn upside down
Yığmak= to stack= put on top of each other, dump on top of each other (yığlamak=shed tears over and over, cry over)
Yağmak=get rained on, get spilled on / to pour down from above
Yakmak= to burn out=to purify matter by heating and removing mass , reduce its volume
Yoğmak=make condensed=to tighten and purify, narrow by turning, get rid of own volume (~get dead)
Yoğurmak= to knead=tighten and thicken , reduce volume, bring to consistency
(Yogurt=thickened milk product)
Yuğmak=to purify squeezing to clean (Yuğamak>yıkamak= to wash)
Yiv = sharp, pointed (yivlemek= sharpen the tip)
Yuvmak=to squeezing thin out, narrow (yuvka>yufka= thin dough) (yuvka>yuka=thin, shallow) (yuvuz>yavuz=thin, weak, delicate)
Yuvarlamak=to round off=narrow by turning (yuva (smallest shelter)= nest) (yavru (smallest)= cub )
Yummak=to shut by squeezing, close tightly (Yumurmak=make it closes inward) (yumruk=fist) (yumurta= egg)
NATURAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS
(akar-eser / eser-eger)
EĞER-ISE = (EVEN-IF)
(su AKAR- yel ESER) = water flows - wind blows
İSE-EĞER = (IF-EVER)
(yel ESER- ekin EĞER)= the wind blows and bows the crops
EĞER-ISE and İSE-EĞER constructs are used to specify "conditions" and are often used interchangeably.
İSE-EĞER: means "If ever" and indicates a condition that is more likely to occur.
"If ever you need any help, just let me know." (Yardıma ihtiyacın olursa eğer, sadece haberim olsun) or (Herhangi bir yardıma ihtiyaç duyarsan, bana haber vermen yeterli)
“If I'm not tired, we can visit them in the evening.” = “Yorgun değilsem eğer, akşamleyin onları ziyaret edebiliriz”
EĞER-ISE: means "Even if" and indicates a condition that is less likely to occur.
"Even if it rains tomorrow, I will go for a walk." (Yarın yürüyüşe çıkacağım, eğer yağmur yağıyor olsa da ) or (Yarın yağmur yağsa bile yürüyüşe çıkacağım.)
“Why should i go to work, (even) if I'm not getting my salary” = Eğer maaşımı alamıyorsam, neden işe gideyim ki.
DOĞAL KOŞULLAR ve ŞARTLAR
(akar-eser / eser-eger)
EĞER-ISE = (EVEN-IF) (su AKAR- yel ESER) = water flows - wind blows
İSE-EĞER = (IF-EVER) (yel ESER- ekin EĞER)= the wind blows and bows the crops
EĞER-ISE ve İSE-EĞER yapıları "koşul" belirtmek için kullanılır ve çoğunlukla birbirinin yerine kullanılabilirler.
İSE-EĞER: "If ever" anlamına gelir ve gerçekleşme olasılığı daha yüksek olan bir koşulu ifade eder.
"If ever you need any help, just let me know." (Yardıma ihtiyacın olursa eğer, haberim olsun) or (Herhangi bir yardıma ihtiyaç duyarsan, bana haber vermen yeterli)
“If I'm not tired, we can visit them in the evening.” = “Yorgun değilsem eğer, akşamleyin onları ziyaret edebiliriz”
EĞER-ISE: "Even if" anlamına gelir ve gerçekleşme olasılığı daha düşük olan bir koşulu ifade eder.
"Even if it rains tomorrow, I will go for a walk." (Yarın yürüyüşe çıkacağım, eğer yağmur yağıyor olsa dahi ) or (Yarın yağmur yağsa bile yürüyüşe çıkacağım)
“Why should i go to work, (even) if I'm not getting my salary” = Eğer maaşımı alamıyorsam, neden işe gideyim ki.
Why would you write these here?
00:16 - Duolingo
00:53 - Babbel
01:38 - Rocket Language
02:14 - LingoPie
02:50 - iTalky
03:33 - Busuu
03:58 - Mondly
04:25 - Drops
04:50 - Pimsleur
05:40 - Memrise
06:05 - Clozemaster
06:47 - Mosa Lingua
07:17 - LinguaLift
07:43 - Preply
08:08 - InnoVative Language
08:48 - BeeLingua
09:25 - FluentU
10:25 - Speakly
10:57 - Fluenz
11:25 - Mango Languages
11:52 - Live Lingua
12:31 - Chatterbug
13:15 - HelloTalk
14:01 - Rosetta Stone
14:24 - Tandem
14:49 - Speechling
15:20 - LingoDeer
15:42 - LingQ
16:06 - Lingvist
16:43 - Glossika
Thank you so much!
Thanks, merci, gracias, obrigado. It's so much work that.
Gracias!
Which one is better for vocabulary
Personally, I really like Mango Languages. Really good depth on the "big" languages (Latin American Spanish has over 700 lessons), structured, a hands-free listening only mode, reading and listening comprehension exercises. Love it.
As a person who uses pimsleur and Innovative since 2008, i agree it's on God tier
what makes you say that? I skipped straight to level 5 and I don't think the Spanish is deep. I thought it was very slow as well
@@_cesarjoseph Pimsleur IMO is not good on it's own, but most language apps aren't either. Where Pimsleur excels is when you want to learn how to speak. I actually suggest not starting with Pimsleur until you maybe are an advanced A2 or beginner B1 level, build up your vocab and listening skills first, before you start learning how to produce output. Yes, easily God tier.
since 2008? Damn, are you like fluent in 10 languages now or smth?
@@Ортур-я3е it's not about when did you start learning but how long did you continuously did it, for me I stop and got bored learning.
RIP Rooster unless he was spared.
In all seriousness, I'm a firm Innovative Languages. It seems like it was made for people who can't just focus on one single long lesson at a time like Pimsleur or even Rocket Languages. The main "Path" is super linear, but I've found myself going into the library of content and just doing random 3 minute video lessons or listening to the "Current Events" section. There's almost no end to the content they packed in the JapanesePod site and I'll probably be using it for years before I get to some sort of endpoint.
I chased him away, these things run way too fast! I agree with you for JapanesePod101. Great resource.
Big thing for Mango is it is free w/ a library card, at least where I live. The Tagalog course is pretty short but it’s has some pros. Color coding grammar, flashcards and vocab list after the lesson, you can switch the lesson to audio only mode if you’re driving or working out.
You mean that your local library has copies of Mango?
@@loistalagrandI put my library card info into the app and got a free subscription
@@loistalagrand Your local library has an online link to Mango at no charge to library members.
I doubt mine has a link. Is it librariesin the US?@@jamesmcdonald3568
@@loistalagrand Yeah, libraries in the US. Mine has it.
I think Glossika is best for someone who's gone through another program and now wants to expand beyond the basics. I like the depth of the course, but how Glossika prioritizes and orders how vocabulary is introduced is puzzling. For example, in Latin American Spanish, I'm pretty sure you can work through the first 1,000 sentences and still not know the names of days of the week and months of the year or know the names of primary colors or count to fifty.
Do you think that Glossika help a people b1?
@@millyzaidan I have only used Latin American Spanish. That one definitely has enough vocabulary and practice sentences to reach B2, probably somewhere into C1. Other languages in Glossika may be different if they cover less vocabulary and have fewer sentences.
A super useful video and love your frank and honest assessments. This is one of the few videos that highlights whether the app is better for developing reading/writing or speaking/listening skills. This will help potential learners identify their objectives better and choose the right app.
I love this video and your channel. Keep up the great work!
Thanks!
Langster is pretty good too at least in Spanish, not boring and bote sized articles based on real news. Not frustrating, you’d feel that you understands what you’re reading.
I have Pimsleur Japanese and Rocket Language Japanese. Pimsleur is awesome to get you to speak and understand, and make your pronunciation amazing. Rocket is it's father, it goes just like Pimsleur's approach, but it allows you to talk and check if what you said sounded good, plus all the extra content.
Pimsleur Japanese can take about 5 months to complete, and Rocket will take about 2 years.
HAve you finished Rocket?
@@loistalagrand No, I just started it like six months ago.
FYI. Pimsleur also have a pronunciation feedback AI tool called Voice Coach.
Absolutely love Pimsleur but not complete on its own. I'd argue that no app is complete on its own. The problem with most apps is you run out of content, or they are what I call "assistance" apps to help learn vocab, or something like that. Pimsleur is the best when you want to learn how to speak. Yes, God tier. btw: Never bought the app -- bought the CD version of Pimsleur for Brazilian Portuguese for $100 off of eBay. Love it!!
On Rosetta Stone -- love RS!! -- If you're a visual learner it is an easy way to get you to A2 as a starter app. Always a believer is starting with a starter app. RS excels if you are a visual learner -- and just to say vocab apps are just as good -- shows a very poor understanding of Rosetta Stone. Fantastic app. The only thing I wish is -- I actually finished the RS course in Portuguese and then I was done -- and no more content to get me to B1. RS was a great way to get to advanced A2 -- just wish they had an advanced course in Portuguese. They do have advanced courses for some languages like English, Spanish, French, etc. -- but unfortunately not for Portuguese.
I used Rosetta Stone many years ago because a friend got it free through his job. I tried the Japanese, which was great because I am an extremely visual learner but what I used of it didn't teach me any Kanji and barely touched Kana. I wish there were good language learning apps that are tailored to visual learners. It is hard for me to sit down and focus for an hour straight on reading with no visual media to supplement it. Thankfully my college textbooks had a lot of examples due to the visual/tactile nature of my major
I actually used Rosetta for Spanish and German. In spanish I was familiar with Grammer and it was super helpful. I was able to talk without even noticing the progress I've made so fantastic experience :) In German I had no clue about the Grammer and Rosetta sucked, nothing is explained grammer wise. Also in Laptop version built in microphone is not satisfactory, they assumed you'll pay for a headset with microphone... Visuals are also 2 decades old :)
I wonder why nobody mentions OUINO. Is it because they think it's bad or because it's limited to just 5 languages?
Immersive Translate is another great way to become fluent in another language. I use it to practice my Vietnamese every day, and I have to say, the more I use it, the closer I get to mastering another language.
It would’ve been a nice more proper comparison if you tried the Pro/Paid versions for all of them
I suppose, but I don't have that kind of money!
innovative language is great.I subscribe it.
@@loistalagrand Yeah, that would have been crazy $$$. Surprised you even looked at that many. btw: Your video was much better than most of the ones that I have seen this. At least you said a little bit about each app, while most people that do these language app tier lists -- just say a little BS about the app and then plop the language into whatever tier their opinion of it is.
Would love to hear your opinion on language transfer
I'll take a look at it.
God tier for sure
Rosetta Stone in "no" is crazy...
Thanks for this video, it also would be interesting to list the languages available in each app (currently learning greek and ukrainian… the choices are not so big)
You missed FunEasyLearn and 50Languages and Assimil
Strange not to see Ling mentioned, many languages and strong on some Asian languages like Vietnamese that are overlooked by some of the major apps.
Hello Talk = God tier. Once you have a basic grasp of a language there is no better tool, just use a translator and learn the phrases you need/hear. Those other apps won't teach you real life conversation skills, except maybe the tutoring ones.
If your goal is to have conversations and make friends then HT will be super motivating. If you just want to consume movies and books with zero human interaction, then sure HT is "Meh tier".
Fact
I agree. Hellotalk and Tandem and the like are absolutely amazing to practice speaking to natives, and most of them will also be more than happy to correct you if you say you would like that in group voice chats or private calls/chats. The voice recording feature is also a great way to communicate when you dont have the time or energy to jump into a live call. In Hellotalk you can also post Voice messages and ask people to correct your pronunciation and most of the time you will get pretty good and quick feedback as well.
But if you arent at least beyond the point where you can actually speak to people without looking stuff up, then the progress with it is really not existant even if you find partners who are willing to teach.
So once you are proficient enough to hold a conversation, I think these apps are the best. And they are 100% free.
Which one would you recommend for Vietnamese? The god tier ones dont have vietnamese language
Pimsleur has Vietnamese: imp.i271380.net/2rjjZQ
.
What would you recommend if you are already fluent in a language, but wanna become more eloquent the way you say things?
Suprised not to see language transfer and kwiziq. They may not fit the overall theme completely but honorable mentions, definitely.
DuoCards?
Est-ce que tu utilisais l'appli "Anki" lors de ton apprentissage pour le Japonais ?
Oui, je l'utilise toujours
WHERE IS TEUIDA
I muss alucation and alugha. 10000s of free videos that are all multilingual in audio and also transcribed.
You mentioned becoming fluent with only Pimsleur but what about rocket language? Is it a comprehensive course?
Yes. In fact, this more comprehensive than Pimsleur. I just haven't had as many comments on my Rocket videos compared to the Pimsleur videos, mainly because Pimsleur is more popular.
What's your eval of Makes You Fluent?
Bro, you showed HelloTalk like it’s an APP from the 90s
How so?
@@loistalagrand the footages are from some really old version, and you didn’t mention any of its features like voicerooms, lives, tutors, pronunciation checks, it’s many translation features, the users submitted corrections feature, a social media like feed, language courses…
@@creed404yt9 True he totally did Tandem and especially HelloTalk dirty. The voicerooms are amaaazing speaking practice and they will actively correct every mistake you do while speaking if you want it most of the time.
And in Hellotalk you can post texts which people will correct quickly and even audio files and ask for pronunciation feedback. When I posted I normally got really good feedback on it in a few hours at the most. And its 100% free. I dont think you can do much better than that for perfecting a language. (You want be able to use the translate feature without Pro version but copying the text into google translate takes literally 4 seconds)
You do need to be at least proficient enough to hold a live conversation though for it to be effective.
I don’t think Preply is called pree-ply. I think it’s called prep-lee.
You are coming from takashi? 😅
Any English learning app that help with grammar correction as well?
Do you have an IELST certificate
What about gengo player?
What are the best apps for offline learning? I have a long plane journey coming up
Hey, hi to connect with you?
Language Transfer.. What about it?
How popular is it? It didn't come up in my research.
@@loistalagrand It is not popular but free. Same methodology as Michel Thomas and Paul Noble. It includes a complete Swahili course which is rare to find anywhere.
I'll look into it. @@mutamanyahya8782
I was waiting this type of video in your channel.
What do you mean? What type of video?
@@loistalagrandthis... tier list
What other type of video would you like to see?@@elvistoro1873
@@loistalagrand tier list of popular SRS flashcard for PC/Mac/Smartphone
11:27 hopefully nothing happened to the rooster 💀
I just chased them away. These things run way too fast.
@@loistalagrand I thought you were going to say that you had chicken for dinner. 😂
@@robxfong00 lol
how about EF HELLO
No Readlang, sad 😢
Do you use it frequently?
@@loistalagrand 12 days streak so far
Great video as always! One of the most used language courses used outside of the US for years was Assimil. They now have an app. I was wondering what you thought about that app, and the old school (books + MP3 audio file) versions of Assimil.
I have used Assimil for multiple languages. I wasn't sure whether it was popular in the US!
What do you think about Assimil Lois ? Maybe you can make one Assimil video. I am using it with Pimsleur.
@@loistalagrand Cool! What were your thoughts on Assimil for language learning?
@@Themindofreyrey I am going to make a video on that soon. There are so many things I would like to say.
@@loistalagrand Thanks for the response Lois! I'm a big fan of your content!
5:40 for a long time Memrise was my favourite app. But 1st they took away the community created flashcards, and then a few months ago they added the new AI chat bot. This chat bot is a complete arsehole who cancels the lesson if you say anything it doesn't like, and tries to tell you what you have to think and feel about topics.
And so are the customer support staff. Very rude and arrogant.
Woke chatbot police? : O
@@AeneaSXI Yup, pretty much.
It's the classic cack-handed shove TQ+ down your throat nonsense.
Oh and it also cancelled a lesson because I said that cigarettes were a good souvenir to buy lol.
How is there a rooster? 😂
Thanks for the vid and recommendations! Also I know all too well about the loud roosters lol.
Where do you live?
@@loistalagrand I grew up in the Virgin Islands, St Thomas.
Lingodeer ans duolingo are the best for me
Yesterday I heard about teuida.
How good is it?
Ive never heard anyone pronounce preply like that 😂
lol
App FALOU é bom e não está aí.
Meh and ok are the same for me?!?!?
I needed a good man! :/
Thank you for this 👍🏾. Enjoyed going through all the apps. Just to say that if learning a language linked to a "smaller population" like European Portuguese, that in itself filters out the apps that are available. I had not heard of Rocket before (and Pimsleur, the price put me off) but will look into!
Thanks for watching!
Have you seen our low monthly or annual pricing for all 51 languages in the Pimsleur app?
@@pimsleur since I posted this comment interestingly… I persevered with European Portuguese and realised I learned the most through the Pimsleur method. So I am on one of those subscriptions (thank you!).
The only issue now is that it would be great if Pimsleur had more European Portuguese lessons please (it’s 30 at present). It’s proven very useful and has improved my Portuguese massively. The interactive games are also very handy.
Appreciate you going through the comments 👍🏾
@@pimsleurOn the main website it says $14.95+tax after the free trial, then i get to the part to fill out my payment info and then its $20.95+tax a month after free trial?? Sleazy little money grab there
so good
LANGUATALK = GOD LIKE
Really!? Oh man I love drops 🤣
Cockadoodadooo
lol
Lies