Through CEFR it takes around 2000 hours for fluency in a hard language, how much time does it takes on average through your method to reach the same fluency level?
@destinyv8672 күн бұрын
This helped so much! I love phonetics 😍😍
@FluentForeverAppКүн бұрын
We're happy to hear you found this video helpful! We share your love for phonetics 💚
@I-is-me3 күн бұрын
How many grammar words are there in the whole grammar section to finish?
@FluentForeverAppКүн бұрын
Hi there! It depends on the language you want to learn, but generally, there are more than 1800 sentences in the app for each language.
@I-is-meКүн бұрын
I mean the words, individual words in the grammar section?
@CoffeeForTeaTime5 күн бұрын
this is melting my brain a little bit
@FluentForeverAppКүн бұрын
Don't worry; it takes a little patience and practice to understand this, but eventually, you will get the hang of it! 🙂
@SheilaAsh6 күн бұрын
is there one for Hindi?
@FluentForeverApp5 күн бұрын
Hello there! Unfortunately, we don't have a word list available to help you learn Hindi.
@SheilaAsh5 күн бұрын
@@FluentForeverApp Any plans to do one?
@FluentForeverAppКүн бұрын
Unfortunately, we have no plans to develop one at this time. 😔 But you never know, maybe this will change in the future!
@Portugues-gw6ze10 күн бұрын
So what's the best way to learn to produce all of these? Do you need to learn multiple different languages to get used to hearing them first?
@FluentForeverApp8 күн бұрын
We offer an English IPA deck here: fluent-forever.com/product/international-phonetic-alphabetipa-anki-deck/
@espiritufati10 күн бұрын
The visual placement of articulation is soo helpful I've been looking in so many places, thank you!!❤
@FluentForeverApp8 күн бұрын
Happy to help!
@antoniocardona196510 күн бұрын
😂
@lauratempestini571915 күн бұрын
Very good information but a bit quick. Please explain the dz phonogram and the gelato. I don’t understand the distinct.
@hbowman10816 күн бұрын
I was surprised learning French that there were only three nasal vowels because the CBC hockey announcers in English pronounce them differently in players' names. They are solidly distinct in Québec, but are not pronounced as given here. Québec also differentiates strongly between a and â.
@RicardoMartinez-oh9sq16 күн бұрын
He is by far the best of the best, he approaches his teaching from several angles, which makes his tutoring understandable to a detail. Good job!
@FluentForeverApp11 күн бұрын
We're happy to hear you found the video helpful!
@hbowman10816 күн бұрын
/ʌ/ isn't a thing in US English like this. Geoff Lindsey has a good video on the subject. USAns instead have stressed schwa. For instance, both vowels in "above" are schwa, while in southern British English, only the unstressed vowel is a schwa.
@hbowman10816 күн бұрын
"Mock" as pronounced by USAns. This sound was introduced by German immigrants.
@ikhebdieishetnietgoeddathe405719 күн бұрын
0:45 that isn’t /u/ in many of the words. Many words have /ɨ/ or /ɯ/ wrongly transcribed as /u/ in this video
@FluentForeverApp18 күн бұрын
Your feedback has been noted and will be taken into consideration as we review the video. Thanks for bringing this to our attention!
@SoyFanDeCnco20 күн бұрын
HOLA THANKS THIS IS VERY HELPFUL TO LEARN MORE KOREAN AND SPANISH AND FRENCH AND ITALIAN AND CHINESE AND PHILIPPINES AND HAWAIIAN AND OTHER LANGUAGES EVERY DAY BECAUSE MY HUSBAND THAT LIVES IN VENEZUELA WANT ME TO LEARN MORE KOREAN EVERY DAY AND SPANISH WORDS EVERY DAY SO THAT HIS FAMILIES CAN UNDERSTAND ME MORE CLEARLY FOR EVERY YEAR WHEN I LIVE WITH HIM SOON THANKS HELPFUL GAMSAHABNIDA 🙏 ARIGATO 🙏 !!!!!!! :) GRACIAS 🙏 XIE XIE 🙏
@FluentForeverApp14 күн бұрын
Happy to help!
@papisaoco70822 күн бұрын
This is the best explanation I’ve seen so far with the the details of the placements of the tongue and the images that really help to wrap your brain around the minor differences in the sounds. Awesome video
@FluentForeverApp20 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching! We're glad you found the video helpful 🙂
@user-bl6mg2bb7k22 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing this! It is helpful!
@FluentForeverApp18 күн бұрын
We're happy to hear you found the video helpful! 😀
@ungezoockt22 күн бұрын
Das ist schwer aber machbar. Sehr interessant.
@I-is-me23 күн бұрын
Is this really the fastest way to learn grammar?
@finnie439428 күн бұрын
Ironically, the /ʁ/ is much more natural to me than the /χ/ which I can't currently pronounce at all. I'm an American who barely knows any other language wth lol
@CJ464128 күн бұрын
Thann you!
@FluentForeverApp26 күн бұрын
We're glad you found the video helpful. Happy learning! 🙂
@genevaconventionsviolator3994Ай бұрын
Im having such a hard time distinguishing between aspirated [ts] and unaspirated [ts], anyone have some tips?
@makar8159Ай бұрын
too late but I'd argue that И following hard consonants, namely Ы, may be presented as a close /ɨ/. For me, it's never that close and is always more or less open, being a close-mid one, floating between, say, /ɪ/ and /ɘ/ (but sometimes too back). Polish and Ukrainian variants can distinctively be perceived and distinguished by my Russian ears and basically are often the same but at the same time more fronted than the Russian one 🤓🤓
@nica3658Ай бұрын
thank you so much
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
We are happy you found the video helpful!
@nomdeplume8355Ай бұрын
I still very much can not hear the difference between the Dutch "w" and the English "v". Your bottom lip most definitely has to touch top incisors for it to work. Otherwises, it's just a English "w".
@nikoemonАй бұрын
How do I contact you or send you a message, Gabriel, if I (Nikoemon) would like to ask you if you are interested in making or discovering a better solution to the IPA set of phonics, something more ROMAJI or ROMAN character friendly. I believe this possible but would like your input and don't know how to contact you or where to set up a safe (and disposable) contact address. Gabriel, if you would be possibly interested in talking about these vowels briefly, could you say something positive here for me to see your interest or not? Thank you ( ^.^ )(^.^ )/
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
Hi Nikoemon, thanks for your interest! Could you please contact our helpdesk at [email protected]? We'll make sure your message gets to the right department. Thanks!
@limbaksaАй бұрын
When I first learned that foreigners have a hard time distinguishing those three sounds, i was kinda surprised. Now I understand why.
@barbiyessАй бұрын
აბა რუსულის ტესტი ვის აქო💪💪💪
@TonyNes64Ай бұрын
_verpleegster_ ... That's a big word to pronounce!
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
Indeed, "verpleegster" is a tough one!
@TonyNes64Ай бұрын
"eu" and "ui" Dutch sounds are quite tricky 😂 I'm glad that some of those sounds exist in my native tongue, French ! ✌🏼
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
Lucky you Tony! 😄
@TonyNes64Ай бұрын
Let's be honest: this ain't the easiest alphabet I've had to learn ! But I'm enjoying it ! Dank !
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
You're welcome!
@DivinaStoneАй бұрын
I never want to hear anyone complain about the English language again. I'm gonna try to speak Korean to my Korean bf and end up saying something like, "I'm kick. Let's get sqeeze." 😮💨😂
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
That's so relatable! Languages can be tricky, but it's all part of the fun. 😄
@Kkoltovska2 ай бұрын
Thank you , the really powerful guide
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
We're glad you found it useful!
@v1.0792 ай бұрын
This thing has been really striking my brain… Can we really learn usable grammar that way or more simply, have you learned a Language’s grammar like this? Please answer clearly..
@FluentForeverAppАй бұрын
Hello there! It is completely achievable to learn grammar based on our app's method. You can learn more about how our founder, Gabe Wyner, learned languages with this method here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/lISKx6uBk8rMhNY.html
@rtperrett2 ай бұрын
Dutch vowels blow me away. It nice to see another Germanic language that is so close to English, to learn it's Orthography rules that are different from English, but much more regular. Do double vowel letters ever end words in Dutch?
@realistickid3292 ай бұрын
what The App you using?
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Hello there! While the app used in this video is Anki, we're excited to inform you that since the creation of this video, we've developed our own app you can use for Japanese learning (and 11 other languages)! You can learn more about it and explore its features on our website: fluent-forever.com/
@trii0dide2 ай бұрын
I'm having an issue where, I can see when editing the card that the diagram is there, but in the preview and in the actual reviews the diagram just doesn't appear
@michapurzynski85092 ай бұрын
a complete waste of time, that looks smart but wont get you any closer to your friench fluency. it's a nice theory but it's completely useless for anything practical
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Hello there! We know that not everyone learns the same way and that something that works for someone may not work for another person. That being said, we have seen many people make the progress they desire with the help of resources like our videos. Thanks for your feedback!
@me40002 ай бұрын
This is exactly the video I've been looking for! So many pronunciation videos say, "oh, the consonants are the same as English ^_^ , it's so easy" but I could always hear the difference in French audio. Thanks for finally being the one to point this out and explaining how to make the proper sounds! The mouth-shape diagrams and comparisons (cat's car vs. cat scar, etc) help tremendously. You're the hero we don't deserve :D
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your kind words. We're glad to hear that our video was helpful. Keep up the great work! 😊
@EiwaGreen-kc2wu2 ай бұрын
Do they came with pronunciation?
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Yes, they come with IPA transcriptions, gender, footnotes and recordings!
@euigorviana2 ай бұрын
Funcionou perfeitamente no Chrome, mas eu tive que colocar a Tab 1 para abrir um site qualquer para não dar erro (isso dentro da macro das 6 tabs). Eu dupliquei o código do google translate e coloquei abaixo da linha escrito "Open" da primeira Tab.
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Hi there! Thanks for sharing this workaround.
@lindafortin79992 ай бұрын
Bonjour, j’ai déjà appris la transcription phonétique américaine, mais je ne retrouvais pas les signes indiqués dans les mots comme : snake (que signifie la demi-lune en dessous de la I et après le ke que signifie le h?) de plus, dans nail (que signifie le signe ajouté sur le l?) et pourquoi le r comme dans le mot zebra (le r est indiqué à l’envers). Je vous remercie d’avoir fait une vidéo sur ce sujet si important et j’ai très hâte de recevoir une réponse de votre part pour m’expliquer les choses que je ne comprends pas. Merci et bonne journée! 🇨🇦Linda
@ladonnatutt78512 ай бұрын
Too cute
@drmichelelinski93252 ай бұрын
Tes vidéos sont formidables. Merci de tout ton travail. J’en suis immensément reconnaissant. 🙏🌊✌️❄️👍🍾🥂
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Happy to hear they are useful for you!
@CJ46412 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
You're welcome! Just a heads up that this is an older version of the video. If you'd like to view the updated one, feel free to check it out here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZGWlsdeBeLLYmto.htmlfeature=shared
@jesunclaro15922 ай бұрын
It's not a good idea to practice ح with a cough lol.
@humano83592 ай бұрын
Mds nn entendo 😢
@FluentForeverApp2 ай бұрын
Hello there! If you have trouble understanding the video because it is in English, KZread has the option to add subtitles to the video. Perhaps this is an option that can help you.
Thanks a lot! surprised that this guide still works
@FluentForeverApp3 ай бұрын
Hello there! We are glad you found this video helpful!
@maikersanchezleon86863 ай бұрын
Excellent videos, I always follow your work. Only one thing I think it's important to highlight: these two sounds /ə/ and /ø/, aren't the same. Now that I have been studying french for a while I can notice the difference between them. And basically for the first one /ə/ your tongue stays low and your lips are kinda round but relax and ofc the pronunciation is quicker than the other sound.
@FluentForeverApp3 ай бұрын
Hello there! Thank you for the comment. We wish you continued success in learning French!
Пікірлер
Through CEFR it takes around 2000 hours for fluency in a hard language, how much time does it takes on average through your method to reach the same fluency level?
This helped so much! I love phonetics 😍😍
We're happy to hear you found this video helpful! We share your love for phonetics 💚
How many grammar words are there in the whole grammar section to finish?
Hi there! It depends on the language you want to learn, but generally, there are more than 1800 sentences in the app for each language.
I mean the words, individual words in the grammar section?
this is melting my brain a little bit
Don't worry; it takes a little patience and practice to understand this, but eventually, you will get the hang of it! 🙂
is there one for Hindi?
Hello there! Unfortunately, we don't have a word list available to help you learn Hindi.
@@FluentForeverApp Any plans to do one?
Unfortunately, we have no plans to develop one at this time. 😔 But you never know, maybe this will change in the future!
So what's the best way to learn to produce all of these? Do you need to learn multiple different languages to get used to hearing them first?
We offer an English IPA deck here: fluent-forever.com/product/international-phonetic-alphabetipa-anki-deck/
The visual placement of articulation is soo helpful I've been looking in so many places, thank you!!❤
Happy to help!
😂
Very good information but a bit quick. Please explain the dz phonogram and the gelato. I don’t understand the distinct.
I was surprised learning French that there were only three nasal vowels because the CBC hockey announcers in English pronounce them differently in players' names. They are solidly distinct in Québec, but are not pronounced as given here. Québec also differentiates strongly between a and â.
He is by far the best of the best, he approaches his teaching from several angles, which makes his tutoring understandable to a detail. Good job!
We're happy to hear you found the video helpful!
/ʌ/ isn't a thing in US English like this. Geoff Lindsey has a good video on the subject. USAns instead have stressed schwa. For instance, both vowels in "above" are schwa, while in southern British English, only the unstressed vowel is a schwa.
"Mock" as pronounced by USAns. This sound was introduced by German immigrants.
0:45 that isn’t /u/ in many of the words. Many words have /ɨ/ or /ɯ/ wrongly transcribed as /u/ in this video
Your feedback has been noted and will be taken into consideration as we review the video. Thanks for bringing this to our attention!
HOLA THANKS THIS IS VERY HELPFUL TO LEARN MORE KOREAN AND SPANISH AND FRENCH AND ITALIAN AND CHINESE AND PHILIPPINES AND HAWAIIAN AND OTHER LANGUAGES EVERY DAY BECAUSE MY HUSBAND THAT LIVES IN VENEZUELA WANT ME TO LEARN MORE KOREAN EVERY DAY AND SPANISH WORDS EVERY DAY SO THAT HIS FAMILIES CAN UNDERSTAND ME MORE CLEARLY FOR EVERY YEAR WHEN I LIVE WITH HIM SOON THANKS HELPFUL GAMSAHABNIDA 🙏 ARIGATO 🙏 !!!!!!! :) GRACIAS 🙏 XIE XIE 🙏
Happy to help!
This is the best explanation I’ve seen so far with the the details of the placements of the tongue and the images that really help to wrap your brain around the minor differences in the sounds. Awesome video
Thanks for watching! We're glad you found the video helpful 🙂
Thanks for sharing this! It is helpful!
We're happy to hear you found the video helpful! 😀
Das ist schwer aber machbar. Sehr interessant.
Is this really the fastest way to learn grammar?
Ironically, the /ʁ/ is much more natural to me than the /χ/ which I can't currently pronounce at all. I'm an American who barely knows any other language wth lol
Thann you!
We're glad you found the video helpful. Happy learning! 🙂
Im having such a hard time distinguishing between aspirated [ts] and unaspirated [ts], anyone have some tips?
too late but I'd argue that И following hard consonants, namely Ы, may be presented as a close /ɨ/. For me, it's never that close and is always more or less open, being a close-mid one, floating between, say, /ɪ/ and /ɘ/ (but sometimes too back). Polish and Ukrainian variants can distinctively be perceived and distinguished by my Russian ears and basically are often the same but at the same time more fronted than the Russian one 🤓🤓
thank you so much
We are happy you found the video helpful!
I still very much can not hear the difference between the Dutch "w" and the English "v". Your bottom lip most definitely has to touch top incisors for it to work. Otherwises, it's just a English "w".
How do I contact you or send you a message, Gabriel, if I (Nikoemon) would like to ask you if you are interested in making or discovering a better solution to the IPA set of phonics, something more ROMAJI or ROMAN character friendly. I believe this possible but would like your input and don't know how to contact you or where to set up a safe (and disposable) contact address. Gabriel, if you would be possibly interested in talking about these vowels briefly, could you say something positive here for me to see your interest or not? Thank you ( ^.^ )(^.^ )/
Hi Nikoemon, thanks for your interest! Could you please contact our helpdesk at [email protected]? We'll make sure your message gets to the right department. Thanks!
When I first learned that foreigners have a hard time distinguishing those three sounds, i was kinda surprised. Now I understand why.
აბა რუსულის ტესტი ვის აქო💪💪💪
_verpleegster_ ... That's a big word to pronounce!
Indeed, "verpleegster" is a tough one!
"eu" and "ui" Dutch sounds are quite tricky 😂 I'm glad that some of those sounds exist in my native tongue, French ! ✌🏼
Lucky you Tony! 😄
Let's be honest: this ain't the easiest alphabet I've had to learn ! But I'm enjoying it ! Dank !
You're welcome!
I never want to hear anyone complain about the English language again. I'm gonna try to speak Korean to my Korean bf and end up saying something like, "I'm kick. Let's get sqeeze." 😮💨😂
That's so relatable! Languages can be tricky, but it's all part of the fun. 😄
Thank you , the really powerful guide
We're glad you found it useful!
This thing has been really striking my brain… Can we really learn usable grammar that way or more simply, have you learned a Language’s grammar like this? Please answer clearly..
Hello there! It is completely achievable to learn grammar based on our app's method. You can learn more about how our founder, Gabe Wyner, learned languages with this method here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/lISKx6uBk8rMhNY.html
Dutch vowels blow me away. It nice to see another Germanic language that is so close to English, to learn it's Orthography rules that are different from English, but much more regular. Do double vowel letters ever end words in Dutch?
what The App you using?
Hello there! While the app used in this video is Anki, we're excited to inform you that since the creation of this video, we've developed our own app you can use for Japanese learning (and 11 other languages)! You can learn more about it and explore its features on our website: fluent-forever.com/
I'm having an issue where, I can see when editing the card that the diagram is there, but in the preview and in the actual reviews the diagram just doesn't appear
a complete waste of time, that looks smart but wont get you any closer to your friench fluency. it's a nice theory but it's completely useless for anything practical
Hello there! We know that not everyone learns the same way and that something that works for someone may not work for another person. That being said, we have seen many people make the progress they desire with the help of resources like our videos. Thanks for your feedback!
This is exactly the video I've been looking for! So many pronunciation videos say, "oh, the consonants are the same as English ^_^ , it's so easy" but I could always hear the difference in French audio. Thanks for finally being the one to point this out and explaining how to make the proper sounds! The mouth-shape diagrams and comparisons (cat's car vs. cat scar, etc) help tremendously. You're the hero we don't deserve :D
Thank you for your kind words. We're glad to hear that our video was helpful. Keep up the great work! 😊
Do they came with pronunciation?
Yes, they come with IPA transcriptions, gender, footnotes and recordings!
Funcionou perfeitamente no Chrome, mas eu tive que colocar a Tab 1 para abrir um site qualquer para não dar erro (isso dentro da macro das 6 tabs). Eu dupliquei o código do google translate e coloquei abaixo da linha escrito "Open" da primeira Tab.
Hi there! Thanks for sharing this workaround.
Bonjour, j’ai déjà appris la transcription phonétique américaine, mais je ne retrouvais pas les signes indiqués dans les mots comme : snake (que signifie la demi-lune en dessous de la I et après le ke que signifie le h?) de plus, dans nail (que signifie le signe ajouté sur le l?) et pourquoi le r comme dans le mot zebra (le r est indiqué à l’envers). Je vous remercie d’avoir fait une vidéo sur ce sujet si important et j’ai très hâte de recevoir une réponse de votre part pour m’expliquer les choses que je ne comprends pas. Merci et bonne journée! 🇨🇦Linda
Too cute
Tes vidéos sont formidables. Merci de tout ton travail. J’en suis immensément reconnaissant. 🙏🌊✌️❄️👍🍾🥂
Happy to hear they are useful for you!
Thank you!
You're welcome! Just a heads up that this is an older version of the video. If you'd like to view the updated one, feel free to check it out here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZGWlsdeBeLLYmto.htmlfeature=shared
It's not a good idea to practice ح with a cough lol.
Mds nn entendo 😢
Hello there! If you have trouble understanding the video because it is in English, KZread has the option to add subtitles to the video. Perhaps this is an option that can help you.
I am better btw 1. English: Hello 2. Spanish: Hola 3. French: Bonjour 4. German: Hallo 5. Italian: Ciao 6. Portuguese: Olá 7. Russian: Привет (Privet) 8. Chinese (Mandarin): 你好 (Nǐ hǎo) 9. Japanese: こんにちは (Konnichiwa) 10. Arabic: مرحبا (Marhaba) 11. Hindi: नमस्ते (Namaste) 12. Korean: 안녕하세요 (Annyeonghaseyo) 13. Turkish: Merhaba 14. Dutch: Hallo 15. Swedish: Hej 16. Greek: Γεια σας (Yia sas) 17. Polish: Cześć 18. Thai: สวัสดี (Sawasdee) 19. Vietnamese: Xin chào 20. Swahili: Jambo 21. Hebrew: שָׁלוֹם (Shalom) 22. Norwegian: Hei 23. Finnish: Hei 24. Danish: Hej 25. Czech: Ahoj 26. Hungarian: Szia 27. Romanian: Buna ziua 28. Ukrainian: Привіт (Pryvit) 29. Indonesian: Halo 30. Malay: Hai 31. Filipino: Kumusta 32. Bengali: হ্যালো (Halo) 33. Persian: سلام (Salam) 34. Irish: Dia duit 35. Scottish Gaelic: Halò 36. Welsh: Helo 37. Hawaiian: Aloha 38. Maori: Kia ora 39. Icelandic: Halló 40. Catalan: Hola 41. Basque: Kaixo 42. Serbian: Здраво (Zdravo) 43. Croatian: Zdravo 44. Bosnian: Zdravo 45. Albanian: Përshëndetje 46. Macedonian: Здраво (Zdravo) 47. Lithuanian: Labas 48. Latvian: Sveiki 49. Estonian: Tere 50. Slovak: Ahoj 51. Slovenian: Zdravo 52. Maltese: Hello 53. Malagasy: Hello 54. Yoruba: Bawo 55. Hausa: Sannu 56. Igbo: Ndewo 57. Zulu: Sawubona 58. Xhosa: Molo 59. Sotho: Dumela 60. Tswana: Dumela 61. Sesotho: Lumela 62. Amharic: ሰላም (Salam) 63. Somali: Salaan 64. Oromo: Akkam 65. Afrikaans: Hallo 66. Uzbek: Salom 67. Azerbaijani: Salam 68. Kazakh: Сәлем (Sälem) 69. Kyrgyz: Салам (Salam) 70. Tajik: Салом (Salam) 71. Turkmen: Salam 72. Georgian: გამარჯობა (Gamarjoba) 73. Armenian: Բարեւ (Barev) 74. Urdu: ہیلو (Hello) 75. Pashto: سلام (Salam) 76. Kurdish: Silav 77. Nepali: नमस्कार (Namaskar) 78. Sinhala: හෙලෝ (Helo) 79. Tamil: வணக்கம் (Vanakkam) 80. Telugu: హలో (Halo) 81. Kannada: ಹಲೋ (Hālō) 82. Malayalam: ഹലോ (Halō) 83. Gujarati: હેલો (Hēlō) 84. Marathi: नमस्ते (Namaste) 85. Punjabi: ਸਤ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ (Sat srī akāl) 86. Assamese: হ্যালো (Halo) 87. Odia: ନମସ୍କାର (Namaskāra) 88. Khmer: ជំរាបសួរ (Chomreabsuor) 89. Lao: ສະບາຍດີ (Sabaidee) 90. Myanmar (Burmese): မင်္ဂလာပါ (Mingalabar) 91. Tibetan: བཀྲ་ཤིས་བདེ་ལེགས (Tashi delek) 92. Pashto: سلام (Salam) 93. Urdu: ہیلو (Hello) 94. Uzbek: Salom 95. Azerbaijani: Salam 96. Kazakh: Сәлем (Sälem) 97. Kyrgyz: Салам (Salam) 98. Tajik: Салом (Salam) 99. Turkmen: Salam 100. Georgian: გამარჯობა (Gamarjoba)
Deserves a like.
Thanks for sharing! That's awesome. 😊
Thank you!
Thanks a lot! surprised that this guide still works
Hello there! We are glad you found this video helpful!
Excellent videos, I always follow your work. Only one thing I think it's important to highlight: these two sounds /ə/ and /ø/, aren't the same. Now that I have been studying french for a while I can notice the difference between them. And basically for the first one /ə/ your tongue stays low and your lips are kinda round but relax and ofc the pronunciation is quicker than the other sound.
Hello there! Thank you for the comment. We wish you continued success in learning French!