#LearningSwedish #sstellestudiess 1
FSI Languages | basic swedish lessons with audio lessons and a textbook
Ikindalikelanguages.com | 45 short Swedish lessons
Ielanguages | basic phrases, vocabulary and grammar in 3 levels with 58 tutorials
Internetpolyglot | word vocabulary lists with audio pronunciations and English translations, with 44 categories
Swedish language course | 4 small lessons on the basics
OnlineSwedish | 7 lessons with a small exam at the end
Speaklanguages | basic vocab and phrases
Memrise | 1025 Basic swedish words to learn
Goethe-verlag | phrases, vocab and audio lessons
Learnalanguage | phrases, verbs, vocab, dictionary and culture
Loecsen | small lessons with quizzes
Mylanguages | literally so many different things
SayitinSwedish | 30 beginners lessons
SwedishPod101 | many, many different things
Wikiversity | 12 short lessons
Babbel | kinda like Duolingo I guess?
P.S. Many of these sites also offer beginners courses in other languages!
#LearningEnglish #sstellestudiess 1
so weird how in english some words are really just used in expressions and not otherwise… like has anyone said “havoc” when not using it in the phrase “wreaking havoc”? same goes for “wreaking” actually…
reply with more, i’m fascinated
beng able to get up and walk around safely
thinking/talking more clearly and lessening of brain fog
a willingness to re-engage with a situation/emotion (even with some reluctance)
ability to do a task you did not want to/could not do before
being able to plan and problem solve (even if you still don’t know what to do)
improved concentration/focus
more understanding of a situation
calmer and slower thoughts (rather than scattered thoughts/rumination)
slower heartbeat and breathing
faster heartbeat, if doing exercise, and momentum that gives you a chance to do a task before you sit down again
being able to sleep easier
an ability to look at the big picture and not get lost in the details
feeling that you can “manage”
ability to control outbursts/destructive behaviour or pause before acting
managing to stop crying
I think people tend to assume their mood is what will improve after trying coping techniques, however, your mood is not the full extent of your mental health, and it doesn’t totally define whether or not a technique has helped you. When disorders cause symptoms like chronic emptiness and low mood, it’s worthwhile to pay attention to your body and your abilities to look for signs of improvement, which can then have an affect on your mood in the long term.
This is a post about masterposts about resources and books for studying many languages. I made this since many people do not know about all the resources that have been posted.
Resources for Many Languages: thelanguagecommunity
General
Language Pile
Free Online Language Courses
Huge Language-Learning Collection
Language and Linguistics Resources
Language Families/Groups
Resources for West African Languages
South Asian Languages Resources
Classics Resource Masterpost
Online Latin & Greek Resources
Celtic Languages Resource List
Celtic Family Language Resources
Germanic Languages Resource List
Dutch, Afrikaans, West Frisian, Limburgish
Scandinavian Language Masterpost
North Germanic Language Resources
Resources for Finno-Ugric languages
Finnish, Estonian, Saami, Voro
Alien Languages of Star Trek
Afrikaans
Learn Afrikaans Masterpost
Afrikaans Masterpost
Ainu
Ainu Resources
Albanian
Albanian Language Masterpost
Amharic
Amharic Resources
Amharic Movies & Shows
Arabic
Arabic Learning Resources
Arabic Language Masterpost
Arabic Language Apps
Moroccan Masterpost
Free Arabic Resources
Armenian
Armenian Language Masterpost
ASL
American Sign Language Masterlist
ASL Masterpost
Azerbaijani
Azerbaijani Resources
Belarusian
Belarusian Resources
Belarusian Resources
Basque
Ultimate Basque Resource List
Euskera Free Resources
Learn Basque
Bengali
Bengali Language Resources
Bulgarian
Bulgarian Resources
Catalan
Catalan Resources
Recursos per aprendre català
Resources to Learn Catalan
Cantonese
Cantonese Language Resources
Mandarin Chinese
Mandarin Chinese Resource Masterpost
Chinese Learning Resources I
Chinese Language Resources II
Chinese Pinyin Masterpost
Intermediate Chinese Resources
Ultimate Mandarin Resource List
Cornish
Cornish Language Masterpost
Crimean Tatar
Crimean Tatar Resources
Croatian
Croatian Resources
Czech
Czech Resources for Beginners
Czech Resources
Danish
Ultimate Danish Resource List
Dutch
Great Resources for Dutch
Dutch Resources
Dutch Resources Masterpost
English
English Online Courses
English Language Masterpost
Estonian
Intermediate Estonian Resources
Faroese
Faroese Resources
Finnish
Masterlist of Finnish Resources
Finnish Language Resources
Finnish Resources: Beginner
Finnish Learning Resources
Finnish Language Resources
French
Ultimate French Resource List
French Resources Masterpost
French Masterpost
French Review
Galician
Galician Resources
Free Galician Masterpost
Georgian
Georgian Language Masterpost
German
German Learning Tools
German Resources
German Resources
German Resources
German Masterpost
Gothic
Gothic Language Masterpost
Greek
Greek Masterpost
Ancient Greek Masterpost
Ancient Greek Resources
Greenlandic
Greenlandic Resources
Guarani
Guarani Masterpost
Hawaiian
Learn Hawaiian
Hebrew
Hebrew Language Masterpost
Hebrew Masterpost
Hindi
Hindi Language Masterpost
Hindi Audio & Video
Hungarian
Hungarian Masterpost
Hungarian Learning Resources
Hungarian Resources
Icelandic
Icelandic for Everyone
Icelandic Resources
Icelandic Masterpost
Indonesian
Indonesian Resources
Italian
How to Learn Italian
Italian Resources
Italian Masterpost
Italian Resource Masterlist
Italian Culture Masterpost
Irish
Irish Resources
Irish Masterpost
Japanese
Free Japanese Resources
Japanese Resources
Studying Japanese
Japanese Resource Masterpost
Japanese Language Learning Resources
Kannada
Kannada Resources
Kazakh
Kazakh Masterpost
Khmer
Khmer Language Masterpost
Kikongo
Free Kikongo Resources
Korean
Korean Textbook Masterpost
Korean Resources
Korean Resource Masterpost
Korean Language Masterpost
Ultimate Korean Masterpost
Kyrgyz
Kyrgyz Resources
Latin
Learning Latin
Latin Resource List
Masterpost of Latin Video Resources
Latin Resources
Lithuanian
Lithuanian Resource List
Malay
Malay Resources
Maltese
Maltese Resources
Mongolian
Mongolian Resources
Nahuatl
Nahuatl Language Masterpost
Nepali
Nepali Masterpost
Norwegian
Norwegian Masterpost
Norwegian Resources
Norwegian Sources
Norwegian Masteprost
Norwegian Masterposts
Occitan
Occitan Resources
Old Church Slavonic
Resources
Pashto
Pashto Masterpost
Persian
Persian Language Masterpost
Where to Start Learning
Polish
Polish Self-Study Masterpost
Polish Resources
Polish Resource List
Portuguese
Portuguese Resources
Portuguese Starter Pack
Portuguese Resources
Punjabi
Punjabi Masterpost
Punjabi Resources
Romanian
Romanian Resources
Romanian Learning Resources
Useful Romanian Resources
Romanian Masterpost
Romanian Resources
Russian
Russian Learning Tools
Russian Textbooks
Some More Resources
Russian Masterpost
Northern Sami
Northern Sami Resources
Northern Sami Masterpost
Scottish Gaelic
Learn Scottish Gaelic Masterpost
Scottish Gaelic Masterlist
Serbian
Serbian Masterpost
Language Resources
Sinhala
Sinhala Resources
Slovak
Slovak Resources
Slovak Masterpost
Slovene
Slovene Resources
Somali
Somali Language Masterpost
Spanish
Spanish Resources: Oxford
Spanish Resources
Learning Spanish
Spanish Resources Masterpost
Swahili
Swahili Resources
Swedish
Swedish Resources
Swedish Resource List
Swedish Resources
Tagalog
Tagalog Masterpost
Tagalog Resources
Tamil
Tamil Masterpost
Tatar
Tatar Resources
Thai
Thai resources + books
Tibetan
Tibetan Resources
Turkish
Turkish Resources
Turkish Masterpost
Turkish Resource List
Ukrainian
Ukrainian Language Masterpost
Ukrainian Resources
Urdu
Urdu Masterpost
Uzbek
Uzbek Resources
Uzbek Mastepost
Vietnamese
Vietnamese Resources
Xhosa
Xhosa Resources
Yiddish
Yiddish Language Masterpost
Yoruba
Yoruba Resources
Zulu
Zulu Resources
**Last Updated: June 2019**
Still working on that 'lazy' study plan post, since I am just not satisfied with any chinese grammar guide summaries online enough to recommend them as a small grammar intro. If anyone knows of any good 'grammar overview summary' articles or sites for chinese grammar, please let me know. (I like AllSetLearning's Chinese Grammar Wiki but it is huge and in depth and not something I'd recommend a learner 'just read through' on month 4 of learning, and the grammar guide summary site I used as a beginner that was very easy to read through in a few hours... no longer exists)
So in the meantime. Not a grammar study tip, but a general 'lazy' option for language learners who (like me) can't focus on stuff like anki, or just don't want to. I go more in depth about using audio lessons and audio flashcards on other posts, and on the lazy study plan post i'm drafting, but the short of it is: you can listen and learn while doing your normal daily activities. That's what makes the study method so convenient. You don't have to squeeze in any extra time, or change your daily life schedule to make time for chinese, to use audio lessons and audio flashcards.
You simply find some times during the day when you'd either normally listen to audio in the background (like if you listen to music when commuting or shopping, or if you listen to podcasts when working, or if you listen to youtube while exercising or browsing social media). As usual, the more time the better as you'll make faster progress if you study 1-2 hours a day or more. But anything is better than nothing. So lets say you commute to work 30 minutes in morning and evening, there's your hour of studying audio. Or you go for a walk at lunch for 15 minutes, and browse tumblr for an hour scrolling (that's 1 hour and 15 minutes of study). It's very easy to fit 30 minutes of audio study into a day, and it's fairly easy to fit even 2-4 hours of audio study if you're so inclined. I usually do 30 minutes - 2 hours of audio study some days, since when I walk I decide if I feel like listening to a youtube essay or chinese or japanese stuff, when driving I decide which I feel like listening to, and I want to listen to something in english 2/3 of the time.
How do you use audio study material? Well, the easy way is you just press play on it, let it play in the background while you do other stuff, and that's it. If you tend to avoid studying new stuff (like me), then I recommend PRIORITIZING listening to NEW AUDIO every time, until you get into the habit of listening to NEW stuff to learn. Then you can re-listen to stuff sometimes, as review, especially when you're doing activities you have less attention on audio during. So for example: you'd listen to new audio on the commute or when walking (when you can mostly focus on what you're hearing), and then re-listen to audio as review while working or scrolling tumblr and reading english (activities where you pay more attention to other things besides audio).
What can you listen to?
There's audio lessons - which would be something like ChinesePod101 (Immersive Language Chinese in the Hoopla library app), Coffee Break Chinese, youtube videos where teachers talk in english and explain chinese as they teach it. These are good for study material, because you comprehend what you're learning due to the english explanations of every word and grammar point you hear. These are good for beginners, because you will understand everything you're listening to, and learn new words and grammar, thanks to the explanations. The drawback with audio lessons is they require the most focus.
There's learner podcasts like TeaTime Chinese and Slow Chinese, these are more often ENTIRELY in chinese. So these are better for practicing comprehension of stuff you've studied elsewhere, rather than for learning new things. You can learn new words and grammar from these, but if that is your goal then re-listen to learner podcasts a decent amount (5-20 times or more until you can't guess/figure out any more word meanings).
There's audio flashcards (which I love). These are sentence audio in english, then repeated in chinese. The order may vary, the chinese may be repeated more than once. These are good for beginners and upward, because you get a translation of every single thing you hear in chinese. You can pick up new words and grammar from audio flashcards. Audio flashcards require less focus than audio lessons, because you can learn from sentences while you pay attention and then if your attention drifts you can just focus again to the next sentence you hear and continue learning. The drawback is there are no explanations for which word specifically translates to what, some translations are not literal, and there's no explanation of why the grammar is the way it is. Audio flashcards require the listener to try and guess what means what by exposure to chinese sentences and their translations. So it's harder than audio lessons in terms of explanations, but easier than learner podcasts. Audio flashcards are the best substitute for traditional flashcards or SRS apps like anki, if you're trying to improve your vocabulary by hundreds of words ASAP. Audio flashcards are dense with new vocabulary (usually 1 new word or grammar point per sentence you can learn), so you'll learn more words than you would with an audio lesson that is paced slower with more english explanations or a learner podcast which would ideally be mostly words you know and only 20% or less new words.
There's Spoonfed Chinese Anki audio files (which I recommend since these start out very basic and increase in difficulty while also repeating words a lot so you can review, they're shared on reddit if you search, or ask me), if you search 'chinese english sentences' on youtube or bilibili (i've done this with chinese japanese sentences on bilibili) you'll find videos like this where you hear audio english then audio chinese. Old glossika cd files are basically this structure as well, which you can find the audio files of for free online or free in libraries (I'm using the new glossika app for japanese but I'm hesitant to recommend the modern app courses as there's significant errors in japanese so I'm not sure how good/bad the chinese one is). If you're a beginner, then the audio flashcard material you pick won't matter much as you need to learn a few thousand common words first which will be in most materials you find. But if you're an upper beginner, you may wish to prioritize finding audio flashcards with MORE unique words, more sentences, or may want to transition to using learner podcasts more for new vocabulary. If you aren't running into at least one new word for every 5 sentences you hear in audio flashcards (and ideally one new word for Every sentence), then that audio flashcard is way too easy for you and you know enough words to move onto new study material.
Audiobooks and audio dramas - use these like learner podcasts, listen to ones you can comprehend the main idea of, and then re-listen until you can't guess/figure out any more new words. If you're not very good at listening comprehension (like me lol), then you may want to listen to a given audiobook/audio drama file 3-5 times before deciding if you can comprehend the main idea (and use the material). When my listening skills are rusty, or just in general since my listening skills are bad, it can take me a few times of listening to recognize words I 'already know' and then a few more times of listening for my brain to put the words i recognize together into 'comprehending' what was communicated. So if you can read better than you can listen, you may want to listen 3-5+ times to a new audio file before deciding if you can follow the main idea or if it's too hard. And if you can READ the audio drama transcript, chapter text, but cannot understand the audio file? Then it probably IS at a good level for you to listen to, you just need a lot more practice hearing and recognizing the words you can read. So re-listen.
All of these listening study methods are good for:
Adding more study time into your day, since you can do them while doing other things.
Learning new words and grammar, when you don't have the time (or don't want) to spend time dedicated mainly to focusing on your study material.
Learning new words and grammar, if you don't use flashcards or SRS like anki but want the benefit of learning lots 'faster' than you would if you only picked up words during active study time (active study time being when you ONLY are focusing on study activities: like reading chinese, watching cdramas, chatting/texting people, and looking up words)
#reminder: its gonna be alright ❤
what’s crazy is that everything is literally going to be okay
i supposedly created this tumblr acc to not be stressed but now I AM stressed bc i didn't thought about my layout lmao
i love you physical media ❤️ i love you cds ❤️ i love you vinyl ❤️ i love you cassettes ❤️ i love you dvds ❤️ i love you blurays ❤️ i love you paperback books ❤️ i love you comics ❤️
It’s a bright and beautiful sunny day a cool breeze and the sun shining down warmly on your face. You go for a drive. Bikini/beachwear on,you grab a cooler some drinks maybe some lunch. You park the car and you open your door and head for the trunk you grab your stuff and maybe you brought a dog. So you harsh your dog and start walking. You head for the sandy hill you go through the little bit of trees and past the picnic tables, the bbq grills and the bathrooms. You getting closer and closer to the hill. Now for the real exercise you make sure you have everything in the right position and start your climb. Once you reach the top there’s no going back. Fighting the sand and using all your leg muscles you reach the top. From here it gets easier you start towards the beach but before you can go to the water you have to find a place for your stuff. Usually you have little hills that are nice and private as most people usually choose to be closer to the water. You get situated and head towards the water. You feel the wind blowing in your face and you can see the waves crashing and the seagulls flying above. You dip your feet in the water. It’s ice cold but it feels amazing. After about two seconds the water gets warmer and you go even further out and the water starts hitting your face and getting you soaked. But you feel like a kid. You splash in the water and run your fingers through the water. You watch as wave after wave approaches you and you looks in the water to see the sand at the bottom. You look to see if you can spot any little animals. Whether it’s jellyfish,sand dollars and even crab,sometimes little fishies. It depends on the season. With ever step you take you feel the salt from the water touch your legs. Seaweed shells and other things picked up from the water brush up against your legs too. You stand in the water and stare at the bright blue sky with few clouds and the sun hitting your face. You feel at peace here. As beach lovers do.
#LearningFrench #sstellestudiess
bon matin! c’est tôt pour moi, hmm? today I’ll be sharing some online resources for learning french ranging from vocab lists to full on courses! i hope you find these useful - the internet really is precious when learning languages! <3
⁎⁺˳✧༚ frenchtoday.com
this website threatens to put me out of business and I couldn’t be more delighted! vocab lists galore, free lessons, tips to work on your pronunciation, articles on french culture and even stories and poetry. i haven’t looked at everything available on there, but from what I’ve seen, it’s pretty useful!
⁎⁺˳✧༚ frenchpod101.com
this is a free course you can take, with options for absolute beginners and those already a little familiar with the language. it looks to be good for conversational french and is an easy, no nonsense starting point for beginners, who i know from experience are often easily overwhelmed.
⁎⁺˳✧༚ coffee break french
this is one I’m not quite as familiar with but has come to me highly recommended. it’s a podcast that covers the basics as well as providing dialogues and example role plays. give it a try and let me know how you find it!
⁎⁺˳✧༚ innerfrench (chaîne de YouTube)
this is a really interesting channel! you get to learn french through a variety of different topical discussions and he speaks slowly enough for you to get most of what he’s saying even if you’re a relative beginner, which can make you feel super smart :)
bien, c’est tout! i hope these recs are alright, and I hope we meet again soon~ a bientôt!
#LearningGerman #sstellestudiess 1
Week 3, day 5 of prepolyglot’s langblr reactivation challenge
(Probably goes without saying but just my personal top 3! You'll notice it is quite listening focused because that is what's most important to me.)
Nicos Weg (A1, A2, B1, Complete Youtube Playlist) - the story of a Spanish guy called Nico who moves to Germany. Really nice and well produced. Each level is made up of 80ish videos of a couple of minutes each, with exercises to review and test your comprehension. This adds up to a movie of almost 2 hrs for each level.
Easy German (x) - street interviews in German. Great for learning how Germans actually speak, outside of the artificial context that you find in a lot of learning resources.
The German Project (x) - online lessons with audio snippets and easy to understand explanations, plus animated short stories with audio. Wish there were some exercises to go with it! Also available for Spanish, French and Italian.
Here to learn languages and to feel a little less alone on this journey :) 25 - she/her
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