How I Learn to Speak Any Language in 24 Hours

2024 ж. 15 Мам.
148 385 Рет қаралды

Check out my language learning masterclass here: streetsmartlanguages.com/mast...
And here’s the link to get my magic sentences that I always learn first whenever learning a new language: join.streetsmartlanguages.com...
And get speaking practice with my AI tutor here: yourteacher.ai/ (currently under maintenance but reopening very soon!!!)
It takes me about 10 to 15 hours to learn the languages that I showcase in my videos, and I’ve done this with around 56 languages to date. Obviously that is not going to get me fluent, but it’s enough to have basic conversations and impress people with the little that I do know. To be clear, because you naturally forget languages over time, I do not actually speak 56 languages at any given time, but even if I didn’t forget any of them I would still speak them all at only a basic level. I only speak 3 languages fluently at the moment (English, Mandarin, and Spanish) and my English is WAY better than my Mandarin and my Mandarin is WAY better than my Spanish.
0:00 I was bad at learning languages
1:45 The problem with how languages are currently taught
3:24 Part 1: Speaking practice
4:58 Part 2: Sentence mining with Anki
8:22 Study a language with me!
10:20 Summation
LEARN A FOREIGN LANGUAGE WITH MY METHOD!
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Пікірлер
  • Want to learn a language with me? Check out streetsmartlanguages.com/

    @xiaomanyc@xiaomanycКүн бұрын
    • I love you Xiaoma but I tried this like a year ago and it's a scam for what you charge, not cool man

      @rock4glory713@rock4glory713Күн бұрын
  • We don't ask infants to learn to write, read, and spell before we start teaching how to speak. Makes sense.

    @cerspence@cerspence18 күн бұрын
    • Arabic is the hard language ever

      @Edward_smithh@Edward_smithh14 күн бұрын
    • Cer Spence?!! In this Comments section. BRO I AM YOUR BIGGEST FAN!

      @LilMiggySoundcloudRapper@LilMiggySoundcloudRapper14 күн бұрын
    • Adults aren't kids. Kids are spoken to 16 hours a day in a dumbed down way with no expectation to reply. They get thousands of hours of free input Iver the first few years. Not making use of the cognitive faculties you've got as an adult just because you didn't have them as a kid is like saying "kids can't drive so walking is better". They just didn't have a choice, and they had all the time in the world to get there. Learning to read and listen opens up the language to be consumed. Once you can consume content in your target language your learning will increase. I know I sound like a dick but learning 50 phrases just to make a KZhead video isn't impressive at all. What Ari used to do with Chinese was incredibly impressive.

      @miraichampion3366@miraichampion33663 күн бұрын
    • @@miraichampion3366 Your words are amazing :)

      @Edward_smithh@Edward_smithh3 күн бұрын
  • i feel like getting to the level of saying hi how are you im hungry its not that hard, but gettin actualy able to understand others when speaking is just hard asf

    @orangotango9231@orangotango923122 күн бұрын
    • Yeah the hardest part of language learning is for me is the listening. I have learned 1000 words in two different languages but can't have conversations because I don't understand anything

      @HeyJD123@HeyJD12322 күн бұрын
    • When you've gotten fluent in basic phrases that's when you start learning and later reading the script. If you're not familiar with script then you'll still stay at those basic phrases.

      @peteck007@peteck00721 күн бұрын
    • That's why you practice listening as well

      @benisrood@benisrood21 күн бұрын
    • You do know he went on norway national television speaking norwegian in just 2 weeks or so of learning right?

      @boazreinders459@boazreinders45921 күн бұрын
    • Id say make an ai character who speaks both ur native language and the language you want to learn and have conversations with it. That way you can learn pretty fast

      @boazreinders459@boazreinders45921 күн бұрын
  • My French teacher in HS was amazing, she started off class day one by only speaking French and no English at all unless it was absolutely necessary. We were all assigned French names and she made us feel comfortable with the language very quickly because she put us in a position where we had to adapt and learn by watching her and listening to her and just repeating everything she said with small conversations or little games.

    @CraiiZeD@CraiiZeD21 күн бұрын
  • It’s where the myth of “kids are the fastest language learners” comes from. Children learn languages naturally while schools try to jumpstart you into the semantics of the language. If you learn a language as if you were a baby, you don’t start with the alphabet, you start with speaking and listening. Literacy should be the LAST thing you learn, not the first

    @zrosix2240@zrosix224022 күн бұрын
    • But children suck at learning languages. My 6 month old nephew can't even introduce himself yet. If it takes you as long to get to B2 as a child does, even just doing 2/3 hours a day vs their 16, then I'd be worried for you.

      @keiredwards9583@keiredwards958322 күн бұрын
    • @@keiredwards9583 “but” brother I literally called it a myth no shit

      @zrosix2240@zrosix224022 күн бұрын
    • I get what you're saying, however, for myself I need to read and write in order to understand a language. I can learn things here and there like 'on the street', and know people who can reach fluency that way, but it doesn't work like that for myself. I'll always speak toddler level of the language, unless I learn to read and write. Because for me the visualising of how the sounds first 1) perceived by ear, then mimicked by mouth is one thing, but the moment I learn to visualise what kind of syllables are given to those sound 'forms' it helps me distuinguish them. Because initially there's a blur of sounds, or there's some slight nuances, like some suppressed 'letters' or less stressed tones, but that are important to the native's ear. Once I see it written, in combination with the spoken, then I can start to grasp it. I think it really depends per person. I'm a writer myself and learnt most of my English through reading. I heard it on tv and the likes, but once I started reading seriously, is when I started to question the things I didn't know yet. Or contemplate more deeply about the meaning of words that I may have been familiar with, but hadn't fully grasped. The written word gave me more variety and more distinctions to think about.

      @_DKE@_DKE22 күн бұрын
    • yes but also kids do have more plastic memories...so it's a combination

      @fredirecko@fredirecko22 күн бұрын
    • @@_DKE well part of my point was learning at the toddler level is the first step. I didn’t say literacy was unnecessary (like Xiaoma implied) but I don’t believe it’s the first step as the education system tries to shove in peoples faces. I think most people find it very difficult to learn the reading and writing grammar rules for a language before even knowing what those words or sentences actually sound like when used practically

      @zrosix2240@zrosix224022 күн бұрын
  • Try writing a daily journal in your target language for a week. You’ll naturally use the most relevant vocabulary to your life and learn a ton of grammar.

    @onionslaps@onionslaps22 күн бұрын
  • "HOW I LEARN TO SAY A FEW PHRASES OF EVERY LANGUAGE WITHIN 24 HOURS"

    @rovajaroo5997@rovajaroo599721 күн бұрын
    • Yeah this video kinda gave me the ick tbh. XiaoMa got to where he is because his chinese got good by spending a LOT of time with the language; he lived there; lived in china town, has a chinese wife. That was his "oh wow thats cool!" thing, like Chinese people admire him, language learners admire his progress. This video is going the way of those really cheesy lanugage scam artists like that Benny guy from "fluentIn3Months" and that Wouter guy where they "speak to strangers in their language" the conversation is always the same 3 sentences before it comes to an abrupt awkward end. XiaoMa is just working his hustle like everyone else; fair play to him, but the product he's pushing is NOT how he became good at 1 language; its how he maybe became fairly bad at lots of languages. You can't learn a language in 24 hours; you can learn like 100 pleasantries and some core concepts in 24 hours (of active study)

      @miraichampion3366@miraichampion336621 күн бұрын
    • literally

      @FitProVR@FitProVR21 күн бұрын
    • Yeah as much as it saddens me to say it but I agree there’s no way he knows 56 languages I can say a handful of things in Russian doesn’t mean I speak Russian

      @Nihilist_Owlman@Nihilist_Owlman21 күн бұрын
    • I personally see it as the gateway to connecting with people in order to gain easy access to improve your language skills. Yes it's annoying hearing him say "I know 56 languages" because no he doesn't, but what he does is that he's opened the door to learning more vocabulary in a natural way. So overall, I approve of his approach to starting a language learning journey.

      @aidenwinter1117@aidenwinter111721 күн бұрын
    • Bro that's what i'm saying. It's literally impossible to learn a language to an Advanced or even a conversational level in 24 hours. Dumbest clickbait shit i've ever seen

      @khalidofthesand5920@khalidofthesand592021 күн бұрын
  • I am definitely going to try this approach. My Japanese used to be pretty decent, both verbal and written. But in 2010 I had a brain tumor removed from my parietal lobe. Two years later I was working in Wuxi, China. I began to have bad headaches. The school I teaching English at felt it was best I return to the US for treatment. When I got back home, an MRI revealed that the tumor a growing again and radiation was needed. Long story short, treatment has damaged long/short term memory. Now I am returning to university or an MA in international relations. So I am going to have a language requirement. Either Mandarin or Japanese are the two options for me. Sorry for being a chatty Kathy. I’ve enjoyed your channel since before the lockdowns. 🤙

    @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures22 күн бұрын
    • Wow your story is sad and hard. I'm sorry this happened to you😢 I hope you don't give up and still practice and maybe even carry cards to help you remember. Anything to keep moving forward in something you showed progress in before ❤

      @breezeh1127@breezeh112722 күн бұрын
    • Thank you for your kind note. Since coming out of the coma back in 2010, things have been difficult, to put it mildly. However, my favorite little mantra comes from Shawshank Redemption. “Either get busy living, or get busy dying.” I try to foo the former every day.

      @ReasontoLiveAdventures@ReasontoLiveAdventures22 күн бұрын
    • @@ReasontoLiveAdventures incredibly positive attitude considering the challenges you've faced. Best wishes in your fight to overcome cancer and to live your best life. You're inspirational.

      @MichaelMoellerTRLInc@MichaelMoellerTRLInc22 күн бұрын
    • @@ReasontoLiveAdventures That is a great Mantra. Even tho some days are hard, I'm glad you are choosing to live your life the best you can 💜

      @breezeh1127@breezeh112722 күн бұрын
    • “The school I ‘taught’ at..”

      @ZachdOh@ZachdOh22 күн бұрын
  • So fluent and well learned in so many language as well as camera friendly you are a standout person indeed. Love your videos

    @brothabarone@brothabarone21 күн бұрын
  • The approach of being spoken language first makes sense for someone like Xiaoma who has great auditory memory but it is much less good for someone who is more visual and needs the written language as a support. There is also a personality component - he is obviously quite extravert and feels very comfortable speaking to strangers even when not fully understanding what they are saying. This is admirable, but not everyone is like this.

    @apaul9776@apaul977622 күн бұрын
    • It is the same for me indeed! But I've also come to learn and appreciate the combination of both worlds. I lean towards reading and writing for a rounder and deeper comprehension, however, in the 'engagement' with people you learn at times to grasp the meaning of things better due to context and a lot of the non-verbal communication that we use as people. But I'm certainly not very extraverted or chatty which makes it not that easy to shift into that space. But listening is definitely good as such.

      @_DKE@_DKE22 күн бұрын
    • there's little evidence for different learning types. I think it's a self-limiting belief or an excuse for most people

      @Willwantstobeawesome@Willwantstobeawesome21 күн бұрын
    • True all sorts of background factors play a part in language learning.

      @itsmebuzzz7322@itsmebuzzz732221 күн бұрын
    • I think this was just very recently debunked, guys. Don't delve into this and use as an excuse, instead try to do it as the OP does.

      @the_doomcliff@the_doomcliff21 күн бұрын
    • ​@Willwantstobeawesome genuinely so true. While some people have a tough time learning how without learning the why, ultimately, the best way to learn anything is to do the thing. Use whatever part of a languge you already know and you'll learn so much faster than just getting stuck in the theoretical knowledge of the language.

      @elizabethmonroe2290@elizabethmonroe229021 күн бұрын
  • Your channel (you) today ,compared to a few months ago and a few years ago is night and day in terms of confidence and personal growth.

    @qchomes@qchomes22 күн бұрын
  • Just checked out those magic sentences. That's really cool. Thanks!!

    @ZalbaagBeoulve@ZalbaagBeoulve22 күн бұрын
  • I've had to learn a few languages for work (German, English & Japanese), and learning languages is ultimately about learning about yourself. You know, how you retain information, what resonates with your interests and makes you look forward to it instead of it being a chore... "The thing that anchors you discipline without it being a burdening thing you're forced to drag", is a phrase a friend told me and I thought it was fairly accurate.

    @AndresGomez-ct7qb@AndresGomez-ct7qb22 күн бұрын
    • Learning is it's own skill, and it's the hardest one by far. It's also the most rewarding skill and can be different based on what it is that a person is trying to learn.

      @elizabethmonroe2290@elizabethmonroe229021 күн бұрын
    • I really resonate with this. I feel like you need to experiment with different learning styles and methods and do what works best for you. Probably why I prefer learning independently to structured lessons in formal education

      @billybob-ge2ql@billybob-ge2ql3 күн бұрын
  • The alphabet/script is the funnest and easiest part for me. I wouldn't dare skip it. I'll gladly spend hours learning a new way to write.

    @servantofaeie1569@servantofaeie156921 күн бұрын
    • I don't think he said skip it. He talked about conversational vs. Literacy. You're studying to become literate.

      @JJ_6036@JJ_60369 күн бұрын
  • This was actually very informative. I'm now using Anki which is perfect for my Mandarin practice. Turns out that I've been instinctually structuring my learning in the ways you're describing so I feel like what im doing is valid now.

    @PhilDancer@PhilDancer21 күн бұрын
  • Well said & done sir !!❤❤❤❤

    @caniacstevehenderson7115@caniacstevehenderson711522 күн бұрын
  • Been waiting on something like this

    @Upsideround@Upsideround22 күн бұрын
  • That's a very useful and interesting video! Thank you for all these tips! 😁

    @Jeelmin@Jeelmin20 күн бұрын
  • Those are good tips. I love studying languages and very few of them am I fluent. I’ve learned enough to understand and can pick up new things as I go.

    @jahanas22@jahanas2221 күн бұрын
  • Well said Ari, great info and great way to learn!! 🙂

    @jasonarnold6273@jasonarnold627316 күн бұрын
  • 3:45 from finding your channel about a week ago, and seeing around a dozen or more videos of yours, I had a strong suspicion this was a big part of your learning experience when learning a language for a video. You usually have your default phrases you go to, especially when ordering food or buying things, and a cheat sheet is certainly a very handy way to get started, like following a script. But what always makes me respect your approach is that you don't just do the bare minimum, you do your research as well, trying to learn the unique cultural cuisine they have and such. And yeah I fully agree that practical phrases and words are far more important to start out than all the nitty gritty details. I imagine the main thing that makes you far more proficient in learning faster is that not only do you probably pick up on patterns far more quickly, but you also just GO for it. You apply your knowledge immediately with little hesitation, and aren't afraid to make mistakes and learn on the spot. I imagine that'd be the part that scares a lot of people when intending to apply a new language, like studying for an exam for weeks/months. Just for some context, I'm bilingual (native Spanish, English second as a pre-teen) and just started learning Japanese a few months ago, and I definitely found the process more enjoyable and easier to swallow if starting with basic, practical phrases and words. Hiragana and Katakana can be learned alongside it but there's no *need* to learn it all upfront. I took French class for 4 years; barely retained any of it. But I also partly feel like learning a language AND attending school can be a lot to handle. I'm just learning Japanese in my free time and it's stress free and I don't need to follow any curriculum and learn at my own pace

    @BertoPlease@BertoPlease22 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for existing b, this is amazing to know, thank you. Eye have this on my list of things to get done.

    @7eye7@7eye722 күн бұрын
  • I can eat a whole pack of chips in under five minutes.

    @Blisken81@Blisken8122 күн бұрын
    • Crush bag, pour in mouth 😅

      @alexander9339@alexander933921 күн бұрын
  • Love your vidéos great example for new generation!

    @artemsapoznikov823@artemsapoznikov82322 күн бұрын
  • Thanks man! 我开始学习汉语 because of you :D

    @PortugalDoor@PortugalDoor18 күн бұрын
  • You convinced me to subscribe to the teacher AI! Let the speaking begin!

    @connorchiselko@connorchiselko20 күн бұрын
  • Yurr. I hope all who read this are blessed beyond measures! One love !

    @cgtatted4145@cgtatted414522 күн бұрын
    • If your comment blows up, I’d expect some debate brain people to show up

      @silverstudios6916@silverstudios691622 күн бұрын
    • @@silverstudios6916 I was in a good mood today, normally I don't care for comments like this... but I genuinely appreciated this one.... especially with all the wars currently going :/ PEACE TO ALL!

      @g60force@g60force21 күн бұрын
  • I love that you live in Jersey now, This way we get to see only the beauty of NYC.

    @NamelesshunterGaming@NamelesshunterGaming21 күн бұрын
  • Amazing! 💖

    @Angell_Lee@Angell_Lee19 күн бұрын
  • you look good mate! just turned in after some months the first time. gj :D

    @datastorage-tz8wd@datastorage-tz8wd16 күн бұрын
  • I use a similar method for Japanese but with a bit more focus on reading since I needed reading for JLPT. I watch a lot of Japanese KZhead and TV, making Anki cards for words I want to learn. Every show I would practice reading the Japanese subtitles before and after hearing the dialogue. It really didn't take that long before I could read 80% of common Japanese vocabulary. I then started reading things like short news articles, easy manga, and kids stories. Then I moved to things like young adult novels and watching shows with no subtitles. Every day I still made sure to make at least 10 sentence cards for Anki until I had learned a lot of words both through Anki and just naturally from reading and watching a lot of shows. I would say the entire process going from absolute beginner learning hiragana for the first time to proficient speaker and reader took about 4 years of daily study. I'm still not perfect but it's to a level that I can communicate most topics I know in English in Japanese as well. I still work my day job in English here in the US so there's only so much time per day to study Japanese.

    @coolbrotherf127@coolbrotherf12722 күн бұрын
  • You are amazing

    @kimwarnock11@kimwarnock1122 күн бұрын
  • Hits ya with the masterclass at the end 😂😂😂 common my guy.

    @yickyhite1725@yickyhite172514 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing! Been wondering how you do it….

    @Coby_Got@Coby_Got22 күн бұрын
  • I am from italy, I've always been interested about learning english and I felt that my level post high school was very poor. I started watching movies in English language and subs in italian. At the same time I moved to the UK, which helped to push myself speaking and interacting with people in English. Then with time, when I felt comfortable, I started to remove subs from movies and I've started to be way more fluent since then. Btw welcome to Jersey, I probably live in a building next to yours lol. See you on the waterfront.

    @KizumaTrading@KizumaTrading21 күн бұрын
  • I love the enthusiasm and the amazing commitment he has for learning and teaching but man chill out with the clickbait

    @abdulalshibly3930@abdulalshibly393010 күн бұрын
  • Great vid, Thai is kicking my butt

    @gcelite36@gcelite3620 күн бұрын
  • You’re my inspiration Ari. I’m still trying to attempt learning Hebrew. I sure wish I had a personal trainer

    @alexanderduff6018@alexanderduff601822 күн бұрын
    • Oftentimes we get frustated for not being able to find someone who can guide us every single day when we kick off learning but I understood that learning a language is a lone process, and from time to time you are going to have somebody else to help you or to practice with you. however, it's a process that depends on us only.

      @CanalSDR@CanalSDR15 күн бұрын
    • @@CanalSDR well yea, I would like to practice with someone else also learning Hebrew but not on a video camera or to an ai

      @alexanderduff6018@alexanderduff601815 күн бұрын
  • Thanks, Xiaoma!

    @peaceofpiety@peaceofpiety22 күн бұрын
  • So come to Cherokee NC and learn our language pls!!!

    @davidjumper55@davidjumper5522 күн бұрын
  • Magic phrases is a good term for my theory of a cheat sheet of words I often encounter while traveling. After putting together my Japanese one I slowly understand certain phrases in foreign media and how a word can be used in different context

    @DubsBrown@DubsBrown21 күн бұрын
  • hey thanks for sharing the magic sentences! is there a possibility you can share the 50 -150 common sentences you mentioned that you save on anki ?

    @arloloul@arloloul19 күн бұрын
  • It feels easier when you already know how to by now.

    @TheStickCollector@TheStickCollector22 күн бұрын
    • I stared learning Spanish for 9 months, switched to German on Duolingo. I know more German in the 4 months than I did in Spanish. But like you said, It's easier once you practice 2. The 3rd and 4th languages come way easier

      @magvs_maestro216@magvs_maestro21622 күн бұрын
    • @@magvs_maestro216German is easier to learn for English speakers than Spanish.

      @nysportsfan2576@nysportsfan257622 күн бұрын
    • @@nysportsfan2576 Spanish is also not hard to learn for English speakers. With comittment, you can easily become fluent in spanish within a couple years.

      @MANMORTAL33@MANMORTAL3321 күн бұрын
    • @@nysportsfan2576that is not true at all

      @m_ron2742@m_ron274220 күн бұрын
    • ​@@nysportsfan2576 to some it can be, the German word order and modal verbs are incredibly tricky for monolingual English speakers, while Spanish has scary verbs and indirect object pronouns that confuse me haha

      @ronnielovell6280@ronnielovell628020 күн бұрын
  • I totally agree. Speaking is essential. I'm Polish and was learning German and English for 10 years at school. I came to Scotland and I was scared to say a word. I was communicating very poorly using hands and gestures. After 10 years of learning! I started watching movies in English and speaking as much as possible. Then finished Art at college and now after 13 years in UK I can say I'm fluent. I'm learning Spanish now for 2 years and I struggle a wee bit, I wouldn't pull even basic conversation, so this video was helpful to remind where to start.

    @mooonsi323@mooonsi32321 күн бұрын
  • Hey Xiaoma, I've watched every one of your videos and I don't want you rushing new content, BUT I want to see more! Can you recommend any other polyglot KZheadrs like yourself I can watch too? I already watch Ryan Hale speaking Chinese and the German guy spekaing Vietnamese, but I want more content like yours!

    @wolfrig2000@wolfrig200018 күн бұрын
  • best method using anki i got. My flashcards are made of native speaker's audios, I save phrases capturing audios and i put into the anki in front side, after that , i write exactly what was said to show as back side. I never seen nothing better than that. You wont find this on youtube, nobody teachs this correctly

    @justmusikbr7395@justmusikbr739522 күн бұрын
    • Please explain your method with a little more detail. Thank you.

      @Ramenko1@Ramenko118 күн бұрын
    • posting so I don't miss further comments regarding this

      @thetaekwondoe3887@thetaekwondoe388714 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for the idea, I've seen that Anki app let you add audios, but I only have used images. I'm going to start using audios from now on!

      @EndyGuerrero_@EndyGuerrero_4 күн бұрын
    • @@thetaekwondoe3887 I'm learning Japanese with anki, and the flashcards I'm using have native speaker audio directly from anime and J-dramas. It's awesome

      @Ramenko1@Ramenko14 күн бұрын
  • We need a collab with Languagesimp

    @KleinOfficial@KleinOfficial18 күн бұрын
  • My epiphany was when I realized the key to master a new language is to remove my native language from the role of the middleman and be able to think in the target language.

    @yikebendan@yikebendan21 күн бұрын
    • smart, im abou5t to do that

      @jayski6813@jayski681314 күн бұрын
  • New Jersey suits you. Beautiful views over there!

    @linsees@linsees22 күн бұрын
  • Very nice 👍🏻

    @SpaceBean0@SpaceBean022 күн бұрын
  • The time one spends banging one’s head against textbooks is not wasted. On the contrary, I have found studying charts to be very helpful in laying out a foundation for language learning, even as a skill beyond that particular language itself. Memorizing charts helps you organize your mind. You don’t forget that, and although you may forget details, just encountering them once can leave an impression in memory that contributes subtly to learning.

    @CompleteIdeal@CompleteIdeal21 күн бұрын
  • Hi Arieh ! Totally agree with you, speaking from day 1 allows you to get a hang of the language way faster. That happened to me with Spanish. However, our memory can wear itself out over time and we tend to unlearn some languages. Otherwise, could you make a vid where you give tips on how you've monetized your language skills ? I'm myself a French polyglot 🇫🇷🇬🇧🇩🇪🇷🇺🇪🇸 but language skills are undermined down here in France...

    @Petr_97@Petr_9720 күн бұрын
  • THANK YOU THIS IS USEFUL IMA TRY THIS OUT TOO

    @Soohaesun@Soohaesun22 күн бұрын
  • Quick shout-out to Ari's arms in the thumbnail. If they get any bigger, this is gonna be a gym channel! Keep up all the hard work, dude! Looking great!

    @JaTjr32@JaTjr3221 күн бұрын
  • Absolutely floored that Xioma/Ari is learning Gàidhlig (Scottish Gaelic)! Deagh obair a charaid!

    @eat_pray_porg8450@eat_pray_porg845019 күн бұрын
  • There's a lot of new Chinese restaurants for you to try in New Jersey to surprise with your Mandarin skills. Go get em!

    @perfectchaos0078@perfectchaos007821 күн бұрын
  • As a Scotsman, I am looking forward to seeing your video in the Highlands. It's such a beautiful country but a bit like your Wales video, I think you'll be surprised by how few people speak Gaelic. Definitely more speakers of it in the highlands than in Glasgow or Edinburgh

    @StevenT-nj7cu@StevenT-nj7cu18 күн бұрын
  • That's insane! Congrats on your accomplishments!!

    @haitiancreolewithluciano@haitiancreolewithluciano22 күн бұрын
  • I remember watching his video speaking welsh where he subtitled stuff to make him look way more proficient than he was, and some subtitles were just straight up not what he said, more like what he implied. There’s a part where he just says “Cennyn Pedr” which means “leek”, but the subtitle shows “Saw some leeks over there”. Another example was when he said “Pa blasus?” which transliterates to “Which tasty?”, but is subtitled as “Which one is good?”. What he said was grammatically incorrect and should’ve been “Pa un yn flasus?” Alot of the video had all these tiny things in almost every subtitle that made him look (to non speakers) way more proficient than he actually was. Most of the time he never even used articles but put them in subtitles. He really is the biggest language subtitle catfish of all time. Also I’m pretty sure he deleted a youtube comment pointing this out ahahaha

    @chrisparra7459@chrisparra745920 күн бұрын
  • Love your Videos Ari!!! Just wanted to say too that I think it would be a cool video to one day see you go over to Louisiana's cajun country and New Orleans to speak Cajun French and/or Louisiana Creole. I think it would be cool to see that you don't need to travel far to find a new culture and language that could be right in one's country. 🇫🇷 ⚜️

    @brandonnavedo9848@brandonnavedo984821 күн бұрын
  • I like the movie the 13th warrior and the way he learned the language. Forced on a boat with a foreign language being spoke and he just sits there listening starting to pick up phrases. The other great trying to understand a language show. Star Trek TNG. Darmok and Jarad at Tanagra. Great example of thinking you know what they are saying and having no idea what they actually mean.

    @jhaas68865@jhaas6886522 күн бұрын
  • Amazing! How do you go with retention of, say Creole, after learning 10 other news ones? Seems like there’s a lot of cramming, as for an exam, which might then disappear quickly. I did hear another polyglot say he learns a new language vis a recent\known one to kinda double-up.

    @tb20million@tb20million21 күн бұрын
  • Thanks Xiaoma! Just like exercises, I guess most of us felt that we kind of know and guess what we should do to learn and what we need is the commitment... Personally, the first 10 days work out great and after what I got hard time is when my learning start to confuse where I start for example to confuse 2 learning elements... which make me feel that I am actually getting worst. But, I guess the exercise analogy is good where when the progress slow down, we still need to do exercises, but perhaps need to adapt the learning program at that point to solidify the previous learning..

    @fcycles@fcycles20 күн бұрын
  • actually, this is a pretty cool learning method.

    @theorthodoxapologeticschan9378@theorthodoxapologeticschan937822 күн бұрын
  • This makes sense 100% I instantly remember myself struggling to writ in English but I could speak it I was 10 from Uganda because surrounded by people I learned how to speak English within 6month but struggled writing.

    @amito441@amito44110 күн бұрын
  • nothing beats talking to native speakers. great video, thanks!

    20 күн бұрын
  • Learning the bare bones basics for a language in a day just isn’t enough to “know” a language.

    @jaksida300@jaksida30021 күн бұрын
  • Looking forward to the Scottish Highlands episode! I hope you will learn Gaelic (Irish) too, it is one of the most beautiful languages in my opinion.

    @Yas-sx6rm@Yas-sx6rm21 күн бұрын
  • Gonna say when I had some aha moment in calculus it was only due to treating it like exercise. I think the same problem applies in math education where the curriculum is too focused on moving forward than helping people progressively attain a comfortable level.

    @user-245er4ud@user-245er4ud21 күн бұрын
  • Making me miss my home, Jersey!

    @Wagmiallday@Wagmiallday22 күн бұрын
  • If you are coming to Scotland to try and speak Gaelic/Gàidhlig you will need to go to the islands in the Outer Hebrides such as the Isle of Lewis to find speakers. Will be hard to find speakers in mainland Scotland unless you arrange before. There are much less speakers compared to Welsh and Irish which you have done before.

    @GordanAnndra@GordanAnndra21 күн бұрын
  • Learning a new language is insanely difficult, this guy has a special gift. There are words you can learn but you don't know how to pronounce them, so to anyone else it sounds like gibberish.

    @aboxoftentacles1395@aboxoftentacles13956 күн бұрын
  • This is your best video. Language learning should be fun and practical. I can find a bathroom and order a beer in 5 languages because I want to. Spending hours Conjugating verbs in school is ridiculous.

    @ClaudeDiamond@ClaudeDiamond21 күн бұрын
  • I would love to learn Gaelic

    @pamelacommons7315@pamelacommons731522 күн бұрын
  • Could you try Taiwanese Hokkien? It’s a harder compared to mandarin and a dying language

    @edeny6560@edeny656022 күн бұрын
  • Can you read Hanzi? Just wondering if you can function in china only knowing how speak mandarin.

    @717studioww@717studioww17 күн бұрын
  • You popularized the video style. A pioneer! Surprising locals, and getting reactions. 🎉🎉🎉

    @randomupdates4013@randomupdates401322 күн бұрын
    • i think @laoshu505000 really pioneered this video style, but xiaoma definitely popularized it and influenced many to learn languages!

      @EndreaDaCosta@EndreaDaCosta22 күн бұрын
    • @@EndreaDaCosta RIP to the brother Laoshu!

      @shaggythisisntweed785@shaggythisisntweed78521 күн бұрын
  • Hi Xiaoma, You mentioned once that your dad is an Lithuanian- american. I want to ask you if you can speak Lithuanian or do a video where you speak Lithuanian in one of the many streets in NYC. Thanks Broliai❤

    @jonasbuble8295@jonasbuble829517 күн бұрын
  • Scripts are some of my favourite parts of learning new languages. Because it feels like a code.

    @Ghuridnasrani@Ghuridnasrani9 күн бұрын
  • Youre English is very good!

    @Cyrath89@Cyrath8920 күн бұрын
    • 😂 he is american

      @RefuseOfMeditation@RefuseOfMeditationКүн бұрын
  • Do you have your Anki deck for mandarin available somewhere? I'm currently in Shanghai, could use it for good 😊

    @reebow@reebow18 күн бұрын
  • hey man i was wonder if you can do a kurdish (kurmanji) video sometime in the future, since from all the language learning app/programs etc I have seen it is not on any of them.

    @ronikorkmaz9097@ronikorkmaz909722 күн бұрын
    • There's plenty of Kurdish people on Tandem but if you're talking about courses then no, I haven't seen any either

      @karlmakhwa4182@karlmakhwa418219 күн бұрын
  • Where do you find all your various online tutors?

    @habojspade@habojspade20 күн бұрын
  • Omg the stack of books thumbnail is back 🤣 we need a new stack of books xiaoma image

    @RaoBrandon@RaoBrandon22 күн бұрын
  • hey, i was wondering if you could learn Faroese? My friends in the Faroe Islands would love to see it happen!

    @IAmAnNorseGael@IAmAnNorseGael17 күн бұрын
  • I'd love to hear you speak Scottish Gaelic, I was born in Cambridge, England but grew up in Midwestern america. Ive been learning for about a 1 1/2 years, it would be amazing to see other people speak it.

    @dannielletylr@dannielletylr13 күн бұрын
  • What are your thoughts on things like Duolingo?

    @CaliMeatWagon@CaliMeatWagon21 күн бұрын
  • I'll start by saying that you do certainly have a gift, and the progress you make in 24 hours is way above what's normal - so firstly, congrats for that. But come on, you know you don't "speak" those languages after 24 hours to any degree, really. You memorize a ton of basic phrases and if you're lucky, the conversation stays within those narrow bounds. When it doesn't, you're totally lost. Or you just repeat yourself. It looks impressive to anyone who doesn't speak the language, but to those who do, it's instantly obvious you have no idea what's going on. It's a nice way to get a "taster" of a new language, and it's a neat party trick, but it's not a good foundation for actually mastering a language in the long term. I only feel compelled to comment because you are now selling something on this basis, and people should go into that with a huge huge disclaimer. Keep up the good work, peace.

    @simonr-vp4if@simonr-vp4if22 күн бұрын
    • I can see where you're coming from, but why do you say it's not a good foundation? With this approach, people can get out and start speaking a language, having a real, though limited, conversation. If they want to learn more, all they have to do is continue learning vocabulary about more topics and continue to increase the complexity of their phrases.

      @TheParadiseParadox@TheParadiseParadox22 күн бұрын
    • @@TheParadiseParadox its not a good foundation because he's telling people to ignore the alphabets etc; frontloading can be a pain in the arse but you absolutely need the alphabet of the language you are learning for example. I also >personally< dont agree with "always put english on the front of the card", I always put english on the back. I wanna read and consume the language im learning. it can encourage 1 to 1 translations which isn't practical.

      @miraichampion3366@miraichampion336621 күн бұрын
    • @@miraichampion3366 you don't need the alphabet to speak a language. It's much easier to read a language once you can speak it

      @TheParadiseParadox@TheParadiseParadox21 күн бұрын
    • @TheParadiseParadox disagree personally. Being able to consume materials in your target language is more important that reciting a few memorised phrases (if fluency is the goal). If you're going on a holiday and wanna just learn to be nice then sure I agree with you.

      @miraichampion3366@miraichampion336621 күн бұрын
    • @@miraichampion3366 okay, that's not really what I was saying Have a good one

      @TheParadiseParadox@TheParadiseParadox21 күн бұрын
  • Have you learnt how to speak Afrikaans or isiXhosa? if so ill love to see! Much love from South Africa!

    @raiNofchAosFPS@raiNofchAosFPS22 күн бұрын
  • @xiaomanyc I've been trying to learn Thai I looked at your course but did not see it as one of the choices. Is there a good course to learn Thai?

    @TheAdamk9111@TheAdamk911122 күн бұрын
    • Do you live in Thailand? If not, but you're interested on Thai language, 4 months of school for 11 months of Educational Visa - a "win-win" condition for you!

      @panosliakos3653@panosliakos365322 күн бұрын
    • @@panosliakos3653 I do not live in Thailand but I am thinking/wanting to move there for a year or two. I was there on vacation and would like to be able to speak with the friends I've made better in their language. Is that right I could get an education visa and stay for a year?

      @TheAdamk9111@TheAdamk911121 күн бұрын
    • @@TheAdamk9111 4 months school for 11 months Visa OR 2 months school for 6 months Visa. BUT! You have to be present at the lessons - on class, or online, you chose.

      @panosliakos3653@panosliakos365321 күн бұрын
  • My hubby’s brain works best studying languages by learning grammar, parts of speech, etc (he speaks 6 languages) but not me! lol needed to hear this! Thanks!

    @VixtoriaVixen@VixtoriaVixen15 күн бұрын
  • In elementary school we had a French teacher who had to work under these rules: no reading or writing, ten-minute daily lessons per class, no homework. He had trained using the Defense Language Institute system at Monterey which uses lots of homework--hours of listening to tapes. So, on the fly, he had to develop a whole new approach to teaching and learning. Our grammar was terrible (I thought the infinitive "to be" was "soir") but our pronunciation was quite good. Later he based his approach to teaching lower-division French at UC Berkeley on his improvised teaching system. Even months into the course, he was careful to introduce new vocabulary by sound first, with the written form at least a day later. I have noticed that a lot of English speakers who try to learn French get really thrown off by the spelling.

    @kbck884@kbck88418 күн бұрын
    • I agree, the spelling throws everyone off when learning French. So many rules and so many exceptions to rules, and remembering them is a near impossibility. So much grammer! I was getting on better last year just by reading aloud in a group and translating the paragraphs, but now I'm in a grammer class and I have gone backwards. Now I panic, I cannot even speak a few words. I can't learn that way - I need to learn phrases phonetically and speak them. I got really despondent and gave up on the classes a month ago and I didn't know how I was ever going to get back on track. Then I came across this video and I'm really inspired to try again. Well done to this guy. I've been following him for a while now and am amazed at what he does. It could be the answer for me. I hope so.

      @anniebygrave9300@anniebygrave930018 күн бұрын
  • You mention your teachers, how do you find people to teach/speak to online? Apologies if I missed this part of the video

    @zb2363@zb236321 күн бұрын
  • I think VR would be great for learning languages as you can talk with native speakers.

    @ThatGoth@ThatGoth22 күн бұрын
    • It would be nice, but I personally would have a higher barrier to entry to get back into it besides the language itself. I also want to make my own custom avatar myself, since otherwise I get bored since I haven't started yet.

      @TheStickCollector@TheStickCollector22 күн бұрын
    • @@TheStickCollector - I already have a couple of VR Headsets and my own Meta avatar, I could however spend hours making an Avatar for specific apps, I hope to learn a couple of languages and figure if I can't go to these countries I can at least go there virtually and interact with real people.

      @ThatGoth@ThatGoth22 күн бұрын
  • People that can speak multiple language's , are usually musically gifted as well.

    @brik2716@brik271622 күн бұрын
    • I've thought about this about myself many times. I don't speak any other languages but I know I have the potential.

      @servantofaeie1569@servantofaeie156921 күн бұрын
    • @@servantofaeie1569 every human has the potential, it takes effort to learn.

      @Paulincg@Paulincg20 күн бұрын
    • They also tend to comprehend abstract concepts like mathematics easier than others. I'm assuming because music and mathematics are languages in some sense.

      @paulewannacrackr@paulewannacrackr20 күн бұрын
    • @@paulewannacrackr I'm good with languages, horrible at math.

      @servantofaeie1569@servantofaeie156920 күн бұрын
  • As a middle school ESL teacher, I approve of this message. 😊

    @iheartwaffles91@iheartwaffles9120 күн бұрын
  • 加油。我知道你在挑戰 老鼠先生的事,雖然他不在了。但看到你繼承了他的遺志。很高興

    @thomaschan1986@thomaschan198622 күн бұрын
  • dankjewel

    @md_studios9819@md_studios981918 күн бұрын
  • Im learnig nepali with the same tutor you had (eni tamang) its taking a whe for me.

    @chrisclark7564@chrisclark756421 күн бұрын
  • Ahh this is amazing news, I’m so excited for you’re going to go to the Scottish highlands! I hope you’re visiting the western / outer Hebrides where they most commonly still speak Gaelic?? (Glad you said gah-lic and not gay-lic) 🎉

    @RichMaciverPhoto@RichMaciverPhoto17 күн бұрын
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