Mikel | Hyperpolyglot
Mikel | Hyperpolyglot
  • 832
  • 401 928
Learn 14,000 German words Part 19
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent (+:14,000 words)
Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf
You know the drill:
1. Memorise words with associations
2. Listen to audio files on repeat
3. Review list with speed reading
4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speaking fluency
Big thanks to Owen Harris (@tovarris ) for creating the vocabulary list.
Переглядів: 37

Відео

Learn 14,000 German words Part 17
Переглядів 537 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 16
Переглядів 4810 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
How to Learn a Difficult Language like Arabic, Russian, Hindi or Chinese
Переглядів 63512 годин тому
00:00 Introduction to the tutorial 00:12 Language and script 00:22 Objective: Making incomprehensible audio comprehensible 00:35 Finding content on UA-cam 01:08 Copying the transcript 01:30 Creating a frequency list of vocabulary 01:37 Creating a phonetic transcript 01:56 Using AI for vocabulary and phonetic transcription 03:01 Calculating word frequency 03:34 Analyzing the frequency list 05:02...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 15
Переглядів 4512 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 14
Переглядів 3515 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 13
Переглядів 3817 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
How to Learn a Language in 2025 (Step-by-Step Guide)
Переглядів 1,3 тис.17 годин тому
0:00 - Introduction: Learning a language efficiently. 0:06 - Critique of common online advice. 0:40 - Language learning myths debunked. 1:01 - Importance of efficient learning. 1:27 - Time as a valuable resource. 2:09 - Value of language skills and time management. 3:01 - Breakdown of language skills: vocabulary, pronunciation, grammar. 4:57 - Importance of understanding and speaking. 6:26 - Pr...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 12
Переглядів 4919 годин тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 11
Переглядів 5022 години тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 10
Переглядів 58День тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn any language effortlessly with this LAZY method
Переглядів 892День тому
Join Natural Language Learning: www.nll.coach/offers/VCqVLDvd/checkout
Learn 14,000 German words Part 9
Переглядів 49День тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
ChatGPT for Language Learning: Learn ALL Verb Conjugations Fast
Переглядів 323День тому
You can learn any language fast on your own using ChatGPT, improving both your comprehension and speaking, learning vocabulary, grammar and even pronunciation on your own. But you have to do it right. Get the template with all the prompts here: www.nll.coach/offers/VCqVLDvd/checkout
Learn 14,000 German words Part 8
Переглядів 135День тому
Lean every German word you need to know to be fluent ( :14,000 words) Download here: communities.kajabi.com/naturallanguagelearning/circle/e131ae80-3e87-4b79-ab03-b993bf6fc520/post/19d3388b-aebc-4d0f-8ad7-6e4f5a7754cf You know the drill: 1. Memorise words with associations 2. Listen to audio files on repeat 3. Review list with speed reading 4. Retrieval practice for error correction and speakin...
Learn 14,000 German words Part 7
Переглядів 77День тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 7
How to learn to speak any fluently without talking to people if you are an introvert
Переглядів 1,5 тис.День тому
How to learn to speak any fluently without talking to people if you are an introvert
Learn 14,000 German words Part 6
Переглядів 66День тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 6
Learn 14,000 German words Part 5
Переглядів 6414 днів тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 5
Learn 14,000 German words Part 4
Переглядів 11614 днів тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 4
Como aprender a hablar inglés en tu casa
Переглядів 37314 днів тому
Como aprender a hablar inglés en tu casa
Learn 14,000 German words Part 3
Переглядів 10114 днів тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 3
Why you still can't speak English fluently (and how to fix it)
Переглядів 30514 днів тому
Why you still can't speak English fluently (and how to fix it)
Learn 14,000 German words Part 2
Переглядів 15114 днів тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 2
YouTube Polyglot tries Boxing
Переглядів 29214 днів тому
UA-cam Polyglot tries Boxing
How to learn ANY language on your own FAST
Переглядів 1 тис.14 днів тому
How to learn ANY language on your own FAST
Learn 14,000 German words Part 1
Переглядів 50914 днів тому
Learn 14,000 German words Part 1
How to get to a C2 level in English
Переглядів 40114 днів тому
How to get to a C2 level in English
Lean ALL German vocabulary you need for fluency (+14,000 words)
Переглядів 62014 днів тому
Lean ALL German vocabulary you need for fluency ( 14,000 words)
3 SIMPLE HABITS to learn any language FAST (I speak +10)
Переглядів 1,1 тис.14 днів тому
3 SIMPLE HABITS to learn any language FAST (I speak 10)

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @teresita.lozada
    @teresita.lozada 21 годину тому

    Voy a ponerlo en práctica esta semana. El idioma, según transcurra mi día. Gracias, Mikel.

  • @ZhuangzisDream
    @ZhuangzisDream День тому

    i think you underestimate how little 4 years and one semester counts for in america. i went to one of the fanciest schools in the country and our french teacher cried once in AP (supposedly college level) French in the middle of the year when she realized a student couldn’t count to 10

  • @stephendanks1790
    @stephendanks1790 День тому

    Love your methods: Have found also when I have been experimenting that if I create a weird, crazy mnemonic to help remember the foreign word or I try to get help with a mnemonic with AI. Following that I then ask chatgpt to create an image of the scene. I put the image/drawing in the Google sheet and then when I quickly review the scene it immediately comes back to me.

  • @steveb851
    @steveb851 2 дні тому

    This guy is speaking pure facts. Subscribed after seeing this.

  • @wahrheitfurosterreich6533
    @wahrheitfurosterreich6533 2 дні тому

    Very helpful!

  • @riversdunn2543
    @riversdunn2543 2 дні тому

    Hey mikel. Would you still recommend your pdf on how to learn 5 romance languages In 6 months? If so, would it lead you to fluency in all of them? Thanks brother

  • @HigashikataDio
    @HigashikataDio 2 дні тому

    Respect

  • @user-mr1bh7cg2o
    @user-mr1bh7cg2o 2 дні тому

    По оперативным данным, которые подтверждают с разных сторон, бандеровцы в ближайшее время собираются провести ракетную атаку натовским оружием на Курскую и Запорожскую атомные станции. Курируют террористическую атаку западные спецслужбы, в основном Британия. Без их ведома дальнобойные ракеты не летают по целям

  • @DuneRuggy
    @DuneRuggy 2 дні тому

    It’s not a waste of time if it’s working for them. There isn’t a single way to learn a language

  • @Jbbubanic5434
    @Jbbubanic5434 2 дні тому

    How are you guys learning with this? I'm genuinely curious. I'm intermediate level and can't even understand most of this A.I. speech.

  • @claytonenglish6211
    @claytonenglish6211 2 дні тому

    What UA-cam channel are you using? It's very difficult to find a channel in hindi with transcriptions.

  • @definitedialect1767
    @definitedialect1767 3 дні тому

    NEED HELP,, Hey, i just discovered the video and I find the video very helpful , thank you for making it . Can you please somehow provide me the access to the material for this challange , please.

  • @definitedialect1767
    @definitedialect1767 3 дні тому

    Hey need help, the link lands me to a login page , I dont already have registered myself , I cant find a page to signup first . please help.

  • @gymnasticslife
    @gymnasticslife 3 дні тому

    Congratulations on getting over 4000 subscribers. Which programs are necessary to buy with this method? Glossika and Anki?

  • @Leo-54ly
    @Leo-54ly 3 дні тому

    **Extra Tips:** 1. Before copying the transcript from UA-cam, consider turning off the timestamp feature. 2. You can paste the generated word list into Excel, where the word counts will be automatically organized into a separate column. 3. For faster translation, use Google Translate and copy the results back into Excel in a new column. 4. By adding an extra column in Excel filled with commas, you can create a list where each word is followed by a comma. This list can then be copied into Google Translate or other AI TTS (Text-to-Speech) sites to generate audio files with pauses between each word. 5. If using Google Translate's TTS, you can utilize internal recording apps to capture the audio.😎

    • @matseklof2250
      @matseklof2250 14 годин тому

      Thank you Leo. Very useful. I have not used Excell so much, but I can try to guess how to do it exactly.

    • @Leo-54ly
      @Leo-54ly 14 годин тому

      @@matseklof2250 Glad this helps. WPS works as well. Good luck. 😄

    • @matseklof2250
      @matseklof2250 14 годин тому

      About your point 3: i dont think Google translate will work for a word list, because it translates the list as a sentence, not a word list. For example if I have two Hindi words with almost same meaning after each other in the list, then Google may translate only one of them. This offsets the two lists.

    • @Leo-54ly
      @Leo-54ly 12 годин тому

      @@matseklof2250 I know very little about Hindi. In my case, I used Russian. The word list generated by the word counting site has been working well so far with Google Translate. Perhaps you could try adding a column of commas or other punctuation first, then paste everything together in Google Translate to encourage the machine to treat the words separately rather than as a whole sentence or paragraph. If it still fails in your case, luckily we have AIs. Google Translate is just my personal preference to avoid typing prompts and machine misunderstanding. (P.S. Google Translate works better with smaller chunks of text, making it ideal for small experiments. AI, on the other hand, is most effective when you find the right prompt and workflow to list more attributes of word information. )

  • @FAJJU42
    @FAJJU42 3 дні тому

    HELLO THANKYOU SO MUCH I AM LEAVING THIS COMMENT ON 16 AUG I WILL COME BACK ON 16 FEB AND TELL YOU HOW MUCH I IMPROVE MY SPANISH. WISH ME LUCK

  • @user-ns5kt3gj8r
    @user-ns5kt3gj8r 3 дні тому

    You helped me big time now iam leaving people in the in the dust but not to brag benissimo. Allora bene .

  • @Ponitypon
    @Ponitypon 3 дні тому

    interesting. thanks

  • @manuelgutierrez6546
    @manuelgutierrez6546 3 дні тому

    I tried it and it's very useful 👍 Thank you for the content.

  • @teresita.lozada
    @teresita.lozada 4 дні тому

    Ahora mismo pondré en práctica la técnica Scriptorium usando DeepL para Francés, y más adelante la otra técnica. Gracias por tus videos tan útiles como siempre.

  • @msvcpdll3735
    @msvcpdll3735 4 дні тому

    it suck that i still need to wait 4 months

  • @lweaver1572
    @lweaver1572 5 днів тому

    Wow. This guys attitude in the comments is enough to make not ever consider what he’s selling.

  • @Leo-54ly
    @Leo-54ly 5 днів тому

    People would rather believe in magic than face harsh reality. If Duolingo can convince people to engage in pseudo-exercises, comprehensible input sounds much more promising. Those who choose magic will never buckle down to do the drill. You need to make the process look simple and demonstrate nearly perfect results to lure them in, designing a rewarding system to keep them engaged long enough to form the habits and mindset that will give them an extra push for greater effort. Otherwise, only those who have been through it will resonate with you; yet, they don’t need much of your guidance since they are already doing well on their own. I guess comprehensible input has done a great job of marketing itself like Duolingo. They don’t need people to truly acquire a language; all they need is for people to believe in them once in a lifetime before they discover the truth. It’s the snowball effect of the modern world: everything is for money. Fame and notoriety are both good for business. At the end of the day, people judge a book by its cover. Good intentions and truth-tellers are rarely welcomed. “Dreaming Spanish”-look at the title-serves as a successful example of selling dreams. It’s a low-cost business built on a bit of half-truth to justify itself, using the 80/20 rule to amass wealth as long as people talk about it, whether positively or negatively. Only silence can kill a business these days.

    • @lingomaxim
      @lingomaxim 5 днів тому

      Comprehensible input is an excellent subscription model

  • @MiloMay
    @MiloMay 5 днів тому

    I think comprehensible input became popular for two main reasons: 1.Language education in school( and with language learning apps) is so bad that even though comprehensible input isn't that effective, it seems like the golden method in comparison. 2.Its easy. It's easier to convince people that they can learn something just by passive learning rather than getting them to put in hours a day of intentional practice.

  • @VhnzSanches
    @VhnzSanches 5 днів тому

    25:00 28:00 30:00

  • @CamSpanish-kq6he
    @CamSpanish-kq6he 5 днів тому

    Ignore this bozo. Dude with under 4K subscribers is obsessed with shit talking Dreaming Spanish. Notice how this dude focuses on bad mouthing other tools to get clicks rather than explaining why you should get his mediocre course. You’re never gonna be successful by being negative my guy.

  • @ericthuber6724
    @ericthuber6724 6 днів тому

    Do you count cognates as different words?

  • @dailydoseofeverything7141
    @dailydoseofeverything7141 6 днів тому

    Hey mikel just thought i would share this tip for google sheets: Setup a hotkey to fill a cell with colour of your choice. Any time you come across a word you don't know in a sentence press the hotkey to highlight the sentence. This can make reviewing words you don't know in a list much easier. You can also click the funnel icon on the main tool bar, select the inverted triangle in the example sentence/word column and select sort by colour>fill colour> and then select your highlighting colour, this will automatically sort all the unknown highlighted words into order so you can easily review them or import them to anki as flashcards.

    • @tullochgorum6323
      @tullochgorum6323 6 днів тому

      An alternative - use conditional formatting to set the colour. For me, if the cell is empty it's green - known. Type one x and it's amber - needs review. Type xx and it's red - needs learning.

  • @belstar1128
    @belstar1128 6 днів тому

    interesting i was always using most of the techniques you mentioned with comprehensible input i noticed that it worked well after studying for a very short time in languages like Spanish. so i thought it was perfect but when i try to learn Asian and African language its really annoying to use comprehensible input since it really takes a long time to learn all the unique vocabulary. i also noticed some types of content is more useful for this like i won't bother with podcasts until later on .again with a west European languages like Spanish i could understand them after just a short period of studying .but for more exotic languages it really takes years i still can't handle podcasts in Tamil after 4 years but watching movies is better because i can see what is going on while with podcasts i often lose the plot and i am more likely to focus on movies. while the main reason i like podcasts is because i can listen to them while doing something else so its harder to focus but i can do this all day today was way too busy so i just listened to podcasts all day while doing work i couldn't watch movies or study today. i think one reason why comprehensible input is promoted so much is because a lot of people especially Americans and other native English speakers had a horrible time learn Spanish in school and think this is the main way of learning languages. so comprehensible input seem like a big revelation to them but even some non native English speakers in places like the Netherlands and Scandinavia forgot how they learned English so even to them it seems like a big revelation .i remember having mandatory French classes in school and not learning anything if i was smart enough to just play some video games or watch French tv after school instead of only English maybe my French would have been great by now .or not since back then most video games were English only i could get tv channels in French because of my region but not from most countries .

    • @tullochgorum6323
      @tullochgorum6323 6 днів тому

      The problem with the way they teach in school is that you simply don't use the language enough. You may learn a new grammar pattern, but then you do some multiple choice exercises or something equally useless. You don't immediately use it intensively in listening and speaking. These days with AI it's easy to generate as many exercises as you need to automate the pattern, and you can integrate vocab learning as you go.

  • @cariyaputta
    @cariyaputta 6 днів тому

    Thanks.

  • @ericthuber6724
    @ericthuber6724 6 днів тому

    Where do you get your vocab lists from?

  • @ericthuber6724
    @ericthuber6724 6 днів тому

    Stabs like a knife when you say they've put in 200 hours of watching language learning videos but only 20 of actual learning

  • @wahrheitfurosterreich6533
    @wahrheitfurosterreich6533 6 днів тому

    nice, very helpful content

  • @teresita.lozada
    @teresita.lozada 6 днів тому

    Me parece una idea excelente. Voy a comenzar a poner esta técnica en práctica con Francés. Como siempre, muchísimas gracias por tu ayuda.

  • @Kal_student_of_German
    @Kal_student_of_German 6 днів тому

    Thank you for making these btw! Appreciate it!

  • @Kal_student_of_German
    @Kal_student_of_German 6 днів тому

    Yo, how many more can we expect?

  • @kevinslyter
    @kevinslyter 6 днів тому

    Do you have any tips on how to better learn to read ancient/dead languages such as Latin, Ancient Greek, Biblical Hebrew, Aramaic, or Quranic Arabic? I’ve been using rootwords and mnemonics for it.

    • @Daviddaze
      @Daviddaze 6 днів тому

      Aramaic still spoken in Ethiopia, videos available.

    • @Daviddaze
      @Daviddaze 6 днів тому

      @kevinslyter there's an app called Bible Offline kjv w/audio by Mr. Rocco. He is in Brazil, in the menu under versions, translations are many languages available. Greek, Spanish, hungarian portugese, whole list of stuff.

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 6 днів тому

      one thing i find annoying about Latin and some languages that are not extinct but rare is learning pronunciation since you got a lot of literature but not a lot of spoken content .its not that bad with Latin but i noticed that in welsh the pronunciation is very different from what i assumed. its a problem with many languages but its normally not a big deal since i hear it often .

    • @leeban
      @leeban 6 днів тому

      Quranic Arabic is not dead 💀 Islamic scholars speak in quranic arabic when teaching about Islam.

    • @Cammed5point3sierra
      @Cammed5point3sierra 4 дні тому

      @@Daviddazethat’s Amharic . Totally different language

  • @allafleche
    @allafleche 6 днів тому

    Coming from a guy selling a method "to learn any language in 3 months" I have to say am skeptic :P

  • @allafleche
    @allafleche 6 днів тому

    Source ? my ass

  • @edizemin
    @edizemin 6 днів тому

    Hey Mikel, thanks for your videos and advice as I have learnt a few things from you. I have a question to ask in regard to Mnemonic associations. I have used them a few times and it's true that I find that I remember the words much more easier. However as you also teach, I have also found a list of top 10000 most common words, and used chat gpt to provide me with example sentences for each of them in my target languages, and then imported the text into LingQ to learn the vocabulary in context. You mention that mnemonic associations are needed for the words that do not come up as often in regular reading / day to day communication. But since I have my import of the most 10000 common words, I'll be seeing and studying + reviewing those infrequent words often, so is there a massive need to use mnemonic associations seeing as I'll see those words often anyways, and not to mention that it takes time to create good associations for each word? Obviously in the first week your might learn and review lets say the top 1-1000 words, but you'll soon get to 1000-2000, then 2000-3000 to study and review those more infrequent words. Maybe within 3 months you have gone over the whole list and seen the infrequents words repeated as you review them as well. So thats why i am curious to know if i should still incorporate mnemonic associations with my the top 10000 words with examples sentences, seeing as ill see the infrequent words in this list often? Thanks

  • @nezarj2742
    @nezarj2742 7 днів тому

    grateful to have discovered this channel

  • @pingoleonfernandez7638
    @pingoleonfernandez7638 7 днів тому

    Basado

  • @teresita.lozada
    @teresita.lozada 8 днів тому

    Wow, Mikel!!!. Estoy fascinada con este método. Llevo larguísimos tratando de adquirir fluidez en Francés y mientras veo este video, me he motivado a hacer mi búsqueda a ver lo que ChatGPT me genera para eventualmente, trabajar con ese contenido. Gracias como siempre!!!.

  • @humanman5033
    @humanman5033 8 днів тому

    If I do 1000 words a day (full time like 12 hours a day) and use the tts top 10,000 word lists with example sentence audio along with speed read review(which i have been training the past few days) could I become fluent in understanding a language in like a week?