It's a nice idea to focus vegetables with classification! I have some requests/ ideas for your future references, only if it is proper. 1. Silent letters in words. 2. Greeting verbal words for different situations. 3. Positive words for praising others. 4. Numbers in spoken words.There are several ways to read large numbers, like One hundred five thousand, twelve hundreds, fifty eight thousands, nineteen sixty nine, one eight hundred 1-800, two o three 203 and four zeros 0000. ( I personally had hard time to catch these numbers in native speed before. Spain, Japan, Taiwan many countries use large numbers for currency.) It's just ideas based on my experiences.
Thanks for the ideas! I will get to work on how to make all or some of those videos asap. It's interesting that you bring up numbers because they are super easy for native speakers but very hard to learn well for non native speakers to whatever language we are talking about. and as you mention, using large currencies makes it even more difficult. I still mess up 10k, 100k, 1 mil and 10 mil in Japanese to this day
とても分かりやすく解説してくれてありがとうございます!
I like broccoli too.
I like broccoli too.
I also like lettuce.
I also like renkon which kind of root vegetables.
those are 3 of my favorites as well!
It's a nice idea to focus vegetables with classification! I have some requests/ ideas for your future references, only if it is proper. 1. Silent letters in words. 2. Greeting verbal words for different situations. 3. Positive words for praising others. 4. Numbers in spoken words.There are several ways to read large numbers, like One hundred five thousand, twelve hundreds, fifty eight thousands, nineteen sixty nine, one eight hundred 1-800, two o three 203 and four zeros 0000. ( I personally had hard time to catch these numbers in native speed before. Spain, Japan, Taiwan many countries use large numbers for currency.) It's just ideas based on my experiences.
Thanks for the ideas! I will get to work on how to make all or some of those videos asap. It's interesting that you bring up numbers because they are super easy for native speakers but very hard to learn well for non native speakers to whatever language we are talking about. and as you mention, using large currencies makes it even more difficult. I still mess up 10k, 100k, 1 mil and 10 mil in Japanese to this day
😄@@chrisdesu1 Agree!