This is Yuxi ❤Thanks so much for inviting me to join your insightful podcast !!! Please feel free to comment down below to share your questions or your experiences of learning languages ❤️🥰let’s evolve into our better self
@@akhilrathinahiii thanks for the question. When I was at middle high school I got super passionate about English and I read a lot of short novels at that time. How was your language learning journey ? When u discovered your passion for languages? 😊
@@ukiuki548 Thank you for sharing your journey, it's very inspirational! 😊 I noticed you didn't mention anything about spaced recall and Anki and all of that. Was your vocabulary in these various languages acquired purely through reading? Or did you dedicate concerted effort on vocabulary through one of these other means?
He has such a humble attitude. When he said that he learned Italian with a tutor first to get the basics, i thought to myself that is a good way to learn because then when you listen and read you will have a bit of a foundation. It can be frustrating when you don’t know anything. This was an inspiring interview!
That's why I feel it's so important to instill in people that if they're trying to learn a language on their own by input, they need to feel comfortable understanding very, very little at first. Language auto-didacticism is a "check your ego at the door" type of activity lol.
I am confident in English use since I have 5 to 6 years of experience in English conversation with my American friends online in video games. There are more new languages on my studying list. My second foreign language is Japanese. I chose it because Japanese has little linguistic distance from the Chinese language. It is like when you compute the cosine similarity, the angle between the two languages can determine the learning difficulties. In addition, it is essential to possess some basic knowledge about the target language first and then practice it immediately. For example, in the early stage of my Japanese learning, verb variations were a significant obstacle to let you step further. Once you have a fundamental idea, you feel more relaxed about continuing.
I agree with a lot of what he said. To get fluent in Japanese I would watch Japanese TH-camrs all the time, sometimes watch a single video like 20-30 times. I would take sentences with words I didn't know and make flash cards to review them. That's how I've learned many thousands of words in Japanese now. I learned to read Kanji by just reading along with the subtitles and reading my flashcards every day.
How long have you been fluent for? I’ve been fluent in Japanese for 20 years now and I’m trying to figure out if I wanna continue using it 6-18 hours a day. I’m extremely introverted, and it’s not like I’m getting better because I understand enough and if I learn something new it’s nothing I can use in a convo anymore. Like the word 「赤裸々...」 from a novel or something. Sometimes I think I wanna learn other languages more even if I forget some Japanese, but it’s scary to think I’ll forget stuff when it’s such a strong habit idk I feel a lot of stress if I don’t use Japanese a lot… 😢 But I also think it’s cool to know other languages, I’m really at a weird place. Wonder if anyone can relate.
@phen-themoogle7651 I've been studying Japanese for about 4 years, but I've studied like 4 languages in the last 12 years. I would say to learn a language that you actually want to learn or think will be useful to know. I wouldn't worry about forgetting Japanese if you study other languages. You might forget some as advanced words you don't see very often, but that happens even to native speakers in their own language too. I don't remember every fancy word I learned in highschool literature class. Just trust that your brain will remember the important stuff. I haven't studied German in 8 years but I still can have conversations in it or watch a German TV show if I want to. I didn't forget everything I ever studied just because I studied something else. It sounds like you've studied Japanese longer than I've been studying languages at all so I really don't think you'll forget almost anything after all that time.
@@phen-themoogle7651in my opinion as long as you ares till exposed to japanese language such as reading, watching movie or listen to songs or even just talk to yourself or thinking in Japanese language you will still have it. Learning a new language is so exciting. I love learning languages. I am a Chinese Indonesian. I started to take Chinese course when I was in junior high although just for about one year. As for English, it used to be super hard for me when I was in school. I started to learn it seriously when I was in university by taking a course. About 10 years ago I started learn German with a native speaker teacher. She was so nice and helpful and I understood what she taught me but I can't make daily conversation although I had learned for about 4 years. I was too timid to talked to her in German 🤭. Several years ago I started learn Thai through TH-cam.
So Read, Listen, and copy the life of language through what and who you love. Also find your purpose or why you started enjoying the language in the first place. Input at your level and make small accomplishments to keep higher motivation. Consistent practice despite how crappy you may be. Study like 30 min- 1 hour a daily, and the rest immersing and talking to natives. Small bits on top of existing habits.
Yeah, if you're gonna do THAT much of a thing, you've gotta like and enjoy doing the thing. That's probably the biggest part right there. Like, your heart has to be in it. Whatever "it" is, for each person.
"C'est une Dinguerie" is pretty informal and it's used like between friends or stuff like this, but never in front of someone you don't know, they would think you'r crazy 😂
@@evolve_hq You wouldn't even believe how many people mention anki - on youtube, pretty much, if you aren't using anki then (apparently) you'll never learn the language hahahaha
Bruh Anki is the game changer, it's not like "you'll never learn the language" but the amount of progress and the increase in speed in learning vocabulary and grammar points you can get from it, makes it criminal to not use it. I recommend it 100% to everybody. You should use it too. It's free too, so what will it cost you? Answer: nothing.
The part about recording your voice while speaking the new language brought back memories of my childhood! My mother's language is Kurdish, and I remember how I started speaking Farsi when I was about 3. I used to record my voice singing and talking to myself 😂😂😂. Now I feel like I must be a natural at learning new languages!
Secrets: Chinese and English since his Childhood gave him the base to learn the other languages. Chinese is a huge advantage if you want to learn Japanese.
@@evolve_hq Fluent Japanese speaker here. Japanese and Chinese share a writing system (it's not exactly the same but one of the Japanese writing systems is based off of Traditional Chinese characters), so a lot of written vocabulary is the same. However, that's where the similarities end. The phonetic, syntactic and morphological characteristics of these languages are completely (and I mean, 100%) different. Knowing Korean is more of an advantage overall IMO.
I disagree. Honestly, I think already knowing the Chinese writing system makes it harder to read them the Japanese way and not the Chinese way. So many are changed or different that it's often more confusing than helpful.
Great video! I'm French, and I can already speak English and Japanese, but right now, I'm learning Spanish on my own. I agreed with a lot of what was said, especially the second piece of advice about maximizing your inputs. However, you can’t follow that advice unless you’re already applying the first one-you NEED to enjoy the process of learning a language. I’ve tried practicing shadowing before, but I always felt like I looked foolish doing it, so I gave up on the exercise. That said, after watching this video, I’m motivated to do it consistently because I’m sure it could have a significant impact on my abilities. Thank you for that! And just so you know, "C’est une dinguerie!" could be roughly translated into English as "That shit slaps!" So yes, it’s quite informal.
I agree with Yuxi. In my opinon as someone who knows 5 languages and is learning 6th one, just familiarize yourself. Like really familiarize yourself. I started watching anime during lockdown and now I can understand most japanese. I am in the midst of learning how to speak it
Thank u a loooooot, so useful video, I'm also a polyglot, i know English Russian my mother tongue and other similar languages to my mother tongue. I'm studying at the University away from my hometown right now, there's a lot of distractions around me, also I miss my family members. I also would try to rebuild my habits and become a better at my special subjects. Just wanted to share my thoughts🙂 thank u. I love u world 🌎 ❤
But the way people shine when they speak their native language is attractive beyond words!!!❤ (of course on top of the fact that they speak multiple languages)
You're incredibly talented! Mastering five languages is such an impressive accomplishment. Thanks for sharing your journey with language learning. Your experience gives me a lot of encouragement and ideas!
I recently started learning Spanish because I think Spanish literature is really fascinating! Now I’ve been reading *The Little Prince* in Spanish lately-reading something familiar and simple really helps me stay interested. And for speaking practice, I’m doing conversations with ChatGPT ( As an introvert, it’s such a comfortable way to work on speaking). I’ve also learned a ton from Yuxi’s honest insights about learning Asian and European languages. Thank you guys so much for this video!
✨ Question for You: What language are you currently learning, and what’s the biggest challenge you've faced so far? Let’s share tips and support each other in the comments! 😊👇
I'm learning Russian and it's a challenge. Especially in the beginning my brain got fried fast, but I had time for some more... Well. I started dabbling with Dutch - fairly easy for a German speaking English -, I made quick progress and it helped me to keep pushing through Russian grammar, etc as I didn't loose motivation. Dutch showed me, my language learning routine works, Russian just need more time / care.
4:50 only real person who is native in the language can give the feedback. So it is important to have once in 1-2 weeks an hour session where you are reading with native and they are "fixing" your mistakes.
この動画、本当にありがとうございます。 For tutoring, where would you recommend looking? Italki? Other resources? I'm looking for japanese and darija/arabic tutoring!! Thank you! chokran bzaf :))) "C'est une dinguerie" is quite informal in my opinion, kinda like めっちゃおいしだ like "YOOO THIS SHI CRAZY GOATED/GUD"
when you speak Chinese it is quite easy to learn Japanese. Cause Japan shares lots of characters. Spanish language is so easy to learn. Probably the easiest language on the planet. You don't need to master your muscles and tongue shapes to pronounce it right. Italian I would say good for you, - cause it has +50% extra difficulty level to the spanish.
After learning English, I'd like to learn portuguese, I know the basics but I'd like to improve my English and my Portuguese I'd love to reach a fluent level.
"Combine your passion with learning languages" 29 yo chronically friendless and unemployed me who does nothing but watch TH-cam and furry cement encasement zorn all day: 👁👄👁
Меня сильно порожают знания этого человека. Азаиты в Японии, Китае, Кореи вообще не учат языки, такое мнение у меня сложилось за время проживания в этих странах.
Maybe the case but I think so much is exaggerated. I'd say switch the news on in say Spanish and try to understand. I think saying you can speak a language and being able to catch when native speakers are speaking with all the phrases, idioms is more than ten years for ANY language. You simply can't learn any quicker. As for Korean and other language I think you are talking around 15 years or more. Think how long it takes a young person of say 20 or so going to University. That's 20 or so years using their native language every day.
Main thing is missing: what are the levels of his languages (in terms of CEFR)? A2 is very different from B2 which is very different from C2. And what international certificate he has to prove his levels?
Thanks for the great spot 😂😂 Everyone makes mistakes at some point, and that's how we improve! Check out our other video with Daria who speaks a lot about this: th-cam.com/video/ueLEAibY5mk/w-d-xo.html
@@masahirogo3330 I mean editing text to highlight errors! It seems you've got great reading abilities, where did you hone these skills? 📝 It would be great to learn some tips from you
1. Consistent
2.passion / learn languages with your interests (watching drama, singing)
3. Make language a part of your life
This is Yuxi ❤Thanks so much for inviting me to join your insightful podcast !!!
Please feel free to comment down below to share your questions or your experiences of learning languages ❤️🥰let’s evolve into our better self
When did you realise that you loved learning languages?
@@akhilrathinahiii thanks for the question. When I was at middle high school I got super passionate about English and I read a lot of short novels at that time.
How was your language learning journey ? When u discovered your passion for languages? 😊
You just added another language to my to learn list Italian 😅
@@Funmi-g5tgo for it !!!! It is a beautiful language esp if u r into arts history or food 😊
@@ukiuki548 Thank you for sharing your journey, it's very inspirational! 😊 I noticed you didn't mention anything about spaced recall and Anki and all of that. Was your vocabulary in these various languages acquired purely through reading? Or did you dedicate concerted effort on vocabulary through one of these other means?
He has such a humble attitude. When he said that he learned Italian with a tutor first to get the basics, i thought to myself that is a good way to learn because then when you listen and read you will have a bit of a foundation. It can be frustrating when you don’t know anything. This was an inspiring interview!
That's why I feel it's so important to instill in people that if they're trying to learn a language on their own by input, they need to feel comfortable understanding very, very little at first. Language auto-didacticism is a "check your ego at the door" type of activity lol.
I am confident in English use since I have 5 to 6 years of experience in English conversation with my American friends online in video games. There are more new languages on my studying list. My second foreign language is Japanese. I chose it because Japanese has little linguistic distance from the Chinese language. It is like when you compute the cosine similarity, the angle between the two languages can determine the learning difficulties. In addition, it is essential to possess some basic knowledge about the target language first and then practice it immediately. For example, in the early stage of my Japanese learning, verb variations were a significant obstacle to let you step further. Once you have a fundamental idea, you feel more relaxed about continuing.
I agree with a lot of what he said. To get fluent in Japanese I would watch Japanese TH-camrs all the time, sometimes watch a single video like 20-30 times. I would take sentences with words I didn't know and make flash cards to review them. That's how I've learned many thousands of words in Japanese now. I learned to read Kanji by just reading along with the subtitles and reading my flashcards every day.
How long have you been fluent for? I’ve been fluent in Japanese for 20 years now and I’m trying to figure out if I wanna continue using it 6-18 hours a day. I’m extremely introverted, and it’s not like I’m getting better because I understand enough and if I learn something new it’s nothing I can use in a convo anymore. Like the word 「赤裸々...」 from a novel or something.
Sometimes I think I wanna learn other languages more even if I forget some Japanese, but it’s scary to think I’ll forget stuff when it’s such a strong habit idk
I feel a lot of stress if I don’t use Japanese a lot… 😢
But I also think it’s cool to know other languages, I’m really at a weird place. Wonder if anyone can relate.
@phen-themoogle7651 I've been studying Japanese for about 4 years, but I've studied like 4 languages in the last 12 years. I would say to learn a language that you actually want to learn or think will be useful to know. I wouldn't worry about forgetting Japanese if you study other languages. You might forget some as advanced words you don't see very often, but that happens even to native speakers in their own language too. I don't remember every fancy word I learned in highschool literature class.
Just trust that your brain will remember the important stuff.
I haven't studied German in 8 years but I still can have conversations in it or watch a German TV show if I want to. I didn't forget everything I ever studied just because I studied something else. It sounds like you've studied Japanese longer than I've been studying languages at all so I really don't think you'll forget almost anything after all that time.
@@phen-themoogle7651in my opinion as long as you ares till exposed to japanese language such as reading, watching movie or listen to songs or even just talk to yourself or thinking in Japanese language you will still have it. Learning a new language is so exciting. I love learning languages. I am a Chinese Indonesian. I started to take Chinese course when I was in junior high although just for about one year. As for English, it used to be super hard for me when I was in school. I started to learn it seriously when I was in university by taking a course. About 10 years ago I started learn German with a native speaker teacher. She was so nice and helpful and I understood what she taught me but I can't make daily conversation although I had learned for about 4 years. I was too timid to talked to her in German 🤭. Several years ago I started learn Thai through TH-cam.
So Read, Listen, and copy the life of language through what and who you love. Also find your purpose or why you started enjoying the language in the first place.
Input at your level and make small accomplishments to keep higher motivation. Consistent practice despite how crappy you may be.
Study like 30 min- 1 hour a daily, and the rest immersing and talking to natives. Small bits on top of existing habits.
この人すごすぎる!!!参考になりました🙇♂️
Thank you for watching! 他の言語も勉強されていますか?
Yeah, if you're gonna do THAT much of a thing, you've gotta like and enjoy doing the thing. That's probably the biggest part right there. Like, your heart has to be in it. Whatever "it" is, for each person.
Wow! Truly amazed by how well Yuxi is able to speak in so many languages~👍 And thank you for making this episode. Very helpful🫶
"C'est une Dinguerie" is pretty informal and it's used like between friends or stuff like this, but never in front of someone you don't know, they would think you'r crazy 😂
Haha thanks for clarifying, we should be careful when we use it then!
Would it be better to say “C’est fou?”
@@clawnz2193 Yes it would. Still rather informal but much more "ok" than "c'est une dinguerie".
Im french and you can say " c'est délicieux" it more formal and very appreciate (a good compliment) @@clawnz2193
PROUD OF YOU, YUXI! KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank u !!! Mariam!! The most popular influencer in Egypt !!
شكرًا لكم على المشاهدة
Dude didn't mention Anki, what a legend!!! 🎉🎉🎉
Does this mean everyone usually mentions Anki? 😂😂
@@evolve_hq You wouldn't even believe how many people mention anki - on youtube, pretty much, if you aren't using anki then (apparently) you'll never learn the language hahahaha
@@kickboxing3728 Haha how interesting! Our guest Daria actually mentioned it in her video: th-cam.com/video/ueLEAibY5mk/w-d-xo.html 😂😂
it is the best flashcard platform out there
just pure grind
Bruh Anki is the game changer, it's not like "you'll never learn the language" but the amount of progress and the increase in speed in learning vocabulary and grammar points you can get from it, makes it criminal to not use it. I recommend it 100% to everybody. You should use it too. It's free too, so what will it cost you? Answer: nothing.
The part about recording your voice while speaking the new language brought back memories of my childhood! My mother's language is Kurdish, and I remember how I started speaking Farsi when I was about 3. I used to record my voice singing and talking to myself 😂😂😂. Now I feel like I must be a natural at learning new languages!
Secrets: Chinese and English since his Childhood gave him the base to learn the other languages. Chinese is a huge advantage if you want to learn Japanese.
Wow really? How does it make learning Japanese easier?
@@evolve_hq Fluent Japanese speaker here. Japanese and Chinese share a writing system (it's not exactly the same but one of the Japanese writing systems is based off of Traditional Chinese characters), so a lot of written vocabulary is the same. However, that's where the similarities end. The phonetic, syntactic and morphological characteristics of these languages are completely (and I mean, 100%) different. Knowing Korean is more of an advantage overall IMO.
@@evolve_hqisn't it obvious?
I disagree. Honestly, I think already knowing the Chinese writing system makes it harder to read them the Japanese way and not the Chinese way. So many are changed or different that it's often more confusing than helpful.
@@coolbrotherf127 nobody cares bud
Great video! I'm French, and I can already speak English and Japanese, but right now, I'm learning Spanish on my own. I agreed with a lot of what was said, especially the second piece of advice about maximizing your inputs. However, you can’t follow that advice unless you’re already applying the first one-you NEED to enjoy the process of learning a language.
I’ve tried practicing shadowing before, but I always felt like I looked foolish doing it, so I gave up on the exercise. That said, after watching this video, I’m motivated to do it consistently because I’m sure it could have a significant impact on my abilities. Thank you for that!
And just so you know, "C’est une dinguerie!" could be roughly translated into English as "That shit slaps!" So yes, it’s quite informal.
Much love& respect for my bro Yuxi❤ 5 languages?! That’s dope!!!!!🔥
Thanks for commenting!
Thank u brooo 🙌🙌
Wow! Thank you so much for this interview. This is so inspirational! Yuxi is so cool!
Pi tum !! ❤❤❤
Wow!Your English is so good!And you learned so many languages😮!
Yes Yuxi's skills are very impressive! Are you studying English too?
Proud of you 💙
Thanks for watching!
You’re killing it🎉🎉
Thanks for commenting!
Thanks Afaq ❤❤
I agree with Yuxi. In my opinon as someone who knows 5 languages and is learning 6th one, just familiarize yourself. Like really familiarize yourself. I started watching anime during lockdown and now I can understand most japanese. I am in the midst of learning how to speak it
Thank u a loooooot, so useful video, I'm also a polyglot, i know English Russian my mother tongue and other similar languages to my mother tongue. I'm studying at the University away from my hometown right now, there's a lot of distractions around me, also I miss my family members. I also would try to rebuild my habits and become a better at my special subjects.
Just wanted to share my thoughts🙂 thank u. I love u world 🌎 ❤
あなた達は凄いです。私はよく四年日本語を勉強しますでも上手になりませんと感じます。今頑張りましょう。この動画を作ってありがとうございます。
僕も日本語の4年間勉強し続き、まだまだ彼の日本語のレベルぐらいはない。。。。
@kunchamp-5195 そうか、諦めないでください
But the way people shine when they speak their native language is attractive beyond words!!!❤ (of course on top of the fact that they speak multiple languages)
You're incredibly talented! Mastering five languages is such an impressive accomplishment. Thanks for sharing your journey with language learning. Your experience gives me a lot of encouragement and ideas!
Thanks for watching and commenting! Which languages are you studying now? And how are you studying them?
I recently started learning Spanish because I think Spanish literature is really fascinating!
Now I’ve been reading *The Little Prince* in Spanish lately-reading something familiar and simple really helps me stay interested. And for speaking practice, I’m doing conversations with ChatGPT ( As an introvert, it’s such a comfortable way to work on speaking).
I’ve also learned a ton from Yuxi’s honest insights about learning Asian and European languages. Thank you guys so much for this video!
@@zimiaowang1154thanks for sharing !!!pratcting with chatgpt is indeed a great way for introverts to learning languages !!! 🙏❤️
I'm Italian and I can confirm his Italian is so good! 👏 plus he's really handsome ❤
Thanks for confirming! Do you also find it easier to understand latin based languages?!
Grazie mille !!❤
@@evolve_hq Certainly, due to the proximity to Italian, I can understand some parts of speech from Romance languages.
@@Gio5679 That's awesome! Which language is the easiest to understand?
He really loves language learning ❤ and he's very good
動画を最後まで見てくれたらウキウキになるって言った?!ウキウキ?!😭😭
This’ll going to be my motivation video
Yuxi, thank you for awesome tips and inspiring story. Xiexie!! :)
As somebody who is learning both Latin languages and Japanese the opening was a trip 😅
Thank you for confirmed Matt's theory on this
✨ Question for You: What language are you currently learning, and what’s the biggest challenge you've faced so far? Let’s share tips and support each other in the comments! 😊👇
Currently i am learning Taiwanese (Hokkien) , Thai and Turkish. The biggest challenge i have faced so far is Russian's grammar 😥
I'm learning Russian and it's a challenge. Especially in the beginning my brain got fried fast, but I had time for some more... Well. I started dabbling with Dutch - fairly easy for a German speaking English -, I made quick progress and it helped me to keep pushing through Russian grammar, etc as I didn't loose motivation. Dutch showed me, my language learning routine works, Russian just need more time / care.
Learning a language that never heard before, must repeat vocabulary a lot to become familiar.
@@mirae9163 Wow I didn't realize Taiwanese and Hokkien are the same thing?!
@@ClaudiaEhrhardt Wow what's so challenging about Russian language?
thanks that enjoyful conversation 🙂
4:50 only real person who is native in the language can give the feedback. So it is important to have once in 1-2 weeks an hour session where you are reading with native and they are "fixing" your mistakes.
この動画、本当にありがとうございます。
For tutoring, where would you recommend looking? Italki? Other resources? I'm looking for japanese and darija/arabic tutoring!!
Thank you! chokran bzaf :)))
"C'est une dinguerie" is quite informal in my opinion, kinda like めっちゃおいしだ like "YOOO THIS SHI CRAZY GOATED/GUD"
I am passionate about languages and Italian is the most beautiful for me.
不愧是你!!! (and Italian deserves it
I love your video sir love from india❤❤❤
Thanks for watching! Which languages can you speak?
@evolve_hq i speak hindi but now i am learning english
when you speak Chinese it is quite easy to learn Japanese. Cause Japan shares lots of characters. Spanish language is so easy to learn. Probably the easiest language on the planet. You don't need to master your muscles and tongue shapes to pronounce it right. Italian I would say good for you, - cause it has +50% extra difficulty level to the spanish.
Veey helpful!!
i love how, despite all the languages acquired, gay-voice peeks through them all
💀😂😂😂😂😂
LMFAO
Also listen to the audiobooks to improve your pronunciation.
So impressive!
Many thanks for watching!
Great video man
Thanks so much!
We say "Vale a pena" in portuguese too!
After learning English, I'd like to learn portuguese, I know the basics but I'd like to improve my English and my Portuguese I'd love to reach a fluent level.
superb
I m using the BIBLE in others languages. Español ... ENGLISH ... עברית . I READ John in spanish and listen in hebrew or English. It helps.
"Combine your passion with learning languages"
29 yo chronically friendless and unemployed me who does nothing but watch TH-cam and furry cement encasement zorn all day: 👁👄👁
More un guests!
this a different type of locked on
这个方法不错,以前很多教堂的牧师通过圣经这一本书就能学会多门外语,就是通过圣经的不同译本进行学习
太厉害了😮
Thank you for watching!
I also speak 5 languages but noone interviews me
Wonder how he'd do with dialects like JA Patois. Would love to hear that! ;-)
Меня сильно порожают знания этого человека. Азаиты в Японии, Китае, Кореи вообще не учат языки, такое мнение у меня сложилось за время проживания в этих странах.
he already has cheat code for chinese and japanese learning the rest are easy compared to those two so there you go
When it comes to Finnish… I just can’t seem to enjoy the learning process.
his japanese sounds quite natural
Maybe the case but I think so much is exaggerated. I'd say switch the news on in say Spanish and try to understand. I think saying you can speak a language and being able to catch when native speakers are speaking with all the phrases, idioms is more than ten years for ANY language. You simply can't learn any quicker. As for Korean and other language I think you are talking around 15 years or more. Think how long it takes a young person of say 20 or so going to University. That's 20 or so years using their native language every day.
I am Japanese, but his Japanese has almost no accent
crazy using the american flag for english
動画を最後まで見てくれたら本当にウキウキになります?日本語おかしいぞw
Main thing is missing: what are the levels of his languages (in terms of CEFR)? A2 is very different from B2 which is very different from C2. And what international certificate he has to prove his levels?
although I heard that kind of content several times, I find this video something special; I don't know
pff I speak 22 languages. Well, a word or two per language ... :-)
How: be chinese origin
KNOWS 5 languages and highly likely zero people skills. hahaahh
He mispronounced or misused “Applicable”. And you call that polyglot?
Thanks for the great spot 😂😂 Everyone makes mistakes at some point, and that's how we improve! Check out our other video with Daria who speaks a lot about this: th-cam.com/video/ueLEAibY5mk/w-d-xo.html
@@evolve_hq this is not a mistake. This is a serious error
@@masahirogo3330 Thanks for taking the time for helping us to identify it. What methods do you use to improve your editing skills?
@ editing skills? You are not even making any sense
@@masahirogo3330 I mean editing text to highlight errors! It seems you've got great reading abilities, where did you hone these skills? 📝 It would be great to learn some tips from you