25:50 being able to say personal examples how old are you?, what is your name? what do you do? 27:40 use dual text and memorize 30:50 use comprehensible input 32:20 story about yourself and how to ask questions if you are starting polish, for example 57:00 you can be fluent in a specific domain even at A1 level 58:00 Be practicle, use the language for your needs
@@naturalanguages yes, it reminded me about learning what you need, less is more, instead of tying to learn the entire grammar rule with its exeptions, just learn an example sentence that is relevant for you
Tim is simply mind boggling. When I think I'm taking on too much trying to learn Korean on top of the other languages I've studied I see him and think man.. you are nothing but a slacker. Get with it. I know he likes using laddering (using another language you've studied to learn a new language) but I've only played around with that and haven't really pursued it. I suppose it could also be a really good way to study two languages at once. I would like to learn Spanish (I would say I'm high beginner or low intermediate) but I am too interested in Asian languages to sit down and read books in Spanish. I could try "using" Spanish to learn Korean. My Spanish is actually about the same as my Korean but since Spanish is so close to English and there's a lot of cognates too I think it might be doable. Or I could use Japanese to learn Korean (my Japanese is much better). The big reason I haven't is that I live in the US and I can't walk into a bookstore and just buy books to study Korean for Japanese people. I'd have to order them from Japan or something. But I could set my Google translate to Spanish or Japanese for when I'm reading a book in Korean.
Yeah laddering or learning related languages is always going to make it easier. But in any case, I've realized lately (or I'm trying to) that whatever you feel like doing is okay. What I mean by that is that there were moments when I was learning several languages at the same time, now I focusing solely on German (occasionally listening to some of the others, but not actively targeting them) and I'm actually loving it. My point is that if you feel like learning 7 languages at once and you enjoy it, go for it. But if just wanna focus on one, that's great too. And this is advice to myself too ☺ And thanks so much for your insightful comment as usual ☺
@@hotcrossbunion okay, I understand! Well, focusing on what I can control, I'll try to find a better balance between personal questions and general language learning ones.
25:50 being able to say personal examples how old are you?, what is your name? what do you do?
27:40 use dual text and memorize
30:50 use comprehensible input
32:20 story about yourself and how to ask questions if you are starting polish, for example
57:00 you can be fluent in a specific domain even at A1 level
58:00 Be practicle, use the language for your needs
Thanks so much for the summary ☺ Were these the things that resonated the most with you?
@@naturalanguages yes, it reminded me about learning what you need, less is more, instead of tying to learn the entire grammar rule with its exeptions, just learn an example sentence that is relevant for you
Tim is simply mind boggling. When I think I'm taking on too much trying to learn Korean on top of the other languages I've studied I see him and think man.. you are nothing but a slacker. Get with it. I know he likes using laddering (using another language you've studied to learn a new language) but I've only played around with that and haven't really pursued it. I suppose it could also be a really good way to study two languages at once. I would like to learn Spanish (I would say I'm high beginner or low intermediate) but I am too interested in Asian languages to sit down and read books in Spanish. I could try "using" Spanish to learn Korean. My Spanish is actually about the same as my Korean but since Spanish is so close to English and there's a lot of cognates too I think it might be doable. Or I could use Japanese to learn Korean (my Japanese is much better). The big reason I haven't is that I live in the US and I can't walk into a bookstore and just buy books to study Korean for Japanese people. I'd have to order them from Japan or something. But I could set my Google translate to Spanish or Japanese for when I'm reading a book in Korean.
Yeah laddering or learning related languages is always going to make it easier. But in any case, I've realized lately (or I'm trying to) that whatever you feel like doing is okay. What I mean by that is that there were moments when I was learning several languages at the same time, now I focusing solely on German (occasionally listening to some of the others, but not actively targeting them) and I'm actually loving it.
My point is that if you feel like learning 7 languages at once and you enjoy it, go for it. But if just wanna focus on one, that's great too. And this is advice to myself too ☺
And thanks so much for your insightful comment as usual ☺
That was excruciating
What do you mean exactly?
I thought he just talked about himself it is not your fault
@@hotcrossbunion okay, I understand! Well, focusing on what I can control, I'll try to find a better balance between personal questions and general language learning ones.
Tim, two languages every year? I barely manage 3-5 +I married
a Colombian and I am only eighty...
Tim's on another level 😅 As long as you enjoy the journey, 3 languages, or 21, or just 1, it's all okay ☺
i watched some of his videos.. in my native language, i can say that his level of proficiency is very low.