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The secrets of learning a new language

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    I love learning foreign languages.
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    In fact, I love it so much that I like
    to learn a new language every two years,
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    currently working on my eighth one.
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    When people find that out about me,
    they always ask me,
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    "How do you do that? What's your secret?"
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    And to be honest, for many years,
    my answer would be,
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    "I don't know. I simply
    love learning languages."
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    But people were never
    happy with that answer.
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    They wanted to know why they are spending
    years trying to learn even one language,
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    never achieving fluency,
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    and here I come, learning
    one language after another.
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    They wanted to know
    the secret of polyglots,
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    people who speak a lot of languages.
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    And that made me wonder, too,
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    how do actually other polyglots do it?
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    What do we have in common?
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    And what is it that enables us
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    to learn languages
    so much faster than other people?
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    I decided to meet other people
    like me and find that out.
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    The best place to meet a lot of polyglots
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    is an event where hundreds
    of language lovers
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    meet in one place
    to practice their languages.
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    There are several such polyglot events
    organized all around the world,
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    and so I decided to go there
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    and ask polyglots
    about the methods that they use.
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    And so I met Benny from Ireland,
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    who told me that his method
    is to start speaking from day one.
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    He learns a few phrases
    from a travel phrasebook
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    and goes to meet native speakers
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    and starts having conversations
    with them right away.
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    He doesn't mind making
    even 200 mistakes a day,
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    because that's how he learns,
    based on the feedback.
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    And the best thing is, he doesn't
    even need to travel a lot today,
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    because you can easily have
    conversations with native speakers
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    from the comfort of
    your living room, using websites.
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    I also met Lucas from Brazil
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    who had a really interesting
    method to learn Russian.
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    He simply added a hundred random
    Russian speakers on Skype as friends,
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    and then he opened
    a chat window with one of them
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    and wrote "Hi" in Russian.
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    And the person replied, "Hi, how are you?"
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    Lucas copied this and put it
    into a text window with another person,
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    and the person replied,
    "I'm fine, thank you, and how are you?"
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    Lucas copied this
    back to the first person,
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    and in this way, he had two strangers
    have a conversation with each other
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    without knowing about it.
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    (Laughter)
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    And soon he would start typing himself,
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    because he had so many
    of these conversations
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    that he figured out how
    the Russian conversation usually starts.
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    What an ingenious method, right?
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    And then I met polyglots who always start
    by imitating sounds of the language,
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    and others who always learn the 500
    most frequent words of the language,
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    and yet others who always start
    by reading about the grammar.
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    If I asked a hundred different polyglots,
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    I heard a hundred different
    approaches to learning languages.
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    Everybody seems to have a unique way
    they learn a language,
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    and yet we all come to the same result
    of speaking several languages fluently.
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    And as I was listening to these polyglots
    telling me about their methods,
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    it suddenly dawned on me:
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    the one thing we all have in common
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    is that we simply found ways to enjoy
    the language-learning process.
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    All of these polyglots
    were talking about language learning
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    as if it was great fun.
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    You should have seen their faces
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    when they were showing me
    their colorful grammar charts
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    and their carefully handmade flash cards,
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    and their statistics
    about learning vocabulary using apps,
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    or even how they love to cook
    based on recipes in a foreign language.
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    All of them use different methods,
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    but they always make sure
    it's something that they personally enjoy.
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    I realized that this is actually
    how I learn languages myself.
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    When I was learning Spanish,
    I was bored with the text in the textbook.
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    I mean, who wants to read about Jose
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    asking about the directions
    to the train station. Right?
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    I wanted to read "Harry Potter" instead,
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    because that was
    my favorite book as a child,
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    and I have read it many times.
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    So I got the Spanish translation
    of "Harry Potter" and started reading,
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    and sure enough, I didn't understand
    almost anything at the beginning,
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    but I kept on reading
    because I loved the book,
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    and by the end of the book, I was able
    to follow it almost without any problems.
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    And the same thing happened
    when I was learning German.
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    I decided to watch "Friends,"
    my favorite sitcom, in German,
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    and again, at the beginning
    it was all just gibberish.
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    I didn't know where one word finished
    and another one started,
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    but I kept on watching every day
    because it's "Friends."
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    I can watch it in any language.
    I love it so much.
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    And after the second or third season,
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    seriously, the dialogue
    started to make sense.
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    I only realized this
    after meeting other polyglots.
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    We are no geniuses
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    and we have no shortcut
    to learning languages.
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    We simply found ways
    how to enjoy the process,
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    how to turn language learning
    from a boring school subject
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    into a pleasant activity
    which you don't mind doing every day.
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    If you don't like writing
    words down on paper,
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    you can always type them in an app.
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    If you don't like listening
    to boring textbook material,
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    find interesting content on YouTube
    or in podcasts for any language.
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    If you're a more introverted person
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    and you can't imagine speaking
    to native speakers right away,
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    you can apply the method of self-talk.
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    You can talk to yourself
    in the comfort of your room,
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    describing your plans for the weekend,
    how your day has been,
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    or even take a random
    picture from your phone
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    and describe the picture
    to your imaginary friend.
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    This is how polyglots learn languages,
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    and the best news is,
    it's available to anyone
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    who is willing to take the learning
    into their own hands.
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    So meeting other polyglots
    helped me realize
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    that it is really crucial
    to find enjoyment
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    in the process of learning languages,
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    but also that joy in itself is not enough.
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    If you want to achieve fluency
    in a foreign language,
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    you'll also need to apply
    three more principles.
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    First of all, you'll need
    effective methods.
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    If you try to memorize a list of words
    for a test tomorrow,
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    the words will be stored
    in your short-term memory
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    and you'll forget them after a few days.
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    If you, however,
    want to keep words long term,
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    you need to revise them
    in the course of a few days repeatedly
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    using the so-called space repetition.
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    You can use apps which are based
    on this system such as Anki or Memrise,
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    or you can write lists of word
    in a notebook using the Goldlist method,
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    which is also very popular
    with many polyglots.
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    If you're not sure which methods are
    effective and what is available out there,
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    just check out polyglots'
    YouTube channels and websites
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    and get inspiration from them.
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    If it works for them,
    it will most probably work for you too.
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    The third principle to follow
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    is to create a system in your learning.
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    We're all very busy and no one
    really has time to learn a language today.
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    But we can create that time
    if we just plan a bit ahead.
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    Can you wake up 15 minutes earlier
    than you normally do?
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    That would be the perfect time
    to revise some vocabulary.
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    Can you listen to a podcast
    on your way to work while driving?
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    Well, that would be great
    to get some listening experience.
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    There are so many things we can do
    without even planning that extra time,
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    such as listening to podcasts
    on our way to work
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    or doing our household chores.
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    The important thing is
    to create a plan in the learning.
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    "I will practice speaking
    every Tuesday and Thursday
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    with a friend for 20 minutes.
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    I will listen to a YouTube video
    while having breakfast.
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    If you create a system in your learning,
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    you don't need to find that extra time,
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    because it will become
    a part of your everyday life.
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    And finally, if you want to learn
    a language fluently,
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    you need also a bit of patience.
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    It's not possible to learn
    a language within two months,
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    but it's definitely possible to make
    a visible improvement in two months,
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    if you learn in small chunks every day
    in a way that you enjoy.
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    And there is nothing
    that motivates us more
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    than our own success.
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    I vividly remember the moment
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    when I understood the first joke
    in German when watching "Friends."
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    I was so happy and motivated
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    that I just kept on watching that day
    two more episodes,
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    and as I kept watching,
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    I had more and more of those moments
    of understanding, these little victories,
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    and step by step, I got to a level
    where I could use the language
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    freely and fluently to express anything.
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    This is a wonderful feeling.
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    I can't get enough of that feeling,
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    and that's why I learn
    a language every two years.
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    So this is the whole polyglot secret.
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    Find effective methods
    which you can use systematically
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    over the period of some time
    in a way which you enjoy,
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    and this is how polyglots learn
    languages within months, not years.
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    Now, some of you may be thinking,
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    "That's all very nice
    to enjoy language learning,
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    but isn't the real secret
    that you polyglots
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    are just super talented
    and most of us aren't?"
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    Well, there's one thing
    I haven't told you about Benny and Lucas.
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    Benny had 11 years of Irish Gaelic
    and five years of German at school.
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    He couldn't speak them
    at all when graduating.
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    Up to the age of 21, he thought
    he didn't have the language gene
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    and he could not speak another language.
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    Then he started to look
    for his way of learning languages,
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    which was speaking to native speakers
    and getting feedback from them,
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    and today Benny can easily
    have a conversation in 10 languages.
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    Lucas tried to learn English
    at school for 10 years.
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    He was one of the worst students in class.
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    His friends even made fun of him
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    and gave him a Russian textbook as a joke
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    because they thought he would never
    learn that language, or any language.
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    And then Lucas started
    to experiment with methods,
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    looking for his own way to learn,
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    for example, by having Skype chat
    conversations with strangers.
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    And after just 10 years,
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    Lucas is able to speak
    11 languages fluently.
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    Does that sound like a miracle?
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    Well, I see such miracles
    every single day.
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    As a language mentor,
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    I help people learn
    languages by themselves,
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    and I see this every day.
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    People struggle with language learning
    for five, 10, even 20 years,
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    and then they suddenly take
    their learning into their own hands,
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    start using materials which they enjoy,
    more effective methods,
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    or they start tracking their learning
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    so that they can appreciate
    their own progress,
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    and that's when suddenly
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    they magically find the language talent
    that they were missing all their lives.
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    So if you've also tried
    to learn a language
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    and you gave up,
    thinking it's too difficult
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    or you don't have the language talent,
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    give it another try.
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    Maybe you're also
    just one enjoyable method away
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    from learning that language fluently.
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    Maybe you're just one method away
    from becoming a polyglot.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The secrets of learning a new language
Speaker:
Lýdia Machová
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:45

English subtitles

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