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Scopri Italki per fare lezioni con parlanti nativi o insegnanti professionisti di italiano e usa il codice PODCAST per ottenere uno sconto di 5€ su lezioni di almeno 10€: https://go.italki.com/podcastDi recente sono stato per la quarta volta al Polyglot Gathering, un evento per poliglotti e amanti di lingue. Ma chi è un poliglotta? E che cosa si fa a questi eventi? Ne parlo con il mio amico Stefano Suigo.Trascrizione (Pl Club, livello oro)Altri link e risorse utili:Fonetica Italiana Semplice, il mio corso di pronuncia italianaEBOOK GRATIS: Come raggiungere il livello avanzato in italiano"EBOOK GRATIS: "50 modi di dire per parlare come un italiano"Il mio canale YouTube InstagramFacebook
English: In this episode, I share my experiences from the Polyglot Gathering in Prague, which I attended in mid-May. For those who don't know, the Polyglot Gathering is an event where language enthusiasts from all over the world come together to meet, discuss various topics, inspire each other, and spend time together. In this episode, you'll learn what the Polyglot Gathering is all about and what I enjoyed the most. Tune in to hear about the fascinating lectures, workshops, and the vibrant community that makes this event so special!Polish: W tym odcinku dzielę się moimi wrażeniami z Polyglot Gathering w Pradze, w którym uczestniczyłem w połowie maja. Dla tych, którzy nie wiedzą, Polyglot Gathering to wydarzenie, gdzie pasjonaci języków z całego świata spotykają się, aby porozmawiać na różne tematy, inspirować się nawzajem i spędzać razem czas. W tym odcinku dowiecie się, czym jest Polyglot Gathering i co najbardziej mi się podobało. Posłuchajcie o fascynujących wykładach, warsztatach i pełnej życia społeczności, która sprawia, że to wydarzenie jest tak wyjątkowe!Enjoy listening! :)You can find a full transcript of this episode on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/104981484My blog: https://ioannesoculus.com/FB Ioannes Oculus: https://www.facebook.com/IoannesOculus/FB Polish With John: https://www.facebook.com/polishwithjohnInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/polishwithjohn/Twitter: https://twitter.com/polishwithjohnIn the podcast, I used "Sing Swing Bada Bing" Doug Maxwell/Media Right Productions; source: https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music (attribution not required)
Meet me at the 2024 Polyglot Gathering event:https://www.facebook.com/polyglotgathering I'll be teaching you how to Introduce Yourself in Arabic! https://www.thouriabenferhat.com/ Pinsterest on steroids: Benable is a tool to create shareable lists of things you recommend! You can skip the waitlist and create your own shareable lists by signing up using my invite link: https://benable.com/i/3PWE7 Products on sale in my store: https://payhip.com/THOURIA?builder_mode=1&environment_id_encrypted=APzDPNrnzE&show_builder_mode_previewing_notification=1 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thouria-benferhat/message
Meet me at the 2024 Polyglot Gathering event:https://www.facebook.com/polyglotgathering I'll be teaching you how to Introduce Yourself in Arabic! https://www.thouriabenferhat.com/ Pinsterest on steroids: Benable is a tool to create shareable lists of things you recommend! You can skip the waitlist and create your own shareable lists by signing up using my invite link: https://benable.com/i/3PWE7 Products on sale in my store: https://payhip.com/THOURIA?builder_mode=1&environment_id_encrypted=APzDPNrnzE&show_builder_mode_previewing_notification=1 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thouria-benferhat/message
En la 1297-a E_elsendo el la 25.01.2024 ĉe www.pola-retradio.org: Nian hodiaŭan felietonon pri koninda polo ni dediĉas al Michał Boym, mortinta antaŭ 365 jaroj pola misiisto, diplomato, etnografo, botanikisto, kiu pere de siaj pioniraj verkoj proksimigis Ĉinion al eŭropanoj, korektis misinformojn pri ĉi tiu lando i.a. de Marco Polo. En la komencaj kulturkronikaj aktualaĵoj ni parolas pri ekspozicio en Romo de grafikaĵoj de eksa Auschwitz-malliberigito, Marian Kołodziej; pri Historio de la pola literaturo, kiu baldaŭ anglalingve aperos sur la usona libromerkato; pri reta librovendejo ĉe Auschwitz-muzeo. En la E-komunuma segmento ni informas pri okazontaj lime de februaro kaj marto fizike Himalaja Renkontiĝo (https://eventaservo.org/e/49c1cd) kaj rete Polyglot Gathering (https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2024/eo/). Muzike akompanas nin Ĵomart kaj Nataŝa per la koncerta plenumo de la kanto „Al loko de kie blovas la vent'” el la seula UK. La akompana interreta foto prezentas mapon faritan de Michał Boym pri Pekino kaj ĉrkaujaĵoj. En unuopaj rubrikoj de nia paĝo eblas konsulti la paralele legeblajn kaj aŭdeblajn tekstojn el niaj elsendoj, kio estas tradicio de nia Redakcio ekde 2003. La elsendo estas aŭdebla en jutubo ĉe la adreso: https://www.youtube.com/results?q=pola+retradio&sp=CAI%253D I.a. pere de jutubo, konforme al individua bezono, eblas rapidigi aŭ malrapidigi la parolritmon de la sondokumentoj, transsalti al iu serĉata fragmento de la elsendo.
O que rola numa conferência poliglota? Diego foi até Budapeste para conferir a Polyglot Conference 2023. Neste evento ele teve a oportunidade de conhecer diversos amigos presencialmente e praticar seus idiomas. Sem contar nas inúmeras palestras que havia e que definitivamente trouxe-lhe mais conhecimentos acerca de como aprender novos idiomas. Confira o que os poliglotas têm a dizer sobre esta conferência! Quer saber mais? Polyglot Conference: https://budapest.polyglotconference.com/ Polyglot Gathering: https://www.polyglotgathering.com Grupo do Telegram do Diversilíngua para os encontros de prática de inglês: https://t.me/diversilinguagrupo Siga-nos nas redes sociais: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@Diversilingua Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/diversilingua/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/diversilingua/ #polyglotconference #polyglotconference2023 #Budapest --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/diversilingua/message
Einmal im Jahr treffen sich hunderte Sprachbegeisterte auf dem Polyglot Gathering, um sich auszutauschen, Neues über Sprachen und das Sprachenlernen zu erfahren, andere Sprachenthusiasten kennen zu lernen. Auch David von Linguathor war dieses Jahr dabei. Mit ihm habe ich in dieser Folge von Deutsches Geplapper darüber gesprochen, warum das Polyglot Gathering so besonders ist, wen er dort kennengelernt hat und welche Sprachen dort gesprochen wurden. Bist du auch Sprachbegeistert? Dann solltest du dir diese Folge unbedingt anhören!Hier findest du David:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuCXMZxGHYZXl--U3qcMQhQhttps://www.instagram.com/linguathor_fluency/?hl=deDas Transkript zur Folge gibt's hier:https://naturalfluentgerman.com/podcast-transkripte/Um die Folge bei iTunes zu hören, klick hier:https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/deutsches-geplapperDen Link zu Youtube findest du hier:https://www.youtube.com/@deutschesgeplapperMich und meine Angebote zum Deutschlernen findest du hier:https://naturalfluentgerman.comhttps://www.instagram.com/natural.fluent.german/Schreib mir unter:flemming@naturalfluentgerman.comLade dir hier mein gratis E-Book herunter:https://naturalfluentgerman.com
En la 1252-a E_elsendo el la 30.06.2023 ĉe www.pola-retradio.org: • Antaŭ nia mikrofono ni gastigas hodiaŭ konatan ĉeĥan esperantiston, Marek Blahuš, kiun ni renkontis dum Polyglot Gathering 2023 en la apudvarsovia Teresin. Ni ligas al lia esperantistiĝo antaŭ 20 jaroj kaj E-aktivado, al la nuna profesia laboro kaj lia E-familio. • La komencaj aktualaĵoj rilatas […]
Sam and Eliseu are back for episode #6 of "Samthing To Say," where they will discuss various topics, including polyglot events such as the Polyglot Gathering, the Polyglot Conference, and Poliglotar. They will also delve into the Chinese language, share tips on how to handle mistakes, and much more. - Polyglosam Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@polyglosamInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/polyglosam/channel/Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0TwtufgjkUzdccvRKjsVVQ- PolyglosamTiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@polyglosam - LingoCast - Social Instagram: @LingocastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100071060924652https://linktr.ee/lingocastLanguageBoost - Use the coupon LINGOCAST for 5% OFF on the entire website: https://languageboost.biz/Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lingocast@eliseurjr Support LingoCast: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/lingocast
In this episode, I'm sharing some of my experience from Polyglot Gathering 2023. I highly recommend you coming to the event next year! Enjoy listening! :)You can find a full transcript of this episode on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/85310314My blog: https://ioannesoculus.com/FB Ioannes Oculus: https://www.facebook.com/IoannesOculus/FB Polish With John: https://www.facebook.com/polishwithjohnInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/polishwithjohn/Twitter: https://twitter.com/polishwithjohnIn the podcast, I used "Sing Swing Bada Bing" Doug Maxwell/Media Right Productions; source: https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music (attribution not required)źródła, sources:
En la 1250-a E_elsendo el la 20.06.2023 ĉe www.pola-retradio.org: • Inter la 14-a kaj praktike la 19-a de junio en la apudvarsovia Teresin okazis la fizika Poliglota Kunsido, Polyglot Gathering 2023. Vizitinte ĝin lastsabate ni uzis la okazon inviti antaŭ nian mikrofonon la ĉeforganizanton de la evento Petron Baláž el E@I. • Hodiaŭ ni proponas […]
Bienvenue au premier épisode du podcast "The Future is Bilingual" en français !
In this episode, I attempt to tackle the highly controversial topic of native speakerism and what it means to be a good language teacher. The episode is divided into three main parts: 1. My personal experiences learning multiple languages, including a shameful secret 2. My professional experiences as a teacher of 4 languages 3. What I learned from others during an open discussion I lead at the Polyglot Gathering online this past March on the same topic. There are so many things that could and need to be said on this topic, and I invite you to keep the conversation going by replying to my posts on Instagram on the topic or writing me a message (https://www.instagram.com/thefutureisbilingual/). You can also find out more about the show on my website (https://thefutureisbilingual.wordpress.com/). If you enjoy this podcast, please consider doing one (or more!) of the following: - follow it - share it with a friend and on your social media - take a minute to rate it - leave a rating and review (https://ratethispodcast.com/bilingual) - buy me a coffee (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/futurebilingual)
En la 1242-a E_elsendo el la 10.05.2023 ĉe www.pola-retradio.org: • Vi aŭdas, gesinjoroj la 2-an parton de la antaŭmikrofona renkontiĝo kun Petro Baláž el E@I, la ĉeforganizanto de la reta kaj fizika eventoj Polyglot Gathering 2023. Hodiaŭ i.a. aŭdiĝas kelkaj detaloj pri la Poliglota Kunveno okazonta meze de junio en la pola Teresin https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2023/eo/. • […]
La 1241-a E_elsendo el la 05.05.2023 ĉe www.pola-retradio.org • proponas antaŭmikrofonan renkontiĝon kun Petro Baláž el E@I, la ĉeforganizanto de la reta kaj fizika eventoj Polyglot Gathering 2023. Hodiaŭ audiĝas la unua parto de nia interparolo (https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2023/eo/). Nia arkiva felietono rekondukas nin vizite al la loko Szydłów. • La komencaj kulturkronikaj informoj rilatas al la […]
Im Jahr 1972 erschien in Italien einer der seltsamsten Songs aller Zeiten. Der gerade erst durch »Azzuro« berühmt gewordene Sänger und Schauspieler Adriano Celentano brachte mit »Prisencolinensinainciusol« ein Lied heraus, dessen Text wie amerikanisches Englisch klang, in Wirklichkeit aber kompletter Nonsens war. 50 Jahr später wird noch immer über den Song spekuliert. Dieser Podcast folgt den Spuren zurück bis zu Charlie Chaplin, Dario Fo und der Commedia dell'arte. Gast: Judith Meyer ist eine in Berlin lebende Polyglottin mit einem besonderen Interesse an nichteuropäischen Sprachen. Während ihres Magisterstudiums der Romanistik und Computerlinguistik wurde Judith Meyer als die Stimme des Deutschlernprogramms „GermanPod101“ bekannt. 2014 gründete sie das Polyglot Gathering, eine der größten Konferenzen für Polyglotte und Sprachenblogger. Des Weiteren arbeitete sie als Beraterin oder Webentwicklerin für mehrere große Unternehmen in der Welt des Sprachenlernens, entwickelte LearnYu (einen Chinesischkurs auf Basis künstlicher Intelligenz), und verfasste die 7-teilige „Script Hacking“ Reihe - Kurse zum Erlernen fremder Alphabete nach einer von ihr selbst entwickelten Methode. Host: Ralf Schlüter, geb. 1968, lebt als Kulturjournalist in Berlin. Seine Jugend verbrachte er zu etwa gleichen Teilen in Plattenläden, Buchhandlungen und Museen, immer schon mit Hang zur Querverbindung: eine Zeile von Bob Dylan brachte ihn auf den Dichter Ezra Pound, ein Patti-Smith-Plattencover auf die zeitgenössische amerikanische Fotografie. Während seines Literaturstudiums im Berlin der 90er schrieb er für den deutschen Rolling Stone und die Berliner Zeitung nicht nur über Musik. Von 2006 bis 2020 war er Stellvertretender Chefredakteur des Kunstmagazins Art. Seit 2013 moderierte er die Sendung Art Mixtape beim Webradio ByteFM. Seit dem 16. Juni 2021 läuft sein Podcast »Ulysses lesen«, der sich mit dem berühmten Roman von James Joyce beschäftigt. Er ist Mitbegründer von kultur{}botschaft, einer digitalen Strategieberatung für Kulturinstitutionen und Medienhäuser. Im Podcast Zeitgeister erkundet Schlüter, von der Musik ausgehend, den Kosmos der Gegenwartskultur noch einmal neu: auf der Suche nach übersehenen Details und unerzählten Geschichten. SHOWNOTES: Erster TV-Auftritt von Adriano Celentano mit dem Lied: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foU3Tgg7VJI TV-Auftritt 1974: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLgkT10N8Yo Interview mit Adriano Celentano: https://www.npr.org/transcripts/164206468 Dario Fo parodiert Chansons: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glLl3GpNshg Ausschnitt aus »Der große Diktator« (OV): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isLNLpxpndA »Smokahontas« imitiert den Klang von Sprachen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybcvlxivscw Von Judith Meyer erwähntes Lied »Desert Rose« von Sting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gzqsmx1KGU Von Judith Meyer empfohlen: Ein bei uns weniger bekanntes aber besonders schönes Liebeslied auf Arabisch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqmWkqh1kt8 Slavoj Žižek-Version von»Prisencolinensinainciusol«: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_qT4puLXEM Analyse des Textes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpuXudaGHGs Trapattonis Wutrede: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ub1zsUD7UNQ Literatur: Eric Pfeil: Azzuro. Mit 100 Songs durch Italien. Kiepenheuer& Witsch Audioproduktion: kultur{}botschaft Mehr über den Podcast gibt‘s auch zu hören bei ByteFM: https://www.byte.fm/sendungen/bytefm-magazin/ Kontakt: zeitgeister@zeit-stiftung.de Weitere Podcasts der ZEIT-Stiftung: https://www.zeit-stiftung.de/mediathek/videoundpodcast/podcast/
Im Jahr 1972 erschien in Italien einer der seltsamsten Songs aller Zeiten. Der gerade erst durch »Azzuro« berühmt gewordene Sänger und Schauspieler Adriano Celentano brachte mit »Prisencolinensinainciusol« ein Lied heraus, dessen Text wie amerikanisches Englisch klang, in Wirklichkeit aber kompletter Nonsens war. 50 Jahr später wird noch immer über den Song spekuliert. Dieser Podcast folgt den Spuren zurück bis zu Charlie Chaplin, Dario Fo und der Commedia dell'arte. Gast: Judith Meyer ist eine in Berlin lebende Polyglottin mit einem besonderen Interesse an nichteuropäischen Sprachen. Während ihres Magisterstudiums der Romanistik und Computerlinguistik wurde Judith Meyer als die Stimme des Deutschlernprogramms „GermanPod101“ bekannt. 2014 gründete sie das Polyglot Gathering, eine der größten Konferenzen für Polyglotte und Sprachenblogger. Des Weiteren arbeitete sie als Beraterin oder Webentwicklerin für mehrere große Unternehmen in der Welt des Sprachenlernens, entwickelte LearnYu (einen Chinesischkurs auf Basis künstlicher Intelligenz), und verfasste die 7-teilige „Script Hacking“ Reihe - Kurse zum Erlernen fremder Alphabete nach einer von ihr selbst entwickelten Methode. Host: Ralf Schlüter, geb. 1968, lebt als Kulturjournalist in Berlin. Seine Jugend verbrachte er zu etwa gleichen Teilen in Plattenläden, Buchhandlungen und Museen, immer schon mit Hang zur Querverbindung: eine Zeile von Bob Dylan brachte ihn auf den Dichter Ezra Pound, ein Patti-Smith-Plattencover auf die zeitgenössische amerikanische Fotografie. Während seines Literaturstudiums im Berlin der 90er schrieb er für den deutschen Rolling Stone und die Berliner Zeitung nicht nur über Musik. Von 2006 bis 2020 war er Stellvertretender Chefredakteur des Kunstmagazins Art. Seit 2013 moderierte er die Sendung Art Mixtape beim Webradio ByteFM. Seit dem 16. Juni 2021 läuft sein Podcast »Ulysses lesen«, der sich mit dem berühmten Roman von James Joyce beschäftigt. Er ist Mitbegründer von kultur{}botschaft, einer digitalen Strategieberatung für Kulturinstitutionen und Medienhäuser. Im Podcast Zeitgeister erkundet Schlüter, von der Musik ausgehend, den Kosmos der Gegenwartskultur noch einmal neu: auf der Suche nach übersehenen Details und unerzählten Geschichten. SHOWNOTES: Erster TV-Auftritt von Adriano Celentano mit dem Lied: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=foU3Tgg7VJI TV-Auftritt 1974: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLgkT10N8Yo Interview mit Adriano Celentano: https://www.npr.org/transcripts/164206468 Dario Fo parodiert Chansons: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=glLl3GpNshg Ausschnitt aus »Der große Diktator« (OV): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isLNLpxpndA »Smokahontas« imitiert den Klang von Sprachen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybcvlxivscw Von Judith Meyer erwähntes Lied »Desert Rose« von Sting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gzqsmx1KGU Von Judith Meyer empfohlen: Ein bei uns weniger bekanntes aber besonders schönes Liebeslied auf Arabisch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqmWkqh1kt8 Slavoj Žižek-Version von»Prisencolinensinainciusol«: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_qT4puLXEM Analyse des Textes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpuXudaGHGs Trapattonis Wutrede: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ub1zsUD7UNQ Literatur: Eric Pfeil: Azzuro. Mit 100 Songs durch Italien. Kiepenheuer& Witsch Audioproduktion: kultur{}botschaft Mehr über den Podcast gibt‘s auch zu hören bei ByteFM: https://www.byte.fm/sendungen/bytefm-magazin/ Kontakt: zeitgeister@zeit-stiftung.de Weitere Podcasts der ZEIT-Stiftung: https://www.zeit-stiftung.de/mediathek/videoundpodcast/podcast/
14 Minuten - Deine tägliche Portion Deutsch - Deutsch lernen für Fortgeschrittene
Liebst du es, Sprachen zu lernen? Dann solltest du dir diese Folge auf jeden Fall anhören. Elisa Polese ist im Organisationsteam des Polyglot Gatherings. Im Interview erzählt sie mehr über diese Veranstaltung für Sprachliebhaber. Das Transkript dieser Folge findest du kostenlos auf www.14minuten.de Gefällt dir der Podcast? Unterstütze mich auf www.patreon.com/14minuten Rabattcode (30 %) für das Polyglot Gathering Online: 14minutenPGO2023
Join Rita in this special episode and listen to our remarkable guest, Tim Keeley - a hyperpolyglot & author - as he tells us about his fantastic life journey in 30 languages and gives us valuable insights into the historical and cultural ties that bind 4 of the major East Asian Languages: Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese. Tim explains - examples in support - the fascinating similarities these languages share and how it is an advantage to learn them together. Show Notes Polyglot Conference (https://polyglotconference.com) Polyglot Gathering (https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2023/en/) Polyglots mentioned in this episode: Richard Simcott (https://speakingfluently.com/about/) Luca Lampariello (https://www.lucalampariello.com/home/) Judith Meyer (https://learnlangs.com) Map of Japan (https://www.worldatlas.com/maps/japan) Ryukyuan languages, Japan (https://www.2m.com.au/blog/ryukyuan-language-japan/) Chinese Dynasties Timeline (https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/chem/hd_chem.htm) Scripts & Language Structure: Alexandre de Rhodes & the Vietnamese Script (https://saigoneer.com/saigon-heritage/9498-street-cred-alexandre-de-rhodes-and-the-birth-of-chữ-quốc-ngữ) Hiragana, Katakana & Romaji (https://8020japanese.com/japanese-characters-explained/) Old Names for Japan (https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Yamato-damashii) Korean Script (Hangul) (https://www.mondly.com/blog/hangul-korean-alphabet-pronunciation/) “Japan Made English” (Wasei-Eigo) (https://kokoro-jp.com/culture/4587/) Particles in Korean & Japanese (https://medium.com/@nathanchinster/korean-and-japanese-particle-and-grammar-similarities-9ad0d9e48e71)
Today's guest on the Expat Money Show is Chuck Smith the co-founder of the Polyglot Gathering, contributor of Duolingo's Esperanto course and founder of the Esperanto Wikipedia, among other Esperanto and polyglot projects. He had the idea for a GPS device to find fellow Esperanto speakers while travelling through Brazil in 2002 but needed to wait 15 years for the technology to catch up, so he could pursue this dream. Now he looks forward to meeting the challenges ahead to help people everywhere connect to make the world a better place. TODAY'S CONVERSATION WITH CHUCK What is Esperanto, where did it come from, and why is Esperanto important? Why do people use Esperanto? Does Esperanto have any politics attached to it? Is it a nation-state type of language? What would a new community in a country look like if Esperanto were the main language, instead of many different languages being spoken? Listen in to find out where the Universal Congress of Esperanto will take place this year, what country and when? You might want to attend! Find out how many people speak Esperanto worldwide and how long it took them to grasp the new language. If you are a monoglot speaker, and this is the first language you will learn outside of your native language, find out how difficult it will be to learn Esperanto. What are the stumbling blocks of why Esperanto does not have 20 million or 200 million speakers? #1 system recommended by Chuck Smith to learn Esperanto, hands down. I talk with Chuck about his app ‘Amikumu,' what it does and how we can all learn about other Esperanto speakers when we travel to new countries or a different city. Chuck and I discuss how someone would really learn the language of Esperanto, what you need to know and do to be fluent and how long that would take. You would be amazed at the number of hours required to pick up a new language, depending on what your native language is and what you want to learn in a new language. It's not as bad as most people think. Best advice, tips and tricks if you want to learn the language of Esperanto! RELATED EPISODES https://expatmoneyshow.com/episodes/best-foreign-language-learning-techniques-strategies-and-methods-for-shortcutting-your-language-learning-journey (169: Best Foreign Language Learning Techniques, Strategies, And Methods For Shortcutting Your Language Learning Journey) https://expatmoneyshow.com/episodes/john-fotheringham/ (147: Full Immersion Language Learning Before Leaving Home – John Fotheringham) https://expatmoneyshow.com/episodes/sarah-tarvin/ (144: How To Raise Your Children To Be Multilingual – Sarah Tarvin) HOW TO CONTACT CHUCK SMITH https://amikumu.com/about-us/ (Amikumu.com) chuck@amikumu.com CONCLUSION Honestly, if you want to learn a second language and you're struggling with Spanish, French or German, then Esperanto is a great language to start with. The time allotted to become fluent is considerably shorter than any other language, and the benefits of learning Esperanto are really worth the effort.
SIMPLE ITALIAN PODCAST | IL PODCAST IN ITALIANO COMPRENSIBILE | LEARN ITALIAN WITH PODCASTS
In questo episodio odierno del nostro podcast di italiano per stranieri voglio parlarvi di compassione. Mentre registro mi trovo a Varsavia, dove sono sto passando qualche giorno dopo il Polyglot Gathering. Perché è importante essere compassionevoli nei confronti di noi stessi e del nostro corpo? Scopriamolo insieme! Ecco un link alla ricerca scientifica cui mi riferisco: https://bit.ly/3MYZopM ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ Exclusive! Grab the NordVPN deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/simonepols Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! Get 10$ for your first 20$ spent on Italki with this link https://bit.ly/3O5yuxE ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
SIMPLE ITALIAN PODCAST | IL PODCAST IN ITALIANO COMPRENSIBILE | LEARN ITALIAN WITH PODCASTS
Sto registrando questo episodio del nostro podcast in italiano semplificato da Varsavia, capitale della Polonia. Sono venuto qui per partecipare al Polyglot Gathering annuale, e la città mi è piaciuta talmente tanto che sono rimasto più a lungo del previsto! Scopri cosa mi ha regalato questa bellissima esperienza. Buon ascolto! ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ Exclusive! Grab the NordVPN deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/simonepols Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! Get 10$ for your first 20$ spent on Italki with this link https://bit.ly/3O5yuxE ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
The Polyglot Gathering 2022 has finished and I invited to this special episode my friends: Lucas Bighetti, Fabrício Carraro and John Becker to discuss their experiences and share their opinions about the last event and also the previous ones. Language Boost - Instagram Language Boost: @languageboost - LanguageBoost: https://languageboost.biz/ - Youtube LanguageBoost: https://www.youtube.com/c/LanguageBoost01 Fabrício Carraro - Instagram Time to Learn Portuguese: https://www.instagram.com/timetolearnportuguese/ - Youtube Time to Learn Portuguese: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6xOxBQ8DutYeBFs7GRKpYg/videos - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fabriciocarraro/ - Podcast "Dev Sem Fronteiras": https://open.spotify.com/show/3WsvUbTh7M1Rsw6lOGwYtk - FabrícioCarraro - Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpJ7-64V2pivyuS7rDKHyhQ Lucas Bighetti - Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lucas_bighetti/ John Becker: - @letsbecker - www.letsbecker.com.br LingoCast Instagram: @Lingocast Facebook https://linktr.ee/lingocast
Polyglots are everywhere. Last week they came to Teresin in Poland. I was there too and I would like to share my experience from then meeting with you :) Enjoy listening! :)You can find a full transcript of this episode on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/67592149My blog: https://ioannesoculus.com/Radio Prosty Polski: https://www.spreaker.com/show/radio-prosty-polskiFB Ioannes Oculus: https://www.facebook.com/IoannesOculus/FB Polish With John: https://www.facebook.com/polishwithjohnInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/ioannesoculus/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ioculusMinds: https://www.minds.com/ioculusVK: https://vk.com/id91229452GAB: https://gab.com/ioculusIn the podcast, I used "Sing Swing Bada Bing" Doug Maxwell/Media Right Productions; source: https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music (attribution not required)źródła, sources:
La Slovaquie en direct, Magazine en francais sur la Slovaquie
Bloc d'actualités. A propos de l'appréciation "Enseignant de l'année". Rencontre mondiale Polyglot Gathering 2022. Entretien avec le directeur de l'association civile Edukácia a internet Peter Baláž, qui organise cette manifestation.
Today on chenelle's language learning jourey podcast. I share how one can attend this year polyglot gathering either online or in person. If you want to learn either eukrainian or polish you can go to uta.lk/chenelle in order to receive twenty percent off either the polish or eukrainian courses. Also you can go to michelthomas.com in order to get thirtyfive percent off of the polish foundation course from the michelthomas.com site. All you have to do is put in the promotional code afmtchn in order to get an additional thirtyfive percent off. Please follow, share rate and review the show on all podcasting platforms where they are downloadeed at. Thank you so much for your support and happy language learning everyone. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/support
Easy Italian: Learn Italian with real conversations | Imparare l'italiano con conversazioni reali
Un modo di dire italiano dice "Non c'è due senza tre". Il detto si riferisce ad eventi, e quindi se un evento si è presentato per due volte consecutive, allora molto probabilmente succederà anche una terza volta. Ma questa volta lo applichiamo alle persone! Oggi siamo in tre! Raffaele, Matteo e Katie. Tra generi musicali e destini incrociati e shock culturali, facciamo quattro chiacchiere con Katie. Trascrizione interattiva e Vocab Helper Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership Note dell'episodio Generi musicali, sono tanti e nessuno di noi è molto competente, ma ecco a voi alcuni titoli e i nomi dei gruppi di cui abbiamo parlato: Uno dei generi preferiti di Katie: Il Post-hardcore -> https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-hardcore Due gruppi, tra i preferiti di Katie: At the Drive-in -> https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/AttheDrive-In The Distillers -> https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Distillers E poi le lingue! Raffaele e Katie si sono incontrati al Poliglot Gathering, ma di che anno? Eh, non si dice, svelerebbe la nostra età!! Possiamo solo dire che si è tenuto a Bratislava. Polyglot Gathering -> https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2022/en/ Bratislava -> https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bratislava "Fare un giro" - Espressione molto usata in italiano, spesso si usa per descrivere una passeggiata, spesso senza uno scopo preciso, ma con l'unico intento di passare del tempo in compagnia, e intanto "passeggiare". Il consiglio di Katie per chi sta imparando l'italiano? Per questo dovete ascoltare la puntata! Trascrizione Intro Musica Raffaele: [0:22] Matteo, Matteo, sto un po' stretto, sto un po' stretto oggi. Matteo: [0:27] Eh, ma è... C'è... (Non riesco a capire il perché) Fatti un po' più in là... La sig.na Jingle Musica Katie: [0:37] Aggiungi un posto a tavola. Buongiorno! Raffaele: [0:42] Ma... questa voce la conosco! Matteo: [0:44] Ma chi è? La signora dei jingle? Katie: [0:48] Sì! Sono quella... Sono la voce dei jingle! Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership
It's a 4th of July eve podcast with language stud and Michigan son Jack Fordon who Ian met at the Polyglot Gathering in 2017. He tells of discovering Spanish as his first foreign language at age ten and then how he nurtured this language passion onwards to include Chinese, German, Russian, Norwegian, French and many more. Jack enlightens the guys on his current masters in interpreting, his traverses across Europe and the US, differences in Canadian English and his potentially contrarian opinions on language policy in Ukraine. It's an action packed ep with lot of linguistic food for thought.
This pod Sunday the guys speak about trying their best at the 40 hour 7 day language challenge (#40h7dLC) with Ian knocking the rust off of his Ukrainian, Cody forging on with his Korean and Markus holding steady with Portuguese and Catalan. Markus pontificates on the allure of Russian and how taking on a new language family is strenuous at first but then pays off for future related languages. Cody dissects his current struggles with Korean and how it has differed greatly from his experiences with Chinese and German. Finally the guys talk about the upcoming Multilingual Hockey Night in Canada on April 17th, the Polyglot Gathering going online again and tease some ideas for future episodes.
In this episode I talk about words – what they are and where they come from. This is losely based on a talk I gave at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava in 2018 entitled “Deconstructing Language“. Videos and slides from other presentations I have given at language-related events. Music featured in this episode Hedge Cats […]
It's a meandering chat about this year's Polyglot Conference Global with Esther, a fellow language lover who the guys met earlier this year at the online Polyglot Gathering. The conversation touches on the Michel Thomas method, revitalizing indigenous languages, starting new language challenges and deciphering dead languages. Finally, the crew ponders giving their own presentation at a future conference.
Cette année, du fait de la pandémie, la très célèbre Polyglot Conference se tiendra en ligne, du 16 au 25 Octobre 2020. Il y a énormément de raisons de plonger et participer à ce genre de rassemblement de polyglottes, même si vous considérez ne pas en être un, et je souhaite en partager 6 avec vous dans cet épisode. Ne faites pas l'erreur que j'ai faite pendant si longtemps et saisissez l'occasion de participer à ces évènements. A tout de suite ! Site officiel - Polyglot Conference
Last weekend, I attended the Polyglot Gathering 2020. It was the first time, I took part in such an event and it was quite good. I want to share some thought about that. Enjoy listening! :)You can find a full transcript of this episode on my blog: https://wp.me/p4D8ou-1bSIf you like my podcast, please support me on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/ioannesoculusIn the podcast, I used "Sing Swing Bada Bing" Doug Maxwell/Media Right Productions; source: https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music (attribution not required)
Today on Chenelle‘s language learning journey podcast. I share my thoughts about my first experience attending the polyglot gathering for the first time online. Please share, review and subscribe to the podcast Forever podcast are downloaded. Thank you so much for your support. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/support
"In languages, when you want to learn, you learn." Steve Kaufmann is a language learner from Canada who has studied over 17 languages so far. He is an advocate of reading in other languages, even from the start...and turns out this is something he did even back in the 60s. I've met Steve in person a few times at events like the Polyglot Gathering and Langfest, and he is ALWAYS full of energy and excitement about the opportunity of learning another language. "It's all about getting your brain used to reading and hearing the new language." What I loved most about this interview is the sheer enthusiasm that Steve brings to the topic of language learning. It's evident that he loves to learn and enjoys access to every single new word that he can get. Steve's attitude is something that I have heard from polyglots and language lovers very often: He approaches languages fearlessly, saying that it doesn't worry about whether he can do it. Anything that he can't figure out, he'll get there eventually. "Some people wanna learn it NOW, but they can't learn it now." This level of trust and self-confidence was so much fun to witness in the interview -- listen out to how Steve discusses mistakes and slow learning, emphasizing that immediate progress is not part of language learning. His advice? Have a positive attitude and be grateful about what you can do now. Check out LingQ Steve is the co-founder of language learning app LingQ, and they're currently sponsoring this show. So if you enjoy his attitude, check it out today and learn a language with LingQ for free at www.fluentlanguage.co.uk/readmore. Thank you for listening to the Fluent Show! If you enjoyed this episode, please consider supporting the show by leaving a review in your podcast app or becoming a member of our Patreon community. Special Guest: Steve Kaufmann.
Ruben Adery is a pronunciation and dialect coach who helps language learners, actors, singers, etc. develop native-like foreign accents in English, Spanish, Portuguese, Hebrew, and Italian. I first met him at the 2019 Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava where he gave a talk titled The Sincerest Form of Flattery: Imitating Foreign Accents to Help Master Any Language. The content of the talk itself was great, but the really impressive part was that he had the audience fooled for the first five minutes that he was from Israel when he is in fact a native English speaker from Los Angeles! As Ruben likes to say: "Accents speak louder than words!"
Katie Harris is the founder of Joy of Languages, a site dedicated to helping make language learning a joy instead of a chore. She was bored to tears with languages in school, but eventually figured out a more fun, effective approach to language learning that is focused on communicating with people and enjoying authentic listening and reading content. With a Masters in Linguistics from Cambridge University and an MRes in Speech, Language and Cognition from University College London, Katie does a great job peppering in just enough linguistics, psychology, and neuroscience to help language learners, but always keeping the focus on fun and efficacy. We first met at the 2019 Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava where I attended her talk How to Learn a Language by Watching TV and Film. Her philosophy was right in line with my "Anywhere Immersion" approach and I was eager to get her on the podcast.
Gabriel Gelman is the founder of Sprachheld, a popular language learning website for Germans learning foreign languages (and―as an added bonus―non-Germans learning German as a foreign language). On the site, Gabriel shares useful language learning tips and tools, inspirational interviews with polyglots and linguists, and a dialogue-based Spanish course (with other languages slated for production in the future). I've followed his work for some time and was delighted to finally meet him in person at the 2019 Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava.
Elisa Polese is an Italian polyglot known for teaching multiple languages at once (up to ten languages at a time!), including Arabic, Catalan, Dutch, Italian, English, Esperanto, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish. In addition to her focus on multilingual learning, Elisa is also a big proponent of speaking from day one and getting over the fear of making mistakes. I had the privilege of witnessing her impressive multilingual teaching skills firsthand at the 2019 Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava, and it was exhilarating to see so many languages flying around in the room at once!
Dr. Gareth Popkins is a lawyer, historian, and former English and Welsh teacher who is fluent in German, Russian, and Welsh, advanced in French, conversational in Hungarian, Finnish, Italian, Portuguese, and Basque, and now hard at work on Japanese. We first met in June 2019 at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava and I knew right away that I wanted to have him on the podcast to share his language learning story and tips. As he puts it: "I've got fluent because I really wanted to and I kept going, despite myself. It's sometimes said that an expert is someone who's made all the mistakes in the book. If so, I'm that expert. I'm still experimenting. I'm still learning…. and still making those mistakes, of course."
Lýdia Machová, PhD is a polyglot, language mentor, interpreter, TED speaker, the former head organizer of the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava, and the founder of Language Mentoring, a site that shows people how to learn any language by themselves. Her 2018 TED Talk, The Secrets of Learning a New Language, has been watched nearly 4.5 million times, and has brought the language learning secrets of polyglots to a much wider audience than ever before.
Welcome to this 5-part series, where I'm joined by my friend Lydia Machovha, from LanguageMentoring.com We'll be discussing the fundamentals of language learning, according to Lydia's framework for teaching and learning. Lydia is a professional interpreter, speaks 9 languages herself, has organised the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava, and now teaches people to learn languages independently. In Today's Episode: Take responsibility for your own learning: Today we have the internet - an incredible resource for learning any language The different between language material and instruction materials Finding a language school is not the answer, and can lead to a dangerous mindset Start Speaking Today: I’d like to thank italki for supporting the show. To claim your free lesson and start speaking today, visit: https://iwillteachyoualanguage.com//italkishownotes Do You Have A Question? Ask me your language learning questions by clicking here, and I’ll do my best to feature it on the show! Also, please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the podcast! If you’ve got any comments about the show then please leave them in the “comments” section below! If you’d like to help me out, then I’d love it if you could… Share the episode using the social media buttons around you Leave an honest review and rating of the podcast on iTunes (click here to do that) iTunes reviews in particular really help the rankings of the podcast and help me to reach other aspiring language learners out there! See you in the next episode of the I Will Teach You A Language podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwillteachyoualanguage/message
In this final interview of the current season one of the first true fans of the podcast; Miroslav Šedivý finally makes an appearance and shares the story behind his incredibly multilingual upbringing and life. Czech & Slovak - Miroslav Šedivý at the Polyglot Gathering 2015 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyJdgbsOqQ4 ONE BRAIN, ONE KEYBOARD, ONE EDITOR https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjvgVhjUSQw This podcast is sponsored by Glossika. Online sentence-based language courses available in 50+ languages. Give it a try for free here: tryglossika.com https://actualfluency.com/afp-133-miroslav-sedivy-seize-every-opportunity-to-learn-languages/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/actualfluency/message
Sono tornato dal Polyglot Gathering di Bratislava e ve ne parlo! Ecco alcune parole che ho usato (sì, la lista fa un po' ridere):GiovineBaldi giovani/giovaniQuattro gattiLezionale frontaleKebabbaroArretratiTrovataTrascrizione, con glossario delle parole difficili (PI Club d'oro)Il mio nuovo ebook gratuito, 'Come raggiungere un livello avanzato in italiano'Il mio ebook gratuito, '50 modi di dire per parlare come un italiano'Fai una donazioneFai una lezione di italiano su Italki e ricevi 10 $ in creditiIl mio canale YouTubeDai un'occhiata al merchandiseFacebookInstagram
https://podcastitaliano.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/29-di-ritorno-dal-polyglot-gathering.mp3 Sono tornato dal Polyglot Gathering di Bratislava e ve ne parlo! Ecco alcune parole che ho usato (sì, la lista fa un po' ridere): Giovine Baldi giovani/giovani Quattro gatti Lezionale frontale Kebabbaro Arretrati Trovata
https://podcastitaliano.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/15-polyglot-gathering-vk-e-un-po-di-qa.mp3 Oggi parliamo di un po' di temi! Alcune parole utili per voi: Personeuna certa età Dispregiativo Dare del "x" a qualcuno Fregarsene altamente Idem Coniugare Chi vivrà vedrà
Click or tap here to read the full show notes (http://www.fluentlanguage.co.uk/blog/podcast-episode-73) German Learners: Click this link to download a full transcript (bilingual) of our conversation, so you can listen and read along at the same time. (https://fluentlanguage.activehosted.com/f/41) Judith Meyer is well-known in the language learning world for co-founding the Polyglot Gathering event and writing several language books and courses. She's consulted by many and freely shares her own tips and experiences from learning over 14 languages. We covered a lot of ground and as a language learner you will be delighted to hear her excellent advice. One Thing You Need to Know About This Episode This is a bilingual podcast. Judith and I are both Germans who speak a lot of English in our daily lives and even in our off-mic conversations we regularly switch between German and English. If you are not an experienced German learner, there will be some parts of the podcast that you don't understand. But like all language learners, you're not alone in that feeling. Try to stay with us, trust that we will come back to English again and again, and challenge yourself to become comfortable with not understanding everything. Special Guest: Judith Meyer.
These days, the Polyglot Gathering (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_8BR59zKgBzeWPxFtmHSwA) pulls in hundreds of language learners who share and enjoy community in the heart of Europe. A lot of this is thanks to Chuck's contributions, along with the wonderful Polyglot Gathering team. This year, Chuck published his first language learning app, Amikumu (https://amikumu.com/en/). What is Amikumu? Want to text another person and ask them to meet up and practice a language...without looking creepy? Amikumu will help you find people near you who love languages. The purpose of the app is to help you find people nearby to chat and meet up, and it supports the world's 7,000+ languages (including 100+ sign languages). The idea for Amikumu came out of Chuck's love for the planned language Esperanto. It's not a natural language choice, it's a minority language. Why would anyone bother to learn? Language Learning Apps In recent episodes, we've covered language learning apps on a regular basis. If you have a smartphone and you live in the 21st century, they are an essential component of language learning. More and more developers are working on apps for language learning, and Chuck's experience stands out from the crowd: he is the creator of Duolingo's Esperanto course. In our interview, Chuck explained how he came to work on Duolingo and why he loves gamified learning, how we can bring more soul into language learning apps...and why you could probably learn a language if you have three apps. Check out Chuck's app recommendations in our link list below. Special Guest: Chuck Smith.
Welcome to Creative Language Learning Podcast episode 56, with our popular roundup of this season's hottest language learning resources and tools. Pop Culture MomentLindsay has been watching Terrace House, a Japanese reality tv show.I found Bore Da, a Welsh breakfast show that displays key vocab right on the screen. Its app even gives you individual items with associated vocab lists.Anyone remember pop-up video? How could would it be to have pop-up vocab video?!And now for the top toolsGrab your sunglasses, get out into the sunshine, and try these brand new language learning resources. This season, we're not all about online learning anymore as you'll hear how Lindsay and I are applying our best tips outside too.1) Prettier NotesHow to: Bullet Journal for Effective Language Learning2) ClozemasterPlay the game at www.clozemaster.com3) Charity Shops and Library SalesFind a charity shop in the UK in this directoryAnd here's what's awesome too.Live Lingua ProjectDubbed YouTube VideosNeed inspiration? Start your search with disney classic "Let It Go"Type your favourite show + your target language into the YouTube search barSubasub and SubsceneAdvanced geeks can even create their own Anki cards using the subtitles on offer (we saw a talk about this at the Polyglot Gathering, but it kinda went over my head -- if you want to go for it, start here.Search for a word or watch a movie while following the script to get the most out of this for learning languagesCheck out this example of scripts mentioning Twin Peaks in English and Spanish
It's one of my favourite episodes of the year - the live clips are in, so you can experience the Polyglot Gathering in 2017 with the Creative Language Learning Podcast as we bring you interviews, impressions and fun from the conference floor. Here's just a hint of what's inside:Wonderful best wishes to you awesome listeners in German, Indonesian, Esperanto, Portuguese, Slovak, Korean, and more!Slovakia Travel Tips and insights into their unlikely national sportFiel's call to arms -- how to bring more love into language learningThe special vocabulary and handy rule 15 of Esperanto grammarWhat Gareth Popkins taught us about polyglotism...and what it has to do with your love lifeCome to an International Polyglot EventIf our episode inspired you to come and participate in a Polyglot event, check out the 2 big international conferences on the calendar:Langfest in Montréal, Canada -- get 25% discount when you enter promo code KERSTINPolyglot Conerence in Reykjavík, Iceland"Polyglot" is nothing to be scared of - not anymore!If this conference has shown me anything, it's that this community called "polyglots" is ever evolving and slowly becoming an ever more supportive, familial group. It's great to see what people of all ages and backgrounds contribute...and of course it feels so fun when you're back home and suddenly realize your phone keyboard now has a Swedish dictionary installed.To learn more about smaller events near you, check out 8 Life-Changing Language Learning Events Around the Globe here on the blog.
We love having you back with the show. WELCOME if you are a new subscriber. HIGH FIVE if you've always been with us. A lot has happened over the last 8 months and in this show you will hear stories about... The new languages Lindsay has been studying - and why she often changes them How we watch TV in other languages The joys of learning minority languages Our favourite podcasts and blog articles of 2016/17 Where we are travelling this year ...and why we're a polite show You can catch me and Lindsay at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava. Listen to hear more about the talks we'll seek out.Links From This Episode The Fault In Our Stars Bench, Amsterdam Polyglot Bratislava Program 2017 Langfest in Montréal, August 2017
Travel Wisdom Podcast -travel and learn languages for success and money
Lydia says that learning with a teacher is not the only way to learn a language! She actually says that learning yourself is the best way and then the teacher or tutor can be used as a guide. You have the power to learn what you want! That's why I love Lydia so much! You don't have to wait for the right class to come along, you can do what you want right away! In her Language Mentoring site (as well as her Slovak version of this site) she teaches how to go through and learn a language to a high level by yourself. That's how she learned 7 additional languages, no teacher required! She is also the head organizer of the upcoming Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava May 31st to June 4th. I will also be volunteering so can't wait to see you there! The music at the end of the show was from Fastnacht in the village of Elzach outside of Freiburg, Germany. People dress up in scary costumes and hit the ground (and people) with sheep bladders filled with air. It's lots of fun with marching bands and kids running away from these 'monsters.'
This episode of the Creative Language Learning Podcast is as fun as ever, covering the ultimate Good, Bad and Struggling and our Top 5 Language Learning Tools of 2016/17. Our Favourite Language Learning Tools for Autumn/Winter 2016Listen to the show to get the detailed recommendations, and here is a quick index.1) Lyricstraining.comThis website is awesome!! It pulls in music videos from YouTube and VEVO, adds the lyrics and converts the whole thing into a game. Teachers might call it a "cloze exercise", I call it "fill in the gap", and anyone would call this one a whole lot of fun. Get yourself to Lyricstraining.com and give it a go 2) Gus on The GoA language learning collection created by parents for children. It's fun, it's beautiful, it's available as an app for your smartphone and tablet. In a sea of language learning apps, Gus on the Go stands out for its design and layout. There are apps available in 28 languages. Highly recommended for getting any young person started in a new language! Get the link for your chosen language here 3) TuneIn RadioA language learner's classic for natural input. This app and website lets you listen to radio stations from all around the world. It's perfect if you're at that stage where you're looking for a way to "level up" in your language. There are also podcasts, or you could search by favourite music style. The diverse voices of radio DJs and exciting foreign language music will give you a great new challenge. Download the app or listen live at TuneIn.com. 4) Tiny CardsThis is a new app from the team behind Duolingo. It's all about adorable flashcards helping you review and check your knowledge on anything, from language vocab to colour theory. This promises to take the Duolingo design excellence to a new level. Great if you're looking for a new flashcard app. Right now this is out on iOS only, but you can register Android interest here 5) EggbunYes, it's another super cute app! This innovative little app works like a text chat, where you're chatting with your new friend "Eggbun", who is teaching you the Korean alphabet and language. If you're addicted to texting on your phone, here's an AI teacher who will reply anytime. The app is out for Korean (iOS/Android), Japanese (iOS coming soon, but already out on Android), and soon coming out soon in Chinese. Get your preferred version from the lovely Eggbun website. Honorary MentionThe All 4 App now has a wonderful "Walter Presents" range, bringing in comedies, dramas and crime shows in a really wide range of languages. If you're in the UK, you go and have a look.Learn more about how to use TV to learn a language in podcast episode 31.So The Podcast is Taking a Break..But that does not mean you're going to miss us too much. Lindsay and I have gone through the archives together, selecting our own favourite episodes for you to try.Here are our essential Creative Language Learning Podcast episodes you should not miss: Episode 5 with André Klein, which was a truly inspiring interview about so much more than "German storytelling". André and I discussed why creativity is so important for language learner, and how you can use it to get out of the failures of school learning. Episode 21 - Why Your Language Learning Goal Sucks and What to Do About It, in which I originally got on the mic only to tell you about my new course...but then I had a big rant about goals and why they suck. Episode 30 - How to Achieve a New Year's Goal of Learning a New Language, which is full of small and actionable tips and you're guaranteed to find good advice for your language learning problem. Episode 37 - The Secret Languages of Great Britain, an episode with the incredible Simon Ager of Omniglot in which we discovered that Great Britain actually has more than 10 languages - not just English! Episode 40 - Live from the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin, a fun and lively audio-postcard from Berlin Episode 45 - How to Learn a Language Using Snapchat, which turned out to be such a great guide show and covered one small topic from lots of fab angles Episode 51 - Top 5 Fictional Languages is the podcast episode for listeners who love to spend a lot of time in the land of books, films and video games Other Link From This Episode Futurelearn - free online courses provided by UK universities and organisations. They offer some language courses, including Dutch, Danish, Spanish, and Catalan Sign Language (!) News in Slow French
Nicolas asks: "I've learnt European Portuguese. Can I switch to Brazilian?" In this episode: Comparison between European and Brazilian Portuguese Switching between varieties of Portuguese How to do it Resources mentioned in this episode: True language love is in the margins: A thoughtful piece from the Loving Language blog on what it means to choose a language to learn Olly chatting Portuguese with Jimmy Mello: https://youtu.be/KVnz14SrobA Differences between Portuguese and Brazilian Portuguese - Fernando Saraiva at the Polyglot Gathering: https://youtu.be/-T5lT5afkys Start speaking today I’d like to thank iTalki for supporting the show. iTalki is the best place online to connect with affordable and effective native speakers teachers and tutors. To claim your free lesson and start speaking today, simply visit:http://iwillteachyoualanguage.com/italkishownotes Do you have a question? Ask me your language learning questions by clicking here, and I’ll do my best to feature it on the show! Also, please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the podcast! If you’ve got any comments about the show then please leave them in the “comments” section below! If you’d like to help me out, then I’d love it if you could… Share the episode using the social media buttons around you Leave an honest review and rating of the podcast on iTunes (click here to do that) iTunes reviews in particular really help the rankings of the podcast and help me to reach other aspiring language learners out there! See you in the next episode of the I Will Teach You A Language podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwillteachyoualanguage/message
Don't forget to catch the mention of our good friends at Flashsticks, the language learning post-it guys. You can purchase vocabulary post-it notes in 8 languages and get 10% off with the code KERSTIN10 - or just download the free Flash Academy app.When you reach the higher language levels, it's not enough to just study. How does it feel to reach a level where you are looking for ways to go beyond fluency? How can you move towards mastery? There's no Lindsay in this episode (don't worry, she'll be back very soon!), so I found myself two experts who know what they are talking about: Tristan Foy, an American polyglot who's currently my advanced German student and Gareth Popkins from How To Get Fluent The episode is full of tips and strategies for reaching the very advanced levels and getting better even after years of study.Check out the full blog post and show notes for this article at www.fluentlanguage.co.uk/blog/podcast-advanced-languageKey Points: It's Not About Fast Progress Advanced Level Means Finding "More" In The Language "Learning a language is a bit like hugging a cactus - you can never get entirely comfortable" It Takes Work To Progress Enjoy the journey, stop for a breather whenever you feel like it and keep going. Fluency - No One Cares! Tristan sums this up with a wonderful sentence: Don't worry about getting fluent. Worry about getting better. You Need Humility Links and Resources Mentioned In This Episode How to Get Fluent, Gareth's blog - highly recommended Ellen Jovin's idea of the Polyglutton Gareth's summary of the Polyglot Gathering, in which he explains what "The Need Principle" is: Learning another language is a long, hard process, requiring a lot of dedication (..) After all, as an adult trying to learn a new language it's all about “overcoming human nature”. You need, erm, “need”: you're either surrounded by the language, you know somebody who speaks it, you have an unusual interest in the country or culture or the language will benefit you at work Wade's Russian Grammar Hammer's German Grammar Teach Yourself Courses Our sponsors Flashsticks Special Guest: Gareth Popkins.
Hi and welcome to the 63rd episode of the Language Meanderings podcast. My name is Jonathan and today I have a wonderful guest, Richard Simcott, a man who probably doesn’t need any introduction. He is behind the website SpeakingFluently.com. He and Alex Rawling have put together the Polyglot Gathering, the Polyglot Conference, and if you […]
In this episode, I talk about the impact that language communities have had on my life. In this episode: The Polyglot Gathering in Berlin What it's like in a language conference Developing deep relationships with likeminded people Getting outside your comfort zone How this can impact on your language learning Resources mentioned in today's episode: With podcast listener Maria in Berlin... Start speaking today I’d like to thank iTalki for supporting the show. iTalki is the best place online to connect with affordable and effective native speakers teachers and tutors. To claim your free lesson and start speaking today, simply visit:http://iwillteachyoualanguage.com/italkishownotes Do you have a question? Ask me your language learning questions by clicking here, and I’ll do my best to feature it on the show! Also, please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the podcast! If you’ve got any comments about the show then please leave them in the “comments” section below! If you’d like to help me out, then I’d love it if you could… Share the episode using the social media buttons around you Leave an honest review and rating of the podcast on iTunes (click here to do that) iTunes reviews in particular really help the rankings of the podcast and help me to reach other aspiring language learners out there! See you in the next episode of the I Will Teach You A Language podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwillteachyoualanguage/message
En este episodio hablo un poco sobre como es la política en España. No te preocupes, es fácil :) A continuación un punto de vista para practicar algunos aspectos de la primera parte, como el vocabulario. Por último, voy a hablar un poco sobre la conferencia de Poliglot Gathering, en Berlín. Due to space limits, I can't add all the text here. You can download the text in pdf at: http://www.unlimitedspanish.com/podcast
This episode comes with a bit of a difference, as Lindsay and I were reporting live from the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin.We bring you reports and impressions from what's going on at the event.There are opportunities to listen in to the fabulous language introductions. We had the opportunity to learn about all kinds of languages, from Indonesian to Greek. It's about people coming together and accepting each other for who they are. It's a life philosophy, in a way. - Jordan I also brought my microphone to several new people - hear the personal language learning stories of Tristan, Jordan and Stephen who are all English native speakers learning over 5 foreign languages. It's possible!The Polyglot Gathering is sponsored by our own podcast sponsors, so this time there's a double shout out for italki - you can get started learning languages with native speakers on there. Get started with a "Buy 1 Get 1 Free" Offer at www.fluentlanguage.co.uk/italki Strange Items That Were Part of The "Qu'est-ce que c'est??" Game Pretty easy 1) Che cosa è? What the ... 2) Was ist das hier?The Kafka referenced after I heard Lindsay's story is "Die Verwandlung" (metamorphosis). Languages heard on this show: German, Esperanto, Spanish, French, Indonesian, Greek, English...I think that's it! Catch up with Lindsay's video blog from the Polyglot Gathering. How Did You Like This Episode? The live reporting format was great fun, but of course we want to hear if it worked for you! Would you like more episodes like this in the future? You can get in touch with us and tell us what you thought by 1) leaving us an iTunes review by visiting our itunes page and clicking "Ratings and Reviews" 2) using hashtag #cllp on Twitter (I am @kerstinhammes and Lindsay is @ldlanguages). And once again, thanks so much to our sponsors Italki - please support our show by visiting that link today.
We're getting excited about the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin! Here is a preview of the talks we are not going to miss.Look out for the very special "live from the floor" reports in episode 40. Episode 38 is brought to you with friendly support from italki. Do visit their site and check out the awesome Buy 1 Get 1 Free offer to learn from native speakers today.We Want To Meet You At The Gathering!Are you a podcast listener on the way to the Polyglot Gathering?Then don't hesitate and come to see Lindsay and me! We'll be reporting from the conference floor for episode 40 so your voice could even be on the show.Send us a message on Twitter! We are @ldlanguages for Lindsay and @kerstinhammes for Kerstin, and on the hashtag #cllpLinks From This Episode: The Polyglot Gathering Full Programme Booklet of the Gathering North American Polyglot Symposium Polyglot Conference 8 Life-Changing Language Learning Events Around the Globe
Episode 35 of the Creative Language Learning Podcast is brought to you with support from HelloTalk. Go visit them now, because you're totally missing out.Do you remember when you first heard the word "polyglot"?And what does this word mean to you? ##Show Topic: What Is a "Polyglot" and Should You Be One?In this episode, Lindsay and I went deeper into what's changed in the emerging community of internet polyglots. A few years ago, the YouTube landscape in particular was a nasty place. But things are looking up!What does the word mean, and is being polyglot desirable?Far from being entirely opposed to polyglots as a barrage of braggards and internet trolls, we are able to bring you many positive thoughts and perspectives.##Polyglot Guest: Alex RawlingsIn this episode, we have a special guest who is a famous fancy polyglot and known for winning the prestigious Harper-Collins award of being [Britain's Most Multilingual Student]. It's Alex Rawlings, co-founder of the [Polyglot Conference] and "full-time language guru dude". Polyglots have existed a lot longer than YouTube. Alex did an amazing job of describing how the polyglot community has changed and also why it wasn't a great place to start out in. It's fascinating how much YouTube comes up in this discussion. He shares the story of bringing a bit of offline magic into the online world, and we agree that the internet is now a nicer place for language learners, and thank God for that.##Takeaway of the Week "It is what you make it." There is still a personal challenge to readers, but also a real sense of permission to make the word mean what it means to you. Polyglots might be online, offline, nice, nasty, multilingual or just really curious.For me, the biggest update to the polyglot label was the idea of it being all about the intention of learning languages, and the interest, and the passion. I love that! ##Links and Tips from This Episode Alex Rawlings writes at Rawlangs Lindsay on Youtube: What's a Polyglot? Kerstin speaks (reads!!!!) 25 European languages - the best part of making this video was finding native speakers of 25 languages in one week. I even rang the Icelandic and Luxembourgish tourist offices. ^__^ My Blog Article from May 2014, summing up all the polyglot negatives Polyglot Conference - this year in Greece and the Polyglot Workshops or just search for any of these things on Facebook Polyglot Gathering in Berlin HelloTalk Are you going to claim the polyglot title this year? Or still not convinced? Special Guest: Alex Rawlings.
This episode is brought to you with support from Other Cats to Whip, a super cute book of French idioms. Get 10% off with the code FLUENT at www.othercatstowhip.com.In this episode, Lindsay went out and discovered the world of Brian Kwong, creator of the #add1challenge. Brian has studied 5 languages and created one of the most successful trends in the polyglot world. Listen to hear more about how it all works inside the challenge: How the Study Groups and Mastermind Groups work Which schools approach turns out to be a rocking technique How the challenge changed for Brian as he took it again How Lindsay once saves a Chinese tourist's world! Brian also gives us a hint as to what the future holds for the Add1Challenge!Word of the Week:An English word that Lindsay was struggling with ;)tout Pronounced taʊt A person who sells or endorses tickets, accommodation or taxis, often in the street or public places.Links from the Show: The #Add1Challenge Benny Lewis's Forum Judith Meyers Talk at Polyglot Gathering in Berlin: From 0 to C1 in Chinese Brian's blog: Kevin Richardson speaks fluent Japanese Essena O'Neill: The Model Who Changed Her Mind About Instagram Tips of the WeekAs always, our guest was hugely impressed with our selection of tips. Brian chose tip 3 as his favourite, because it's the one way you're guaranteed to build sentences. Slow down YouTube videos: Click the cog in bottom right hand corner of video, click speed, and slow down or speed up. Use Snapchat: Record multilingual clips throughout the day and they're only there for 24 hours, no comments, no pressure on mistakes! Find a study buddy to text: Use HelloTalk, Tandem, MeetUp, Facebook groups etc to find a study buddy and start a WhatsApp or iMessage thread where you vouch to only use the language you're both studying. Do whatever it takes in this hour so you'll want to learn another hour tomorrow. (Anthony Lauder)
This episode is brought to you with support from Other Cats to Whip, a cute French book that you can buy for 10% off using the code FLUENT. What was language learning like before the internet? What's so great about an event like the Language Show? Our ideas for Langathon and Language Speed Dating Language and Careers: What's out there beyond Teaching and Translating? Lindsay's passionate explanation of “Primary Languages” in the UK, and how to instil a language passion for life in younger learners Our appreciation of multilingual actors and subtitles in TV and movies Our podcast also featured a short interview with Dan McIntyre from the University of Huddersfield and our discussion around what fluency involved. Tip of the Week Lindsay chose Tip 2 as the winning tip for this episode and added more great ideas on how you can present to people, even when they are not learning your language. 1) Draw a trilingual vocab chart to practice vocab divergence 2) Prepare a presentation for your tutor or buddy 3) Swipe in two languages using the Swiftkey Keyboard app Links and Interesting Stuff from This Show Podcast: Episode 13 with Becky Morales about raising bilingual children Daniel Brühl Monsters by Gareth Edwards The Add 1 Challenge The Lingo Show on the BBC Babel Language Magazine Learning English with Phrasal Verbs, Lindsay's new online course Language Learning Events around the World Language Show Live Polyglot Gathering Polyglot Conference Polyglot Workshops
Episode 18 was packed full of language learning news and chat with Lindsay from Lindsay does Languages, my trusty and lovely co-host. I hope you'll join us for all the debate and learning! We discussed A truly useful and helpful definition of Polyglot by Richard Simcott What the Polyglot Gathering is and how it went down in Berlin in 2015 If a language you learn really makes you think differently, and Whether Kerstin should make herself study more Russian or allow herself the fun of exploring a bit of Welsh In Episode 16, I'm introducing our new co-host: Lindsay Dow from Lindsay Does Languages I'm bringing Lindsay in for more Creative Language Learning Podcast because she's just been so much fun for you to listen to.Article of the Week"How the Language you Speak Changes your View of the World" in the Independentclosely related Does your Language Shape how you Think? in the NY TimesTips of the WeekLindsay's tip of the week was tip number 1, of course because she is completely involved in the awesome Script Challenge this year. Unplug your computer, get a book from the library and write down those words.1) Go Old Skool with handwriting 2) Use your internal thesaurus when you get stuck 3) Play video games in another language (here's a relevant article from Learn out Live)Links for Episode 18 of the Creative Language Learning PodcastThis episode is brought to you by FlashSticks, the printed language learning post-its. Use code KERSTIN10 for 10% off. Polyglot Berlin and here is their Youtube channel Tuvan throat singing Support the podcast with a Patreon pledge and get a lovely card from me
These Memory Strategies Can Quickly Boost Your Foreign Language Fluency ... Even If You Wind Up Throwing The Mnemonics Away! Have you ever wished someone would just inspire you and give you exactly the tools you need to succeed in one blast of self-empowerment at the same time? Well, if you're into language learning, what I'm about to tell you may be the most important episode of this podcast you'll ever hear. And of course if you'd like the transcripts in handsome PDF form, you can download them here. You can also scroll all the way to the end for the links mentioned in the podcast for a power-packed injection of inspiration and practical guidance. Plus, I've got something cool to teach you at the very end about using hats to increase your productivity, so go all the way through for that. Here's How Philosophy Can Double Your Fluency When All Other Techniques Fail ... Last week I attended the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin. Of the many talks, Christopher Huff's struck me the most. All of the other presentations were great, of course, but... because Christopher drew some language learning ideas from philosophers I know very well, I was struck by the connections I'd never noticed before. He also had some great ideas about memory techniques and more importantly, memory strategies. Taken in the context of philosophy, Christopher presented some exciting ideas you can start applying to your language learning and overall life right away. You may even experience results overnight. Here's why: The Undercover Secrets Of Minimalism And Hedonism Christopher talked about two kinds of philosophers, which we could call the minimalists and the Epicureans. The first group like to toss out everything unnecessary and the Epicureans fill everything to excess. What they share in common is that only the now exists. You might want to check out philosophers like Plato and Aristotle for more info on this matter. For example, Plato's Republic has many passages on frugality in many aspects of life (including thought). Aristotle talked about minimalism in terms of the Golden Mean and eudaimonia, a special definition of happiness. When it comes to learning a language, minimalism helps you concentrate on the essentials by using only the essentials. Sell Everything! Being minimalist also helps you identify what is essential. If you're only working on mastering one language learning book, after all, you're more likely to discover what's essential in that book in a meaningful way than if you try to find out what's essential in twelve books. You can learn more about this powerful form of whittling down in How to Memorize a Textbook. By focusing on just one thing, you're more likely to get a concentrated vision of what you're lacking. So minimalism creates focus, understanding and diamond-hard clarity about what you don't know yet. You can make much more powerful decisions because you're a minimalist. You're only going to acquire one more book, one that you select well based on your well-developed knowledge of what you need. Epicureanism, on the other hand, allows for excess. So long as it's linked to pleasure, epicureanism happily encourages maximalism. How to Over-Exaggerate Everything And Still Get Results Although it might sound wild, excess can be done intelligently. Christopher pointed out the value in giving yourself rewards of excess (which is different than giving yourself an excess of rewards). Christopher also implied that having a library of special books you've collected, even ones you're never going to read, is not really clutter. Each book is a memory of the passion behind why you got the book in the first place. So even though Christopher (and probably you) may never study some of the language learning books in his collection, they serve as part of a language learning whole. It is a specific library, one that contains many touchstones that point to the larger goal of gaining fluency in many languages.
Today's episode features a question from John: "I recently learnt the word for Heathrow in Chinese. How can I make sure I don't forget it?" In this episode: How can I learn a word that I've learnt recently? What kind of vocabulary should you prioritise learning? The memory techniques that will help you Links and resources mentioned in this episode: The Polyglot Gathering, Berlin 2015 Lang-8.com The forgetting curve Anki Memrise Flashcards Deluxe Principles of memorising vocabulary: See the vocabulary often See and use it in different contexts Personalise it Practical ideas for memorising vocabulary: Drop it into conversation Write sentences using the vocabulary Have your tutor or a native speaker correct these sentences Put those corrected sentences into your SRS flashcards Put the word on Post-it notes and stick them around the house! Set calendar reminders to bring up the word on your phone/computer Today's featured resource Hacking Chinese: Remembering is a skill you can learn. A fantastic post about the myth of "bad memory" and the fact that you can train your memory. Do you have a question? Ask me your language learning questions by clicking here, and I'll do my best to feature it on the show! Also, please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Win a copy of my course! To celebrate the launch of the podcast, I'm giving away 3 free copies of my Language Learning Foundations video course, worth $97 each! To be in with a chance of winning, simply head over to iTunes, search for the "I Will Teach You A Language Podcast" in the store, and leave me an honest review and rating for the show! After episode 10 of the podcast, I'll choose 3 lucky winners from around the world! Thanks for listening Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the podcast! If you've got any comments about the show then please leave them in the "comments" section below! If you'd like to help me out, then I'd love it if you could... Share the episode using the social media buttons around you Leave an honest review and rating of the podcast on iTunes. iTunes reviews in particular really help the rankings of the podcast and help me to reach other aspiring language learners out there! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated, and I read every single one. :) See you in the next episode of the I Will Teach You A Language podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwillteachyoualanguage/message
Today's episode features a question from Marcelo: "Now that I'm at an intermediate level of English, which is better - intensive or extensive reading?" In this episode: What are extensive/intensive reading? What are the benefits of each? How language teachers use these approaches The "intermediate plateau" and how to break through Why speaking alone isn't enough to help you reach an advanced level in a language Strategies for extensive reading: Make sure choose something to read that you're interested in Try not to use a dictionary whilst you're reading Read things that are lower than your current level Links and resources mentioned in this episode: "Graded readers" are books that have been simplified. Here's a great example of one. Today's featured resource Alex Rawlings talking about reading at the Polyglot Gathering 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgQZfS_BMVo Do you have a question? Ask me your language learning questions by clicking here, and I'll do my best to feature it on the show! Also, please subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Win a copy of my course! To celebrate the launch of the podcast, I'm giving away 3 free copies of my Language Learning Foundations video course, worth $97 each! To be in with a chance of winning, simply head over to iTunes, search for the "I Will Teach You A Language Podcast" in the store, and leave me an honest review and rating for the show! After episode 10 of the podcast, I'll choose 3 lucky winners from around the world! Thanks for listening Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the podcast! If you've got any comments about the show then please leave them in the "comments" section below! If you'd like to help me out, then I'd love it if you could... Share the episode using the social media buttons around you Leave an honest review and rating of the podcast on iTunes. iTunes reviews in particular really help the rankings of the podcast and help me to reach other aspiring language learners out there! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated, and I read every single one. :) See you in the next episode of the I Will Teach You A Language podcast! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iwillteachyoualanguage/message
Chuck Smith is back to talk about the upcoming Polyglot Berlin Gathering, but we also get a rare behind the scenes look into Duolingo. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/actualfluency/message
Add1Challenge: Where We Add a Language Together | Changing Your Life Through Language Learning
Alex Rawlangs graduated from Oxford and was a speaker in the first ever Polyglot Conference in Budapest and the Polyglot Gathering in Berlin. Alex will share how his passion for language got started and his approach on how to learn to speak a new language.