NOT A POLYGLOT

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

I am not a polyglot. I speak 3 languages (sort of). So why do I offer advice on language learning?
My name's Lamont, and three years ago I started teaching myself Swedish. Today, I also speak French to a decent level, but Swedish and French are both fairly easy languages for an English speaker, just like Spanish, Italian and German are fairly easy languages.
Counting the number of languages we speak is not always fair because while one person may learn Norwegian and Portuguese to a basic level, someone else may learn Chinese to a very high level. I know who has achieved more out of those two language learners.
In the last 20 years, language learners have become obsessed with the idea of becoming a polyglot. There is a problem with this: How much of a language do you have to know in order to say that you can speak that language? If I wanted to, I could quite easily learn German and Spanish in 2020 enough to be able to say that I speak those languages. In theory, that would make me a polyglot because then I would speak Swedish, French, German and Spanish. But it would not give me a better idea of how to learn languages to a high level; it would not give me a good grasp of the languages and in my book, it would actually be a polyglot fail.
You don't need to be a polyglot. Just be a better version of yourself. Not everyone can speak 10 languages, not everyone can be Luca Lampariello, Lindie Botes or Steve Kaufmann. Everyone can just aim to learn more. Learn more of the language you already speak before you take up a new language.
Language learning videos, tips and techniques!
• How To Learn Languages

Пікірлер: 312

  • @daysandwords
    @daysandwords4 жыл бұрын

    Hey guys - it's not about how many languages you speak, rather about what you learn along the way. What are some things that you are hoping to improve in 2020?

  • @TheGabennn

    @TheGabennn

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hello. I want to learn German. Currently I'm using busuu premium and I'm in middle of the B1 lessons, also using Lingvist Premium and listening to German podcasts and watching KZread videos. Maybe later I can start learning Spanish.

  • @EasyFinnish

    @EasyFinnish

    4 жыл бұрын

    French, only French. I can't even think about to learn other languages. Swedish is my fourth language and I just listen swedish news and watch tv shows, but not try to learn it like I do with French. Your video nails a lot of these polyglot things. We can memorize a language in a day and make a video of it, easily, and then say I learnt Italia in a day, haha!

  • @clawmansegele1988

    @clawmansegele1988

    4 жыл бұрын

    I am learning Arabic! It’s hard but I love it. When people ask me why I want to learn it, I don’t have a good answer other than “It’s a beautiful language and I love the culture”. But its so fun and I love it.

  • @MattMcQueen1

    @MattMcQueen1

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'm right at the beginning of my Spanish journey. I'm using Duolingo Premium (which I kind of regret paying for, but I guess it helps to build vocabulary) and Busuu Premium (which seems far better). A major annoyance for me is that Duolingo uses American English, and soy de Escocia :-) I also have Coffee Break Spanish Premium Seasons 1 and 2 - I bought those years ago, and never got around to actually using them. So, this year I intend to get more organised with my language learning and the use of the resources I already have.

  • @MattMcQueen1

    @MattMcQueen1

    4 жыл бұрын

    As an example of why American English is annoying if you are from the UK and using Duolingo: if I say "Estos son mis pantalones.", am I talking about my trousers? Pants in UK English are not trousers (not sure how that works in Australia) LOL

  • @frankwaechter8676
    @frankwaechter86764 жыл бұрын

    French girl screaming hysterically: "Help! I need to go to the hospital!!!" KZread Polyglot: "Let's eat a lot together"

  • @imanrustemkyzy977

    @imanrustemkyzy977

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nah the polyglot would probably understand that. Most people with any knowledge of French would xD. I understand that and my French is drop down terrible. Help! Je besoin aller à l'hôpital My attempt at translation (Donno help) I'm not sure why he used the example but that'd be actually hilarious. Maybe he meant they wouldn't know exactly why she'd need to go?

  • @autocorrect3055

    @autocorrect3055

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@imanrustemkyzy977 *Au secours! Je dois aller à l’hôpital!

  • @autocorrect3055

    @autocorrect3055

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@imanrustemkyzy977 if you say besoin always say: I have need of. Exemple: J’ai besoin de

  • @israellai

    @israellai

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@imanrustemkyzy977 lmao have you seen the ones Frank was referring to

  • @baronmeduse

    @baronmeduse

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@imanrustemkyzy977 Nah, they wouldn't understand it. Case in point.

  • @Actuallylucian
    @Actuallylucian4 жыл бұрын

    So happy there is a language enthusiast that didn’t grow up with multiple languages as is the case for most of us in the community. It’s fresh and l hope this can motivate others in your position.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Cheers!

  • @keegster7167

    @keegster7167

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually I think if you look at the stats of certain groups like members of the polyglot gathering, most of the people that speak a lot of languages grew up monolingual. How well they know their languages though, I have no clue

  • @henriquerezende5106
    @henriquerezende51064 жыл бұрын

    I couldnt stress that out more, those “i speak 20 languages” polyglots are very much annoying Specially because they give people the false impression that this is achievable quickly. I would only consider saying “I speak this x language” if i were at least a b2 level. Otherwise, you DONT speak the language. Some exceptions such as Luca the polyglot, who has been learning for several years and dedicates his inteire life for it. Love your videos man, keep em going

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Even Luca admits that his level kind of drops off in his less used ones, like Swedish. I think his Swedish is probably only around the same level as mine (B2) which is pretty good considering all the other languages he speaks, but there are some people who suggest (and I tend to agree with them) that more than 5 languages to a C level is so rare that it's basically impossible, or at the very least you'd have to make it your life's work.

  • @henriquerezende5106

    @henriquerezende5106

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords Absolutely, a C1 level takes massive work, and I completely agree with you, its better to really master a language than to know 30 in a2. kzread.info/dash/bejne/maOby5KJfsuzf7g.html Check this video out, no description needed

  • @psychedelicmanicincarnatio2731

    @psychedelicmanicincarnatio2731

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords By 5 languages at C level, do you mean native languages included or exclusively foreign languages? (I agree btw)

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@psychedelicmanicincarnatio2731 Hmm, I'm not an expert in bilingual children but I do know that it isn't the magic path to complete understanding of that language that a lot of people assume it to be. Studies have found kids who are raised in a bilingual environment have on average, a smaller vocab in both languages than monolinguals of the same age (but a higher vocab as a total of both languages). They also generally only attend SCHOOL (the secret deliberate practice that happens under our noses) in 1 language. My basic philosophy is that you have 1 fully native language. I have watched more than one Swedish KZreadr who claimed to be completely bilingual (raised in an English speaking household, and Swedes obviously have English in school from an early age) - and they always say something that gives their English away and makes it sound weird. Would it be C1? Probably, but that's a Swede who was raised bilingual. I think most "bilinguals" don't reach C1 in the language unless they attend school in it. So yes, including "native" languages, I think 5 to that level is basically a lifetime's work.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@henriquerezende5106 Yeah that idiot came to my channel a few months back claiming to speak 10 languages and I challenged him to make a video, and he did and all the comments were like "I am ____ and I can't understand a word you said."

  • @AlessandroBottoni
    @AlessandroBottoni4 жыл бұрын

    I'm in the same position as you: I'm not a polyglot, I just had to learn a couple of languages at school and for my business (English and French) and I developed an interest for languages that led me to learn a couple more (I'm studying German, at the moment). Your KZread channel is a breath of fresh air in a world of difficult challenges (try Japanese, Chiese or Korean...) and unreacheable gurus. You are a lovely travel companion for many of us. Thanks for being here.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Alessandro!

  • @danilojoserengifosulbaran9301

    @danilojoserengifosulbaran9301

    4 жыл бұрын

    You are completely right!!!

  • @gamermapper

    @gamermapper

    3 жыл бұрын

    Does it mean it's bad if I learn Japanese? 😭

  • @jonahwoolley4465

    @jonahwoolley4465

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gamermapper Absolutely not! While it may be easier for a native English speaker to pick up, say, Spanish or German over a language like Japanese, it is still very possible to learn. If you're passionate about a language, regardless of its difficulty level, you should try to learn it, because you'll be happier doing so.

  • @twoblocksdown5464

    @twoblocksdown5464

    3 жыл бұрын

    lovely travel cringePanion*

  • @val.teacup
    @val.teacup4 жыл бұрын

    Let me just tell you - From all the language leaning channels I love yours the most cause you say it like it is and don't sugarcoat language learning. I know how hard learning a new language can be cause I spent 2 years on German and still ended up with a rather low and demotivating level of understanding it. I'm Bulgarian and leaning English to a C2 level took me literally 15 years ( started at 4 ) so I will never believe a person can become proficient in 3 months lol The struggle continues.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! The thing is, that sugarcoating it doesn't make it easier. It's actually freeing to say "This takes 10 years of hard work" because once you acknowledge that, then you are free to give it that time or not to give it that time. Thanks for your support.

  • @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    Жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords You hit the nail on the head! 🔨 I've been learning English for more than thirty years, although not in a steady way, and I'm still learning a lot. Thirty years ago, I studied French just for three years, and now I'm taking it back.

  • @spanishconmigo122
    @spanishconmigo1224 жыл бұрын

    I totally agree. I actually call myself an emotional learner. Because of how stress or stressful people slows down my studying. I mediate now as a part of my studying process.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    I don't think many people would NOT be like this, I think it's just some people ignore the fact that they can't learn when they are stressed or angry. If people make me angry when I want to study or something, I then get even more angry that they've ruined my study haha - so then I have to listen to music.

  • @barkspasenine
    @barkspasenine4 жыл бұрын

    This is so refreshing. Finally someone not claiming to learn 12 languages in one summer or to be able to speak 1 language usefully in a week. It's so ostentatious and misleading, and I'd bet those people will forget 90% of it just as quickly as they learned it.

  • @TheChicagoRose
    @TheChicagoRose4 жыл бұрын

    Yes! I’m so for this movement of more KZreadrs sharing their journeys rather than “polyglots” telling you how they did it. I think I’m going to start vlogging my Spanish learning journey

  • @TheChicagoRose

    @TheChicagoRose

    4 жыл бұрын

    Also I’ve learned a ton from you and other learners. I want to know about tools and systems that are working for you whether I may adopt them or not. I want to learn from LEARNERS not experts.

  • @Anakianaj
    @Anakianaj4 жыл бұрын

    I find it really difficult to say "I think I'm fluent in this language" - Even in English I make stupid mistakes all the time (more often then not re-reading takes care of that - but still: the vast majority of native speakers wouldn't make those mistakes) - and yet here I am using more English than German (my native language) in my everyday and professional/academic life. So to gauge my own progress I completely ommitted the words "fluent", "level", "proficient" and "good". I also try to not use them when others ask me about my progress with a language (if the question in a questionnaire is how proficient I am and the choices are based on the CEFR then, well, can't do anything about that). Instead, I like to evaluate myself and my skills with a set of categories: (1) How much do I struggle reading a) fiction, recipes, social media b) non-fiction, newspapers, research articles c) subtitles, real-time chats (2) How much do I struggle listening to a) cooking shows, vloggers etc. b) news and speeches c) podcasts, discussions, tv-shows, audio-books etc. c) live discussions with many people, random audio mid sentence (3) How much do I struggle writing a) a comment on e.g. youtube b) a summary / comment / mini-essay / opinion on a movie, discussion point etc. c) in a real time-chat with many participants (4) How much do I struggle with speaking when a) reading out loud b) giving short replies to questions c) formulating my opinion or participating in a discussion (=being given the floor) ( d) throw in a comment in a discussion (=taking the floor) (5) How often do I find myself thinking in the target language by accident? How often do I know what a word/sentence in the target language means but don't actually know the dictionary/text-book translation?

  • @user-pm1xk5vw3u

    @user-pm1xk5vw3u

    4 жыл бұрын

    If you say it like that, no one is fluent in a language. Fluency, in my opinion, is to be able to speak, understand, read, and write in the language with minimal mistakes. Every speaker, no matter what the language is, has to back track at times because they think faster than their mouth can talk.

  • @rawrs2849

    @rawrs2849

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@user-pm1xk5vw3u agreed. I think we can say we're fluent in so and so language, but that doesn't mean we've mastered that language. I'm definitely fluent in my native language, but I haven't and most likely won't ever master it.

  • @TheZenytram

    @TheZenytram

    3 жыл бұрын

    By the size of you comment i can tell you, you are fluent in english, you are probably better in english than i with my own language.

  • @Euclidesdofuturo
    @Euclidesdofuturo4 жыл бұрын

    My native language is Portuguese.right now im trying to learn italian even tho it's a relatively similar language it's taken me quite a while to learn.great video.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, just because they are "similar" doesn't always make them easy. French is closer to English than Swedish, but linguistically it's definitely harder for an English speaker. Thanks for the comment!

  • @intarc0giotto

    @intarc0giotto

    4 жыл бұрын

    i am an native italian speaker ( and even native and native is not the same, i grew up in germany and my native italian level is much lower than a regular italian native speaker... so you couldnt even put that in the same bin) and i tried to leanr portuguese. it is similar but that can make it even harder, because you will try to copy your native language with an foreign accent or words... this is what i did with french as a teen in school. it was good to get around with in speaking situations but i never really learned which words were masculine and feminine in french because i just tried to get around it by using the italian genders for these words... it is just too tempting in romance languages to do something similar.

  • @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    Жыл бұрын

    @@intarc0giotto That happens with similar languages (same family or close related). The first steps are easy because similarities help. Nevertheless, regarding mastering the language is the other way around: similarities are a misleading burden.

  • @taryndancer29
    @taryndancer294 жыл бұрын

    Great vid. I am a language learner but also not a Polyglot. I never liked those videos of people claiming to speak 10 languages but they say two sentences. Your channel is quite refreshing, keep it up!

  • @Mei190
    @Mei1904 жыл бұрын

    Although I study multiple languages and have been for quite some time, I have to say I find your channel very refreshing, many people feel the need to 'catch up' so to speak, comparing themselves, when it's definitely no race :) Decided to not be a lurker as this video deserves a thumbs up! I believe you'll have many subscribers in no time!

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! What language/s are you learning?

  • @Mei190

    @Mei190

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords Currently my focus is Spanish and Icelandic :)

  • @seriekekomo
    @seriekekomo4 жыл бұрын

    Meh, everything comes down to your personal goals and how high your standards are. I personally only claim to know a language when I have at least a solid B1 in that language, I think that's fair. In general, it is a bit "toxic" to compare each others' language abilities, but I agree that we should call out those polyglot wannabes who care more about self-promotion than language learning.

  • @PrateekJain-pi9jc
    @PrateekJain-pi9jc3 жыл бұрын

    Simple answer: being A1 level doesn't mean you "speak that language"

  • @idolevin8795

    @idolevin8795

    3 жыл бұрын

    Scream that louder for the people in the back

  • @petesayke
    @petesayke4 жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate your honesty. I’m an A2 Spanish-speaker and I’m just hoping I can get to B2 by this time next year (using a combination of Pimsleur, Busuu, Flashcards and random media). At some point in the next five years, I would love to get French under my belt, as well. This video has given me inspiration because you make language-learning feel the way it feels to me; it’s a lifelong process of refinement. It’s a disservice to aspirational viewers to claim to have become fluent in a few short months. Thank you all the way from Chicago!

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. A process of refinement is a very good way to put it. I speak French yes. It sounds good to non-French speakers. It sounds OK to French speakers. But I can't claim that it's excellent or that it took a week or even three months. Good luck with your Spanish... be like Dory and just keep swimming!

  • @diariosdelextranjero

    @diariosdelextranjero

    4 жыл бұрын

    Always talk about the time it takes in hours. This always gives a better idea than the number of months it takes. 120-200 hours of classroom instructions supplemented by reading and watching videos.

  • @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    Жыл бұрын

    @@diariosdelextranjero Time in hours can also be misleading or obscure to interpret. Classroom instruction hours (depends on the class - teacher, materials, techniques and methods, attention, concentration, dedication, assignments, homework, etc.) and not to mention the supplements.

  • @xhiems
    @xhiems4 жыл бұрын

    Je viens de découvrir ta chaîne, j’apprécie beaucoup ton honnêteté et ta transparence ! Merci beaucoup de partager tes pensées et tes méthodes !

  • @Catire92
    @Catire924 жыл бұрын

    Your opinion about those “polyglots” reflects exactly what I thing about it. I don’t really get why people would learn 6-7 languages besides their native tongue. I would rather learn 3-4 (as an example) languages and I would try use my time to bring them to perfection. I think that’s way cooler and way more useful.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    I do think knowing a bit of about 10-15 languages is useful in some ways, in that you can guess the roots of words etc (a Germanic one and a Romance one is great for that obviously) but yeah I would rather get good at 2 or 3. I'd love to learn Icelandic and Finnish one day but I'm not ready on French and Swedish yet. Some polyglots speak lots of them well (e.g. Luca is decent in at least 10) but this was more about why this channel exists even though I'm just almost a mono-lingual.

  • @estrafalario5612

    @estrafalario5612

    4 жыл бұрын

    I have another opinion. Let's leave aside those who are making a kind of commercial branch from their alleged polygloty, let's focus on those who do it as a kind of "hobby". I can understand them because the puzzle-solving part of learning a language it's specially funny to me at the beginning. That's the reason I've "started" to study 6 languages that I didn't actually meant to complete along the last 15 years. That's the reason I find joy in the puzzle-solving period. The reason to not finish the way to fluency? For me it's the intermediate-gray-zone, when the initial thril it's gone but still I can't really enjoy reading a book, watching a movie or having a meaningful conversation with a true friend in that language. In short: if it's your hobby, it's fine to taste a lot of "appetizers" of different languages! Just don't call it being a polyglot

  • @crazydanger

    @crazydanger

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@estrafalario5612 exactly! I am studying my 8th language because I love how much I can learn about the respective cultures through language learning, it's amazing. Not to mention languages like Chinese and Japanese where the learning process could be compared to almost mathematical learning. I enjoy sciences as well, so learning the characters and getting down to their history are mind blowing to me. Although I am fluent in three languages, one being my mother tongue, my second language is getting weaker as I have been speaking my third language constantly over the past 5 years. It's so demanding to keep up with fluency in languages, especially when those languages come from different language groups.

  • @ryanstarlight8018

    @ryanstarlight8018

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can bring 6-7 languages to perfection though

  • @gamermapper

    @gamermapper

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@estrafalario5612 do you know some people that aren't really polyglots? I'm new in the world of polyglots of youtube and language learning. What of those are good and what are bad? Laoshu, ikenna, Lindley

  • @jonipalmer2612
    @jonipalmer26124 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Thanks so much for this. I have never commented on a video like this, but I just found this video and your video about "How to learn a language for real". These have been the most useful language learning videos I have ever watched (and I've watched a lot). Your point about having task based goals was so helpful- just yesterday I was still sitting with the lofty and vague goal of "I will be conversational in French by August". Now I'm going to put some thought into task based goals like making a recording of myself every fortnight and a diary entry every day. And the fact that you started learning your second language at 30- that is so encouraging, because I'm 23 and have only just really got into language learning. I've been feeling quite discouraged by hearing how young other successful language learners were when they began. So thank you so much for sharing! Subscribed!

  • @FlowUrbanFlow
    @FlowUrbanFlow4 жыл бұрын

    Yoooo, shout outs to my man Matt vs Japan. I found him recently, and I really like how he's extremely real about the language learning process, and only wants to help people learn. I'm a Japanese-learner, so obviously anything about language learning interests me. So I subscribed! Hope you have a great day

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    You can check out my video with Matt if you haven't already. :-) I think it's my 3rd latest.

  • @stefania1500
    @stefania15004 жыл бұрын

    Polyglots say that learning a language is useful, fast, and easy. But I wonder if culture, make friends, knowledge, understand music lyrics and films are enough to bother learning a language or if you still can do all this without knowing the language at all. What they don't tell you is that learning any language is hard and takes a lot of effort and time, let alone being a polyglot, which becomes quite an addicting idea after listening to them. What most often forget is that the language has to be incorporated into the daily routine consistently, and it's a lifelong process that takes you years to master it. Before deciding what you want to study, you might consider the efforts and benefits from it, your plans to live in the country or doing business with them, and so on. You're bound to be demotivated sooner or later if you don't have reasonable reasons in the first place. In short, be realistic, choose two or three languages tops, and go for it. The most important thing is to know that you're learning something you're gonna use and that makes you happy.

  • @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    @Sprachliebhaber-Languagelover

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree... almost. Firstly, not all polyglots say the same thing. Secondly, regarding how many languages to study or why, it is a matter of individual choice and goals. The usefulness of a language for others might be beyond our particular scope. Not to mention happiness. 🙂 I love to compare how different languages have solved the same problem in quite different ways, as in "there is/are" (to be), "il y a" (to have), es gibt (to give), "hay" (from "haber" different from "tener" but both "to have"), or that "to be" can be "ser", "estar" and even "ir" (I have been to) or "tener+n=estar/ser+adj" (I am hungry, I'm ... years ).

  • @leisastyles1844
    @leisastyles18443 жыл бұрын

    I can’t thank you enough for giving me the confidence I needed, so very badly to try again for the 100th time to learn German, ty ty ty 🤗 I’m almost 50 and up until this point, I really thought I wasn’t smart enough to learn another language, as soooo many channels and courses are always promising that you can learn a language in a week, I never could, so felt so dumb, but you have explained exactly what I needed to hear to get me started again 😊 I really can’t thank you enough, love your channel 🥰🙏

  • @willlexie
    @willlexie4 жыл бұрын

    I'm sick of those click-bait "polyglot" youtubers :') "I LEARNED FRENCH IN 1 DAY" like... bye.

  • @ryanstarlight8018

    @ryanstarlight8018

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Luicius Vanegas Dude, you don't become fluent in 2 months. That's some severe bullshit.

  • @Roxy_303

    @Roxy_303

    4 жыл бұрын

    Luicius Vanegas 2 months??? No dude i don’t believe it, language learning comes with more time...

  • @AnthonyLauder
    @AnthonyLauder3 жыл бұрын

    I have just discovered your channel and really appreciate this message. I am a very weak language learner, with hardly any natural ability, but do struggle along and make eventual progress. Despite these many limitations, I have learned a few things that might help out others, and have tried to share some of them in the past. It is delightful to hear somebody else with an equally well grounded position.

  • @languagelearningdabbler
    @languagelearningdabbler4 жыл бұрын

    I want to reach a high level in my target languages too. Great video! 🤓

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the support!

  • @nataliamunoz5660
    @nataliamunoz56604 жыл бұрын

    Hi, I just wanted to let you know how much of an inspiration you have been to my journey of learning languages. I'm a Spanish native speaker so I often watch English speakers KZreadrs for practice my second language. Lately, I got really interested in learning more languages so I started watching KZreadrs that claimed to have learned a language in 2, 3, 6 months and so on, or the ones that explain their plan for studying 12 languages in 2020 (are they even humans? Lol). So I started to get really stressed thinking about my A1 french that I reached in 6 months and how I wasn't good enough for this... and then I found your channel and I basically binge-watched all your videos regarding language learning and man just a huge THANK YOU, you help me focus in my own progress rather than thinking how everyone else is doing. Keep the good content, you deserve way more subscribers, can't wait to see your channel grow :)

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    J'aime cette commentaire ! I don't have time to respond properly (have to go to work hehe) but this is lovely, so nice of you to say!

  • @Flauschbally

    @Flauschbally

    4 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely agree. I am also a binge watcher of this channel and I am so happy to have found him. I was doubting my language studies as well. All these super polyglots out here.

  • @cn7079
    @cn70794 жыл бұрын

    I refuse to say I speak a language until I know it fluently, or at least to a conversational level. I get annoyed with all the people saying "I speak 10 languages", but then that can barely say anything in either of them.

  • @alailafernandez7271
    @alailafernandez72714 жыл бұрын

    I love your channel, it's so honest! I'm a native spanish speaker that knows english (I work for an american company), and I'm trying to learn french right now. Thank you for making these videos, your channel should (AND WILL!) have more views!!! Stay consistent!!

  • @roxannnoguera2993
    @roxannnoguera29934 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for being real! I saw your last video about quitting French and I felt so relieved to not to be alone. I felt like a failure after moving to France and still struggling with the language and pronunciation, I thought I knew everything I needed to know about French and I was sooo wrong. Learning languages is like a rollercoaster for me, sometimes I'm loving it and sometimes I don't even want to hear a word in my TL, so after watching KZread videos like "I learnt French in one week" "How to speak 7 languages" I felt so discouraged. So thank you for being honest and keep motivating people around you!

  • @storysplinters9458
    @storysplinters9458 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this video. I feel like getting your systems in place and actually bringing yourself into a position which enables you to continuously work on something is necessary and not talked about enough in the language learning discourse. Last year, I stumbled upon Refold and started imemrsing in French, after a few weeks I lost motivation. I'm back and currently studying regularly. Even though I'm still at the start, I've noticed that everything becomes easier once you have specific goals and motivations and above all, once you're able to take better care of your mental and physical health.

  • @RelinaRu
    @RelinaRu4 жыл бұрын

    I’ve just recently stumbled upon your channel and I really love how honest you are about language learning experience. I’ve been watching a bunch of polyglot videos and I would get this feeling that they’re only true to some extent. They were definitely inspirational at first until I realized that either I simply wasn’t talented enough or my criteria for ‘speaking a language’ was a bit different. I started learning English at school about 20 years ago and my level is still far from perfection because I’ve never been to an English speaking country and I rarely get to talk to a native speaker. Then I started learning German and I can speak it on a simple level, I also got into Japanese and I talk like a small child rn, and all of that definitely doesn’t make me a polyglot. Of course, there are people who are truly fluent in several languages but I can hardly imagine their journey and the amount of time it took. Keeping your goals and motivation in check is also an issue. And if defining a reason for speaking English is simple because you can’t do without it in the modern world, with the other languages you have to really think hard. I still have no idea why I need German and Japanese, I just like the idea of speaking them. Idk maybe that’s the problem that slows me down in my studies or it’s just that I don’t know how to study more efficiently. Sometimes I also get the feeling that polyglots spend all of their waking hours studying languages XD Anyways, thank you for sharing your thoughts, definitely subscribing to your channel!

  • @kathryngordon7364
    @kathryngordon73644 жыл бұрын

    It's good that you're honest about your experience.

  • @saltedwithfire4132
    @saltedwithfire41323 жыл бұрын

    The honesty is so refreshing, as usual.

  • @MRrZero
    @MRrZero2 жыл бұрын

    I respect your positive attitude and humility. Very humble.

  • @gwimmer98
    @gwimmer984 жыл бұрын

    You can learn the basics of any language and a couple of the most important vocabulary in two weeks with little more than an hour daily. Why do I know? Because I “learned” Italian while on vacation in Italy for two weeks during the siesta hours. I do not speak Italian, but it’s enough to order a drink and to pull a trick at a party. Really learning a language is way harder and needs a tone of commitment!

  • @HollyOak

    @HollyOak

    4 жыл бұрын

    I learnt enough Tagalog in 2 weeks, while in the Philippines to convince a native speaker I was fluent - until we got to the end of my knowledge that is. There is something special about learning while in the country that speaks that language. It's an added motivation, but that's not the same as spending that 1 hour a day back home where you aren't surrounded by the language all day.

  • @logarithm0

    @logarithm0

    4 жыл бұрын

    LOL. In those two weeks, did you also learn that siesta is not a word in Italian?

  • @thisisbgm
    @thisisbgm4 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate your focus on figuring out what's needed to speak languages reallllly well rather than knowing a bunch of phrases and hand gestures and filler words in a bunch of different languages. That's what I'm going for too

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yeah in fact I've recently put French on hold to focus on Swedish because I'm not happy with my level.

  • @jacobnatseway3993
    @jacobnatseway39934 жыл бұрын

    Recently subscribed! Looking forward to watching the rest of your videos. I've been "learning" Greek for about a year and a half but only more intensively the past month. Definitely my test run for language learning.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thank you!

  • @elijahwrites
    @elijahwrites2 жыл бұрын

    I tried learning french and spanish for years and years and I got so frustrated. I could barely communicate in Spanish even in Mexico. Started learning norwegian and I feel refreshed. I want to learn swedish after getting to decent level of norwegian. Mastering a language and being able to speak about politics and philosophy in it is better being able to order some tacos in 3 languages.

  • @dangmefinnish
    @dangmefinnish4 жыл бұрын

    I love your channel because you are relatable and realistic. I don't need advice from language geniuses. I need advice from someone who has similar challenges to me. Thank you so much. And now I need to go watch some French videos...

  • @LetsLanguageTogether
    @LetsLanguageTogether4 жыл бұрын

    I loved this video. I also really value being able to speak a language to a high level instead of knowing 5 or 6 at a very basic level. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but it was great to see a video talk about that.

  • @fixiofangfang
    @fixiofangfang3 жыл бұрын

    It's actually very relaxing to listen to you sharing your experience. When I started watching language learning videos on KZread I felt really motivated, until I noticed it could also have adverse effects on how much I enjoyed actually learning the language (and it seems you may have been a victim of that as well). Don't get me wrong I still use youtube a lot for language learning but you need to be careful about how you approach it. My experience is similar to yours: I started getting into language learning at 30 (Japanese - difficult enough to not even think about another one!), and it had been almost 10 years since the last time I actively studied a language (English). After 2 years I'm quite happy where I'm at, but I know I could easily feel like I didn't do enough and I didn't study the right way and I should have reached this level much faster and blablabla, if I were to focus on these thoughts and to compare myself to youtube polyglots. When I started japanese I thought to myself "it's gonna be at least a 10 year journey to reach a point where I feel a real sense of achievement", and I'm sticking to that. Actually if you compare yourself to real life people with day jobs learning the language on the limited free time they have, you will see that you're making a ton of progress. Anyway, thanks for your honesty and stay motivated!

  • @Anna-bm3oe
    @Anna-bm3oe4 жыл бұрын

    I consider myself a polyglot, my mother tongue is portuguese. I'm C1 in english., B2 in japanese (Kanji is very hard so yeah), and B2 in spanish. Now I'm learning italian and french! :)

  • @aafrophonee
    @aafrophonee Жыл бұрын

    I've seen this video a couple of times before, but I just wanna say this video has one of my favorite thumbnails. I smile every time it pops up on my feed.

  • @Bobertjr559
    @Bobertjr5594 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for being real. Long story short, I studied French in school (America) for 5 years, and would have rather spent that time learning to tolerate walking on hot coal. 17 years later (September 2019) I decided to return to French. Your channel is why. I watched your French speaking video and your honesty with your struggles connected. Thanks for not being a polyglot.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Merci, vraiment. C'est cool de recervoir ces genres de commentaires. 😊

  • @Akab
    @Akab4 жыл бұрын

    (not all)Polyglot youtubers be like: "LoOok At Me IaM A PoLyGlOt, Ic cAn SaY HeLlO iN 20 DiFfErEnT LangUaGeS"

  • @isaibro
    @isaibro2 жыл бұрын

    When I was in university I thought I spoke such good French... until I actually moved to France had had to speak to French people all the time. I thought my Spanish was really solid, until I moved to Spain and actually had to try to understand Spanish being spoken by Spanish people. It took me yeeeeaaaaars of living in the countries and struggling to communicate at times before I got “very fluent”. That’s what it takes. I don’t even know why someone would want to be fluent in 10+ languages. The learning process is supposed to be savored and done carefully, not something done in a rush in order to get views on KZread videos.

  • @madebyroots-venezuela4489
    @madebyroots-venezuela44894 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video! I consider myself just like you.. now I try to concentrate in one language at the time. coz I was frustrated for so long trying to study 3 languages at the same time, and on top of it, those are Russian, German, and Chinese. What it made me improved was the luck I had of having the chance of living in the countries of these languages. So, I can say by now I speak a really decent Russian, I would say B2 with mistakes.. German C1.1 but it took me so much time, frustration and hard working to reach these levels and I don’t feel I’m fluent enough, in terms of I what I consider being a fluent in a foreign language. And well.. my chinese has dropped down by the fact that I’ve been focused on my German and practicing my Russian as well. Honestly I find your channel super motivational because you say the true story, thoughts, and journey of what it’s learn a foreign language like.. I wish you all the best on your learning journey.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Danke... Spatsiba or whatever it is they say... and yeah I have no idea what the Chinese is haha!

  • @ReeseCpeaces
    @ReeseCpeaces4 жыл бұрын

    This is a great video I would love to see a break down of your language learning schedule

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Will try to do that. It (my language learning schedule) is becoming more regular but honestly it's still a long way from where I'd like it be, and still pretty random. Two days in a row with nothing and then 4 hours of listening and an iTalki lesson haha.

  • @r21guns74
    @r21guns744 жыл бұрын

    Honestly, I choose your channel over any polyglot any day. Maybe it's because I don't want to be a polyglot myself, my life goal is to become fluent in both Welsh and Italian. Welsh because simply, I am Welsh and I'm very proud of it. And Italian because I adore the Italian culture, and I recently found out I have Italian in my blood. So that's my motivation. But beside that, I honestly have a lot of respect for you and your videos because you are very genuine, fair, and you have a lot of knowledge on this subject. That in itself has brought me back to your videos and I'm sure that is the same for everyone else too! Basically, I feel like you are just like all of us, we are all on the same journey with our languages, no matter what stage we're at, you make us feel like we're all equal. So keep being you buddy and keep making great content! Much love :)

  • @JohnPaulCauchi
    @JohnPaulCauchi4 жыл бұрын

    Nice vid man. I'm from Melbourne, started learning my first foreign language this year at 27yo. Channels like yours are way more relatable than many of the polyglot channels out there which is why you have such a fan-base already. Another example to highlight your point is like a beginner athlete taking advice from an olympic champion. Pro athletes are SO FAR AHEAD that can't even relate to the struggles of the beginner. I've heard polyglots dismiss common beginner questios (such as "how do i retain new words better?" etc) with "oh it's not that hard". And many of the time, these guys learned 2-3 languages before they were teenagers and literally don't understand the challenges that monoglot adults have to face in order to improve. It's also a big misconception that someone has to be elite to share wisdom or value. Although you "only" know two foreign languages and although you've "only" been studying for 3 years, you have plenty of wisdom and value to deliver. So thanks for your channel my dude, please keep posting regularly.

  • @GabrielBarbosa-yp4vy
    @GabrielBarbosa-yp4vy2 жыл бұрын

    Well, I do think you are a successful language learner, as you can communicate your ideas both in Swedish and in French. I used to say that I'm not good enough in English, although I've been studying it for quite a long time. Then I realized all the amazing things I can already do in this language (like following your channel, talking to my friends from abroad, performing tasks in English at my job). The thought of "I'm not good enough" isn't healthy. Congratulations from Brazil!

  • @beesr
    @beesr10 ай бұрын

    Really appreciate your attitude here, I've learnt two languages to a fairly high level before and when I decided to pick another back up after dropping it some time ago I ended up watching language learning videos on here - it's very easy to feel inadequate pretty quickly when everyone who makes the videos seems to have "learnt" 10+ languages and it felt like this is what you have to do to be a real language enthusiast. For me personally I think it's more rewarding to continue to progress in the ones I've learnt already to get as good as I can, although there are a couple of languages I'd like to learn to a more basic level because I think it could be useful, but I'm done with dabbling in languages or having a list of ones to learn next when I know that's not realistic for me! I'll probably never be a polyglot and that's ok! (Although this has meant accepting that I won't be learning Swedish after all, which despite having no real use for I am intrigued by!) keep doing what you do :)

  • @julbombning4204
    @julbombning42044 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for pointing this out. You've earned my subscription. I had one year anniversary of studying spanish last month and realized that youtube polyglots just wants to monetize their business selling the idea of an asap recipe. Btw im swedish and your swedish is very good!

  • @Ihatemyusernamemore
    @Ihatemyusernamemore3 жыл бұрын

    Feeling this video. I'm actually a disciple I guess you could say of Matt's, I've followed his videos as consistently as I can, with frequent lapses in discipline. and I love watching how you saw Matt's incredible results and method and made some adjustments to your own study based on it, so many people don't even hear the MIA/AJATT ideas out but you're a genuinely driven guy who wants a result and is willing to do what it takes to get it, which is pretty rare in youtube language learning, so I've subbed.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think one reason that it's really rare in KZread is that there is something quite contradictory about being a YTer and a language learner. I like making content, but I would spend more time learning Swedish if I could... but content has also become work that I actually kinda rely on (especially this year with normal work being less reliable). But for the channels who genuinely make a living from talking about language learning... there's just not that much time left for the real thing. Olly Richards is pretty upfront about this - he's got his own business these days and it's a good thing he learnt the languages he did when he did, because he has barely any time left for it nowadays. So yeah... my Swedish learning is slower than I'd like it to be but then I get to make content for this too which I also like. Thanks for your encouragement!

  • @robertoestrangeiro
    @robertoestrangeiro4 жыл бұрын

    That's so true !

  • @andreavalentinaperez2734
    @andreavalentinaperez27342 жыл бұрын

    Spanish and English are my main languages from childhood. I've been learning Portuguese and french for a while now. I plan on learning arabic because i'm passionate for it and know the alphabet and travel basics. For me is basically "adopting" a language for life. I closed the door for any other languages, because with these five i have a lot to learn, live and sing. I am a singer and sing in those languages. I dont want to be a youtube polyglot, the reality is i'll learn throughout the years. My goal is to function in the five languages by the time i turn 40 (I'm 20). I have a lot of time! But especially arabic will take me my whole life.

  • @concaro5727
    @concaro57274 жыл бұрын

    I've learned French for almost seven years (school included, so most of this time wouldn't really count as full dedicated learning) and Italian for about two years, and I felt pretty comfortable and fluent in both of them, and was 'ready to move on to the next language', until I decided to read more of some deeper french and italian literature and and write my own texts, I realized how much vocab is still missing. For a moment I was very frustrated, because I thought I had a good level of fluency, but I accepted it and now I continue learning and improving to reach a much higher level :) Your videos help keeping it real!

  • @nick-hu1nx

    @nick-hu1nx

    4 жыл бұрын

    i think it comes down to a realistic view of your goals, the time and effort you can realistically put in, and to simply not expect to have the language skills you have in your native tongue anytime soon. lets just say your 30, and english is your first language. thats thirty years of practicing english a whole usually 12 years of english schooling and you are still likely to run into words you dont know. i think it is also worth considering that Days of French n Sweedish has recently tried an extreamly difficult task of learning 2 languages at the same time and found himself unhappy with the results. there are probably diminishing returns even if you do devote all of the time to be fair to both. so he might be down mentally or emotionally not that this is not a great video to reality check people setting insane goals. (i dont think his goals were crazy but maybe just too high for learning 2 languages at once.)

  • @MatthewRaymondBoyle
    @MatthewRaymondBoyle3 жыл бұрын

    Solid reality check! Thank you!

  • @AyanAcademy
    @AyanAcademy3 жыл бұрын

    Good work man! Keep it up!

  • @manamemajeff6283
    @manamemajeff62833 жыл бұрын

    Love you Lamont~!

  • @law1775
    @law17753 жыл бұрын

    I love this channel!

  • @peterstrianus1790
    @peterstrianus17904 жыл бұрын

    I am on your same line. I speak English but I am trying to master it at an high level. Of course my primary interest is Estonian because I live here (currently I am attending B2 classes). Meanwhile for my pleasure I'm into the conversational japanese and arabic (but those are just during relaxing time very causally through Busuu).

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    What a lovely programme you have there!

  • @FlowUrbanFlow
    @FlowUrbanFlow4 жыл бұрын

    I subscribed because of this video. I really appreciate your openness and honestness as far as how polyglots are and how the fake polyglots act. I definitely appreciate your truthfulness and realness. I'm looking forward to your future content

  • @justlearnteam7991
    @justlearnteam79913 жыл бұрын

    Great points. It takes many years to learn multiple languages. Keep going forward :)

  • @mili_srna
    @mili_srna4 жыл бұрын

    Your honesty. I like it.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate that!

  • @mjinhamburg
    @mjinhamburg2 жыл бұрын

    I like your attitude!

  • @valter3112
    @valter31124 жыл бұрын

    Jag ville bara säga att jag älskar din kanal! Om du skulle vilja ha hjälp med svenska får du gärna höra av dig☺️☺️

  • @EasyFinnish
    @EasyFinnish4 жыл бұрын

    Good video! Ive studied languages but I'm not that one who learns a language in 3 months..

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Honestly I don't think anyone is, unless they a) live in the country b) refuse to speak any other language c) study outside of their normal life and d) are already quite lingustically able.

  • @Uninvisibl
    @Uninvisibl4 жыл бұрын

    Amen! You say what I think watching other youtubers, but it's stuff I wouldn't expected to get views. I thought you had to frame it the way they do to get people's attention.

  • @nicomartin8280
    @nicomartin82804 жыл бұрын

    You are very cool. I have english since 11 years at school and always been very bad. I just started to like languages a few monts ago. How I know a lot of wonderful people they have another native language. I want to learn more and start spanish now. I don't want to be like a native. My gool is to be able du understand the most, read normal difficold stuff and can express myself, even if I make misstakes. (Like in this text I guess xD)

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the comment!

  • @Noheatcooltech
    @Noheatcooltech3 жыл бұрын

    Ever heard of Language transfer? Would love to see a review on the app or even an interview with Mihalis the creator of it.

  • @kurootsuki3326
    @kurootsuki33264 жыл бұрын

    Strongly agree on MattvsJapan as well, its beautiful!

  • @liamanderson6424
    @liamanderson64244 жыл бұрын

    I want to be a reservist polyglot. Currently I can converse in Spanish and English at a moment's notice. Since I tend to forget most vocab and then the grammar because I never use the languages I learn, I just revise them once and a while to keep the grammar up. I can confidently revive my Portuguese and Italian to conversational level within 10 days to mobilise my rusty skills.

  • @jos7006
    @jos70063 жыл бұрын

    He who has a why can bear any how. I wanted to learn french because I live in bilingual Belgium and I wanted to be able to understand the french part, and for more work opportunities. After studying it on and off and back on again for a couple of years, I’ve been able to get a job where I need to speak french a couple of times per week at least. This has completely lit a fire under my my ass and now I want to be fluent more than ever just to avoid embarrassment lol

  • @irenemcnamara9699
    @irenemcnamara96994 жыл бұрын

    You don't have to be a polyglot to help us learn languages. You have given a lot of encouragement to me, especially to persist in learning a couple of languag es. Marco beaucoup.

  • @k1medward
    @k1medward4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your honesty and authenticity! I get annoyed with those popular-pretend polyglots here on KZread. I do believe there are true polyglots but they are rare. These popular KZreadrs are just giving false hope with their prepared videos.

  • @MrLilwallace
    @MrLilwallace3 жыл бұрын

    Starting at the age of 30 is no problem. I only started learning languages at 29, and now speak Spanish well enough that I've taught classes to natives in Mexico and Chile, and done television interviews. I also speak French and Portuguese at a B2 and B1 level respectively. I don't go crazy with study, either, just a little bit of each language each and every day.

  • @jameshuang2677
    @jameshuang26773 жыл бұрын

    Great video just one thing you said didn't quite align my own experience. I found language learning got easier as I got deeper into the language but you said it gets harder. What did you find became more difficult exactly? 🤔

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well I watched this back and couldn't actually find a bit where I said it gets "harder", only that the further you get into Swedish the harder it is. Obviously it's easier to like, order a beer or something if you've taken the language a lot further. But it gets harder in that you are more and more likely to encounter tough things, and different meanings that are expressed by small changes in pitch accent or something. At the start it's like "Det är bra med mig, tack." and people are like "You're progressing very fast!" but later on it's like "What's the difference in implication between these 6 words for "before"?"

  • @sonnenhafen5499
    @sonnenhafen54994 жыл бұрын

    this video was recommendet for me and i like your thoughts. just grounded. it's true, sometimes one should come back to the roots and not try everything at once and try to be lindie or steve, as you say... :)

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Exactly. You can't be like those people if you're always worried about who you are not.

  • @hil449

    @hil449

    Жыл бұрын

    thats for sure. I mean, their lives revolve around learning languages while most of us have this as a hobby. I cant even fanthom how lindie doesnt get burned out with so many languages lol

  • @PetraStaal
    @PetraStaal3 жыл бұрын

    Your view is like a breath of fresh air

  • @Clarabella-cl6gb
    @Clarabella-cl6gb4 жыл бұрын

    2:57 Almost perfect! "Ich bin immer bereit, Deutsch zu reden" Edit: great video by the way :)

  • @concaro5727

    @concaro5727

    4 жыл бұрын

    "Ich bin immer bereit zum Deutschreden" is valid as well. I would hear that a lot and I myself would use that without feeling it's weird about it

  • @Clarabella-cl6gb

    @Clarabella-cl6gb

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@concaro5727 Deshalb sagte ich ja "fast perfekt". Ich denke dass "bereit sein etwas zu tun" aber die korrekte Grammatik wäre. Du hast recht, man kann das andere schon auch sagen, Deutsche sprechen ja auch kein perfektes Deutsch. Aber es ist doch immer praktisch zu hören, wie etwas noch besser ginge, vor allem wenn man es selbst nicht so einfach überprüfen kann. Aber du hast absolut recht dass man das andere definitiv auch sagen kann, dabei verwendet man "Deutschreden" dann halt als Substantiv.

  • @malcolmlowe16
    @malcolmlowe163 жыл бұрын

    This is a good video.Tto give an example I've been studying russian quite intensively every day for three months. I have a much more solid base with Bulgarian having lived there(my level in Bulgarian could charitably have been called B1 when I left, but I haven't practiced it for a few months so my vocab has gone to shit). Also, there are a few useful structural similarities and phrases that you can, so to speak, transfer from Bulgarian to Russian. So I can express myself in those and other phrases and structures I've learned quite well. But there's no way, as you say, if confronted with an ordinary Russian speaker who doesn't have any english, my vocabulary would be big enough to meaningfully talk about most things. We could communicate effectively, but not because of my Russian ability - more because I would be able to get the gist from my experience with slavic languages + a bit of Russian. I like what you say about appearing to speak another language, because I think ppl get v. excited when they see that someone can speak in a certain way and pull of some idiomatic and interesting, perhaps even complex, phrases. However, said person might not be able to follow a slightly non-standard conversation in the same way. The most important thing is to praise all people who participate in language learning, even if they can't seem to make any progress or they're struggling, and not hold up anyone as an idol or a god or get sucked in by false promises.

  • @alexchavake3185
    @alexchavake31854 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Guatemala, as of May 2020 I've been studying two languages which are English (obviously) and Russian and even though I've gotten fairly good at them I always felt as if I just wasn't good enough. Why? The answer is quite simple, sometimes I falter in my languages and make some errors from time to time despite having been studying for years by now, but even worse is that I constantly watched all those people claiming to be polyglots on the internet. I sincerely felt bad but thanks to your video I understand that the most important thing is to be understood and be functional even if some mistakes let themselves be known from time to time. Thanks for the motivation, good luck.

  • @twoblocksdown5464

    @twoblocksdown5464

    4 жыл бұрын

    Привет. Почему ты решил учить русский?

  • @alexchavake3185

    @alexchavake3185

    4 жыл бұрын

    Jaguar Chicago я даже не знаю, сначала я хотел попросту хвастаться тем что умею говорить на некоторых разных языках перед друзьями но оказалось я в конечном итоге влюбился в этот язык. Конечно, ошибки всеё-таки бывают но я работаю над ним ))

  • @alexchavake3185

    @alexchavake3185

    4 жыл бұрын

    Всё-таки*

  • @crazydanger

    @crazydanger

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@alexchavake3185 молодец👏👏👏

  • @simonhakansson9300
    @simonhakansson93004 жыл бұрын

    Learning a language is like scaling a mountain at your own pace. Someone who has been rock climbing for decades obviously knows how to scale a mountain way faster than you do, but it doesn't really matter. If you work on your goal and your method of reaching that goal (study techniques etc.) regularly, you will succeed. It of course also means that you must put the work into it, I have an Australian friend who lives here in Sweden who talks about his desire to learn Swedish. I offered him some easy tips to learn vocabulary but after a few days, he just said that he didn't really have the energy to follow through. (which is understandable since everyone can speak English anyway).

  • @itzdayz2988
    @itzdayz29884 жыл бұрын

    Here’s the problem I’m facing. I’m learning Samoan, there is very few resources that can be efficient for self study, I’m blessed to have a native speaker in my family through my wife but there isn’t ever any very useful “programs” or teachers online for the language it just isnt available from what I’ve found. Samoan isn’t on the “difficulty scale” on the language learning scale either

  • @ShinobiNando
    @ShinobiNando3 жыл бұрын

    I had an experience like you described. I was at 13-14 fluent in French as I lived in Quebec, Canada. Jump forward 10 years later and living in the UK, my boss has a French footballer asking for someone that speaks French, he says " Nando does!" I froze on the spot 🤣.

  • @14xx07
    @14xx074 жыл бұрын

    can u make a comparison between Busuu and Babbel?

  • @bowbowbow9954
    @bowbowbow99543 жыл бұрын

    whats the name of the second background song? its lit. anyway, love your content!

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ha, thanks. It's from Soundstripe (stock music) and it's called Duromina, by Chelsea Gough.

  • @bowbowbow9954

    @bowbowbow9954

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords thank you! ive been watching all of your vids and find them extremely motivational and helpful. hope your language learning process has been going well so far and hope to see more vids soon

  • @TruthSerum
    @TruthSerum4 жыл бұрын

    One thing I am trying to decide is I get to go to study aboard in Russia in my junior or senior year of college and I am a sophomore right now. I want to have a solid base in the language about B1 and I am not sure how long it will take too reach it. I also have been learning Czech past 8 months and in January put Czech aside to start french and now I am in love with french and want to keep studying it but I know I have to start Russian soon, so I am not sure if I should stop my french now and go right on to Russian. Or wait until I have three months under my belt in french to move then to Russian. Once I come back from studying aboard in Russia I will then go back and refine my Czech and french up to b2. And hopefully have my Russian at C1 from studying aboard there. Thoughts?

  • @adenovirus.

    @adenovirus.

    4 жыл бұрын

    Truth Serum Russian is 2200 hours used very wisely. Chinese, Japanese and Korean 4400 hours

  • @MisterGames

    @MisterGames

    4 жыл бұрын

    IMO, start Russian right away.

  • @TruthSerum

    @TruthSerum

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MisterGames Does the brain still take in two languages as fast even if you give each 1 hour a day with right methods? Or is it better to do one and then do another? I have the time as a college student so I could I just wanna know if it works.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    What Jemmo said is totally correct (although I thought Korean was a bit easier than Chinese and Japanese) but here's what I would do: Sit down and map out (like with a literal pen and paper) what you want to achieve in your languages and how you might go about it. Do you have two peaks in your day? e.g. First thing in the morning and then right after dinner? If so then maybe you can study the different languages at the two peaks. The brain cannot take in 2 languages like it can take in 1. One is always better, but the problem is motivation. But if you've already done some French and now you want to learn Russian, then your French will always be ahead (because it's heaps easier and you've already started), so that's a good sign. Maybe watch my video in French about learning 2 languages at the same time - just check my channel for "Learning 2 languages at the same time" (sorry I can't grab the link right now).

  • @TruthSerum

    @TruthSerum

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords Thank you for your detailed and helpful response. if I might add your editing quality and video skills is on par with any of the pro's, I see your success written in stone. Keep up your work and I hope to keep learning more from you. Languages are freaking awesome.

  • @keilou_3296
    @keilou_32964 жыл бұрын

    when he becomes an actual polyglot that understands things well. Days of French ‘n’ Swedish ‘n’ Chinese ‘n’ Japanese ‘n’ Spanish ‘n’ Thai

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Haha, unlikely. More like Days of French n Swedish n Finnish n Serbian. But I like the ring of Days of French n Swedish. It's sort of a play on Days of Wine and Roses.

  • @pedropatury8039
    @pedropatury80394 жыл бұрын

    It's like when u are struggling with a subject and when u ask ur teacher about it he explains it as if it were the most simple thing in the world because for him it is and u still don't have a clue of what he is talking about then a classmate of urs come over and explains it in simpler way bc he was struggling in the same thing a while back.

  • @k.5425

    @k.5425

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep. Examples my French teacher and math teacher in senior high school.

  • @brianhynds6201
    @brianhynds62014 жыл бұрын

    Apart from the videos, I've often wondered if the polyglots could read books in the languages they speak or write an essay in those languages. Would they be able to speak to join in a conversation with a group of native speakers and speak spontaneously in the language? Do they really have 100% understanding of everything they hear and read?

  • @frankwaechter8676

    @frankwaechter8676

    4 жыл бұрын

    Very unlikely. Since they learn so many languages, at one point they have to sacrifice quality for that quantity, but maybe they just have different goals and don't care about fluency. However, I wouldn't say I 'speak' a language if I don't have at least a solid B1. But that's just my opinion.

  • @lauriegagnon279
    @lauriegagnon2792 жыл бұрын

    Im not sure what it truely means to be a polyglot so i cant say that i want to be one but i do want to learn many, many languages. I know french (first language) and english(fluent) learning spanish since 2 and a half years. But i havent done much i was studying about 30 minutes per day on average. Even though im not yet fluent in spanish, i started german AND russian. It motivates me. And i have a feeling of urgency as if I needed to at least understand all those languages fast even though im not done with spanish yet. And even english i need to maintain a bit. But i am really motivated.

  • @danieltemelkovski9828

    @danieltemelkovski9828

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm just curious, why the "urgency"? Are you afraid someone else will beat you to it or...?

  • @lauriegagnon279

    @lauriegagnon279

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@danieltemelkovski9828 i was very motivated but im slowing down in russian but i love that language i dont want to give it up but i dont do much i am concentrating in spanish and german first. I am not scared that someone would be better than me. There already are so many people better than me but I am competing with myself.

  • @adenovirus.
    @adenovirus.4 жыл бұрын

    This is so commonsense. Thanks.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you too!

  • @LucienDLawrence
    @LucienDLawrence4 жыл бұрын

    You're a good person.

  • @tedc9682
    @tedc96824 жыл бұрын

    Is "Lamont" a first name or surname? I'm mentioning you in an email. I'll just say "Lamont". You have some good ideas -- I've already heard a lot from Steve K and Luca L, and now I'm learning from you. I'm currently studying Chinese. I'm at "less than conversational level" in French and Spanish, which I studied many years ago. All I need is another 15,000 words in each and I'm fluent! Meanwhile, I'm enjoying studying 普通话. Thanks for all the good ideas.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    4 жыл бұрын

    Lamont is my first name.

  • @decluesviews2740
    @decluesviews27402 жыл бұрын

    I am just as impressed-if not more-with people who speak one foreign language extremely well as I am with someone who speaks 5 languages to a moderate degree. I mostly had to learn languages for reading (research). I did learn Spanish to B1, and I could give impromptu speeches and hold some conversations, but I was never satisfied with that. I struggle to speak Spanish and German. As one of my professors said, he can read complex theological texts in German, but he can’t order a cup of coffee. Similarly, I can do research in 3 or 4 foreign languages, but I am fluent in none of them. I’d rather be highly fluent in 1 or 2 of them.

  • @daysandwords

    @daysandwords

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well I think it's all valuable depending on your cicumstances. e.g. I can now read most stuff with realtive ease in Swedish, and speaking is OK but not amazing, but for now, I'm happy with just being able to understand everything said to me, because if worst came to worst, there'd be a few Swedish people chatting with each other and I'd be able to be involved in the conversation. But I would also be interested in knowing enough to read signs and stuff in 10 languages. I just don't like then trying to speak them.

  • @decluesviews2740

    @decluesviews2740

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@daysandwords I agree. And I do understand the appeal of learning several to a moderate degree. I’ve thought of doing so myself in the past. I only mean that for me, personally, at this moment (subject to change), I would like to be a fluent speaker of at least one or two foreign languages. After that, learning several to a moderate extent would be okay. Most of my languages were of necessity for research anyway, and to meet degree reading requirements where dictionary use was still allowed. That made me want to learn to speak, and being able to was frustrating. Being able to speak at B1 after only 8 weeks through a language course made me realize how inefficient my prior instruction had been in the States.

  • @treygray2817
    @treygray28174 жыл бұрын

    Similar situation. I started studying languages 18 months ago at age 31. Studied Spanish 3 months and French 10 months. I would be helpful in French in the situation described in this video, but not Spanish. Possibly could help in Spanish if the hypothetical women in distress wrote her issues down. Written communication is always easier to understand.

  • @Historyboi-vn7gd
    @Historyboi-vn7gd4 жыл бұрын

    That's a bit situational, I'm studying French and Spanish two languages extremely close to my native language and I'm studying quite a bit. 2 Hours for each a day, plus I'm am also watching a bit of French and Spanish TV, if you take in this and the similarities (not just the vocab a lot of the Grammar is similar) So in six months I could be at a very decent level, not fluent of course For the rest yeah you're right you'll need to practice it a lot more than six months, especially if the language is not that easy and similar to one you already speak Btw thanks for recommending me Busuu it's helping me a lot

  • @CrazeeFy

    @CrazeeFy

    4 жыл бұрын

    You italian or portuguese, right

  • @Historyboi-vn7gd

    @Historyboi-vn7gd

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@CrazeeFy yes, I'm Italian

  • @DanClapp
    @DanClapp2 жыл бұрын

    Me all happy that I was able to understand the absolute bare minimum amount of German that you spoke :D

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