The secrets of learning a new language Ldia Machov

I love learning foreign languages.

In fact, I love it so much that I like
to learn a new language every two years,

currently working on my eighth one.

When people find that out about me,
they always ask me,

“How do you do that? What’s your secret?”

And to be honest, for many years,
my answer would be,

“I don’t know. I simply
love learning languages.”

But people were never
happy with that answer.

They wanted to know why they are spending
years trying to learn even one language,

never achieving fluency,

and here I come, learning
one language after another.

They wanted to know
the secret of polyglots,

people who speak a lot of languages.

And that made me wonder, too,

how do actually other polyglots do it?

What do we have in common?

And what is it that enables us

to learn languages
so much faster than other people?

I decided to meet other people
like me and find that out.

The best place to meet a lot of polyglots

is an event where hundreds
of language lovers

meet in one place
to practice their languages.

There are several such polyglot events
organized all around the world,

and so I decided to go there

and ask polyglots
about the methods that they use.

And so I met Benny from Ireland,

who told me that his method
is to start speaking from day one.

He learns a few phrases
from a travel phrasebook

and goes to meet native speakers

and starts having conversations
with them right away.

He doesn’t mind making
even 200 mistakes a day,

because that’s how he learns,
based on the feedback.

And the best thing is, he doesn’t
even need to travel a lot today,

because you can easily have
conversations with native speakers

from the comfort of
your living room, using websites.

I also met Lucas from Brazil

who had a really interesting
method to learn Russian.

He simply added a hundred random
Russian speakers on Skype as friends,

and then he opened
a chat window with one of them

and wrote “Hi” in Russian.

And the person replied, “Hi, how are you?”

Lucas copied this and put it
into a text window with another person,

and the person replied,
“I’m fine, thank you, and how are you?”

Lucas copied this
back to the first person,

and in this way, he had two strangers
have a conversation with each other

without knowing about it.

(Laughter)

And soon he would start typing himself,

because he had so many
of these conversations

that he figured out how
the Russian conversation usually starts.

What an ingenious method, right?

And then I met polyglots who always start
by imitating sounds of the language,

and others who always learn the 500
most frequent words of the language,

and yet others who always start
by reading about the grammar.

If I asked a hundred different polyglots,

I heard a hundred different
approaches to learning languages.

Everybody seems to have a unique way
they learn a language,

and yet we all come to the same result
of speaking several languages fluently.

And as I was listening to these polyglots
telling me about their methods,

it suddenly dawned on me:

the one thing we all have in common

is that we simply found ways to enjoy
the language-learning process.

All of these polyglots
were talking about language learning

as if it was great fun.

You should have seen their faces

when they were showing me
their colorful grammar charts

and their carefully handmade flash cards,

and their statistics
about learning vocabulary using apps,

or even how they love to cook
based on recipes in a foreign language.

All of them use different methods,

but they always make sure
it’s something that they personally enjoy.

I realized that this is actually
how I learn languages myself.

When I was learning Spanish,
I was bored with the text in the textbook.

I mean, who wants to read about Jose

asking about the directions
to the train station. Right?

I wanted to read “Harry Potter” instead,

because that was
my favorite book as a child,

and I have read it many times.

So I got the Spanish translation
of “Harry Potter” and started reading,

and sure enough, I didn’t understand
almost anything at the beginning,

but I kept on reading
because I loved the book,

and by the end of the book, I was able
to follow it almost without any problems.

And the same thing happened
when I was learning German.

I decided to watch “Friends,”
my favorite sitcom, in German,

and again, at the beginning
it was all just gibberish.

I didn’t know where one word finished
and another one started,

but I kept on watching every day
because it’s “Friends.”

I can watch it in any language.
I love it so much.

And after the second or third season,

seriously, the dialogue
started to make sense.

I only realized this
after meeting other polyglots.

We are no geniuses

and we have no shortcut
to learning languages.

We simply found ways
how to enjoy the process,

how to turn language learning
from a boring school subject

into a pleasant activity
which you don’t mind doing every day.

If you don’t like writing
words down on paper,

you can always type them in an app.

If you don’t like listening
to boring textbook material,

find interesting content on YouTube
or in podcasts for any language.

If you’re a more introverted person

and you can’t imagine speaking
to native speakers right away,

you can apply the method of self-talk.

You can talk to yourself
in the comfort of your room,

describing your plans for the weekend,
how your day has been,

or even take a random
picture from your phone

and describe the picture
to your imaginary friend.

This is how polyglots learn languages,

and the best news is,
it’s available to anyone

who is willing to take the learning
into their own hands.

So meeting other polyglots
helped me realize

that it is really crucial
to find enjoyment

in the process of learning languages,

but also that joy in itself is not enough.

If you want to achieve fluency
in a foreign language,

you’ll also need to apply
three more principles.

First of all, you’ll need
effective methods.

If you try to memorize a list of words
for a test tomorrow,

the words will be stored
in your short-term memory

and you’ll forget them after a few days.

If you, however,
want to keep words long term,

you need to revise them
in the course of a few days repeatedly

using the so-called space repetition.

You can use apps which are based
on this system such as Anki or Memrise,

or you can write lists of word
in a notebook using the Goldlist method,

which is also very popular
with many polyglots.

If you’re not sure which methods are
effective and what is available out there,

just check out polyglots'
YouTube channels and websites

and get inspiration from them.

If it works for them,
it will most probably work for you too.

The third principle to follow

is to create a system in your learning.

We’re all very busy and no one
really has time to learn a language today.

But we can create that time
if we just plan a bit ahead.

Can you wake up 15 minutes earlier
than you normally do?

That would be the perfect time
to revise some vocabulary.

Can you listen to a podcast
on your way to work while driving?

Well, that would be great
to get some listening experience.

There are so many things we can do
without even planning that extra time,

such as listening to podcasts
on our way to work

or doing our household chores.

The important thing is
to create a plan in the learning.

“I will practice speaking
every Tuesday and Thursday

with a friend for 20 minutes.

I will listen to a YouTube video
while having breakfast.”

If you create a system in your learning,

you don’t need to find that extra time,

because it will become
a part of your everyday life.

And finally, if you want to learn
a language fluently,

you need also a bit of patience.

It’s not possible to learn
a language within two months,

but it’s definitely possible to make
a visible improvement in two months,

if you learn in small chunks every day
in a way that you enjoy.

And there is nothing
that motivates us more

than our own success.

I vividly remember the moment

when I understood the first joke
in German when watching “Friends.”

I was so happy and motivated

that I just kept on watching that day
two more episodes,

and as I kept watching,

I had more and more of those moments
of understanding, these little victories,

and step by step, I got to a level
where I could use the language

freely and fluently to express anything.

This is a wonderful feeling.

I can’t get enough of that feeling,

and that’s why I learn
a language every two years.

So this is the whole polyglot secret.

Find effective methods
which you can use systematically

over the period of some time
in a way which you enjoy,

and this is how polyglots learn
languages within months, not years.

Now, some of you may be thinking,

“That’s all very nice
to enjoy language learning,

but isn’t the real secret
that you polyglots

are just super talented
and most of us aren’t?”

Well, there’s one thing
I haven’t told you about Benny and Lucas.

Benny had 11 years of Irish Gaelic
and five years of German at school.

He couldn’t speak them
at all when graduating.

Up to the age of 21, he thought
he didn’t have the language gene

and he could not speak another language.

Then he started to look
for his way of learning languages,

which was speaking to native speakers
and getting feedback from them,

and today Benny can easily
have a conversation in 10 languages.

Lucas tried to learn English
at school for 10 years.

He was one of the worst students in class.

His friends even made fun of him

and gave him a Russian textbook as a joke

because they thought he would never
learn that language, or any language.

And then Lucas started
to experiment with methods,

looking for his own way to learn,

for example, by having Skype chat
conversations with strangers.

And after just 10 years,

Lucas is able to speak
11 languages fluently.

Does that sound like a miracle?

Well, I see such miracles
every single day.

As a language mentor,

I help people learn
languages by themselves,

and I see this every day.

People struggle with language learning
for five, 10, even 20 years,

and then they suddenly take
their learning into their own hands,

start using materials which they enjoy,
more effective methods,

or they start tracking their learning

so that they can appreciate
their own progress,

and that’s when suddenly

they magically find the language talent
that they were missing all their lives.

So if you’ve also tried
to learn a language

and you gave up,
thinking it’s too difficult

or you don’t have the language talent,

give it another try.

Maybe you’re also
just one enjoyable method away

from learning that language fluently.

Maybe you’re just one method away
from becoming a polyglot.

Thank you.

(Applause)

我喜欢学习外语。

事实上,我非常喜欢它,以至于我
喜欢每两年学习一门新语言,

目前正在学习我的第八门语言。

当人们发现我的情况时,
他们总是问我,

“你是怎么做到的?你的秘诀是什么?”

老实说,多年来,
我的回答都是:

“我不知道。我只是
喜欢学习语言。”

但人们
对这个答案从来都不满意。

他们想知道为什么他们花费数
年时间试图学习一种语言,却

始终无法流利,

而我来了,学习
一种又一种语言。

他们想知道会说
多种语言的多语种的秘密

这也让我想知道,

实际上其他多语种是如何做到的?

我们有什么共同点?

是什么让我们

能够
比其他人更快地学习语言?

我决定结识
像我这样的其他人并找出答案。

结识许多多语种的最佳地点

是数百
名语言爱好者

在一个地方聚会
练习他们的语言的活动。

世界各地组织了几场这样的多语种活动

,所以我决定去

那里询问多语种
他们使用的方法。

所以我遇到了来自爱尔兰的 Benny,

他告诉我他的方法
是从第一天开始讲话。

他从一本旅行短语手册中学到了一些短语

,然后去见说母语的人,

并立即开始
与他们交谈。

他不介意
每天犯 200 个错误,

因为这是他
根据反馈学习的方式。

最棒的是,他
今天甚至不需要经常出差,

因为您可以

在舒适
的客厅中使用网站轻松地与母语人士进行对话。

我还遇到了来自巴西的卢卡斯,

他有一种非常有趣的
俄语学习方法。

他只是在 Skype 上随机添加了 100 位说
俄语的人作为朋友,

然后他打开
了一个聊天窗口和其中一个人聊天,

并用俄语写了“嗨”。

那个人回答说:“嗨,你好吗?”

卢卡斯把这个抄下来,
放到另一个人的文本窗口中

,那个人回答说:
“我很好,谢谢,你好吗?”

卢卡斯把这话抄
回给第一个人

,就这样让两个陌生人
在不知情的情况下进行了对话

(笑声

) 很快他就会开始自己打字,

因为他有
很多这样的对话

,以至于他弄清楚
了俄语对话通常是如何开始的。

多么巧妙的方法,对吧?

然后我遇到了多语言的人,他们总是
从模仿语言的声音开始,

还有一些人总是学习
该语言中最常用的 500 个单词,

还有一些人总是
从阅读语法开始。

如果我问一百种不同的多语种,

我会听到一百种不同
的学习语言的方法。

每个人似乎都有一种独特的
学习语言的方式

,但我们都得到了相同的
结果,即能流利地说几种语言。

当我听这些多语种的人
告诉我他们的方法时,

我突然恍然大悟

:我们都有一个共同点,

就是我们只是找到了
享受语言学习过程的方法。

所有这些多语言的
人都在谈论语言学习

,好像它很有趣。

当他们向我展示
他们丰富多彩的语法图表

和他们精心制作的闪存卡,

以及他们
使用应用程序学习词汇的统计数据,

甚至他们如何喜欢
根据外语食谱烹饪时,你应该看到他们的脸。

他们都使用不同的方法,

但他们总是确保
这是他们个人喜欢的东西。

我意识到这实际上
是我自己学习语言的方式。

当我学习西班牙语时,
我对课本上的文字感到厌烦。

我的意思是,谁想读关于何塞

询问去火车站的方向的故事
。 对?

我想读《哈利波特》,

因为那是
我小时候最喜欢的书,

而且我已经读过很多遍了。

于是我拿到
了《哈利波特》的西班牙译本开始阅读

,果然一
开始我几乎什么都不懂,

但我一直在读,
因为我喜欢这本书,

到了书的最后,我
几乎可以毫无问题地跟随它。

同样的事情发生
在我学习德语的时候。

我决定看
德语版的我最喜欢的情景喜剧《老友记》,

而且一开始
那都是胡言乱语。

我不知道一个词在哪里结束,另一个词从哪里
开始,

但我每天都在看,
因为它是“朋友”。

我可以用任何语言观看它。
我非常喜欢。

在第二季或第三季之后,

严肃地说,对话
开始变得有意义。

我是
在遇到其他多语种后才意识到这一点的。

我们不是天才

,也没有
学习语言的捷径。

我们只是找到了
如何享受这个过程的方法,

如何将语言学习
从无聊的学校科目

变成
一种你不介意每天都做的愉快活动。

如果您不喜欢
在纸上写字,

您可以随时在应用程序中输入它们。

如果您不喜欢
听枯燥的教科书材料,

可以在 YouTube
或任何语言的播客中找到有趣的内容。

如果你是一个比较内向的人,

而且你无法想象
马上与母语人士

交谈,你可以应用自言自语的方法。

您可以
在舒适的房间里自言自语,

描述您的周末计划,
今天过得怎么样,

甚至可以
从手机中随机拍摄一张照片,

然后将照片描述
给您想象中的朋友。

这就是多语言者学习语言的方式

,最好的消息是
,任何

愿意自己学习
的人都可以使用它。

因此,与其他多语言人士的会面
帮助我

意识到,

在学习语言的过程中找到乐趣真的很重要,

但光有乐趣本身是不够的。

如果你想流利
地使用一门外语,

你还需要应用另外
三个原则。

首先,你需要
有效的方法。

如果你试图记住
明天考试的单词列表,

这些单词将存储
在你的短期记忆

中,几天后你就会忘记它们。

但是,如果您
想长期保留单词,

则需要
在几天内

使用所谓的空间重复反复修改它们。

您可以使用
基于此系统的应用程序,例如 Anki 或 Memrise,

或者您可以
使用 Goldlist 方法在笔记本中编写单词列表,该方法

在许多多语言者中也很流行。

如果您不确定哪些方法
有效以及哪些方法可用,

只需查看 polyglots 的
YouTube 频道和网站

并从中获取灵感。

如果它适用于他们,
它很可能也适用于你。

要遵循的第三个原则

是在您的学习中创建一个系统。

我们都很忙,今天没有人
真正有时间学习一门语言。

但是,如果我们提前计划一点,我们就可以创造那个时间

你能比平时早起 15 分钟
吗?

那将是
修改一些词汇的最佳时机。

您可以
在开车上班的路上收听播客吗?

好吧,如果
能获得一些聆听体验,那就太好了。

我们可以做很多事情
,甚至不需要计划额外的时间,

例如
在上班途中听播客

或做家务。

重要的是
在学习中制定计划。


每周二和周四我会

和朋友练习 20 分钟的口语。

我会
一边吃早餐一边听 YouTube 视频。”

如果你在学习中建立了一个系统,

你就不需要找到额外的时间,

因为它会
成为你日常生活的一部分。

最后,如果你想
流利地学习一门语言,

你还需要一点耐心。

在两个月内学习一门语言

是不可能的,但如果您每天以自己喜欢的方式小部分学习,那么绝对有可能
在两个月内取得明显的进步

没有什么

比我们自己的成功更能激励我们了。

我清楚地记得在看《老友记》

时,我明白了第一个
德语笑话的那一刻。

我很高兴也很动力

,那天我又继续看了
两集

,随着我继续看,

我有越来越多
的理解时刻,这些小胜利

,一步一步,我达到了一个
水平 我可以

自由流利地使用语言来表达任何东西。

这是一种美妙的感觉。

我无法获得足够的那种感觉

,这就是我
每两年学习一门语言的原因。

所以这就是整个多语种的秘密。

找到
可以

在一段时间
内以自己喜欢的方式系统地使用的有效方法

,这就是多
语言者在几个月内而不是几年内学习语言的方式。

现在,你们中的一些人可能会想,


享受语言学习真是太好了,

但真正的秘密不
就是你们多语种

的才华横溢
而我们大多数人都不是吗?”

好吧,
关于本尼和卢卡斯,我还没有告诉你一件事。

本尼在学校学习了 11 年的爱尔兰盖尔语
和 5 年的德语。 毕业时

他根本不会说这些话

直到21岁,他都认为
自己没有语言基因

,不会说另一种语言。

然后他开始
寻找自己的语言学习方式,

即与母语人士交谈
并从他们那里获得反馈

,今天 Benny 可以轻松
地用 10 种语言进行对话。

卢卡斯试图
在学校学习英语 10 年。

他是班上最差的学生之一。

他的朋友们甚至取笑他,

并给他一本俄语教科书作为玩笑,

因为他们认为他永远
学不会那种语言或任何语言。

然后卢卡斯开始
尝试各种方法,

寻找自己的学习方式,

例如与陌生人进行 Skype 聊天
对话。

仅仅 10 年后,

卢卡斯就能
流利地说 11 种语言。

这听起来像是一个奇迹吗?

好吧,我每天都看到这样的奇迹

作为语言导师,

我帮助人们自学
语言

,我每天都看到这一点。

人们在语言学习中挣扎
了 5 年、10 年甚至 20 年,

然后他们突然
将学习掌握在自己手中,

开始使用他们喜欢的材料、
更有效的方法,

或者开始跟踪学习,

以便欣赏
自己的学习 进步,

就在那时,

他们突然神奇地找到
了他们一生都在怀念的语言天赋。

因此,如果您也尝试
过学习一门语言

并且您放弃了,
认为它太难

或您没有语言天赋,请

再试一次。

也许你也
只是

流利学习该语言的一种令人愉快的方法。

也许您
离成为多语种人只有一种方法。

谢谢你。

(掌声)