I agree that it takes about a year to get to B1/2, I’ve been living here for nearly 2 years but didn’t bother learning until a year ago. I did tons of self study and about 60 hours of classes. Now I feel like I can have pretty normal conversations about lots of things with people. I still kinda talk like a little kid and I don’t understand everything but it’s waaaay more than 1 year ago.
Người nước ngoài học tiếng Việt từ người bản ngữ ở miền Nam thì có thể có một số từ gây nhầm lẫn, ví dụ: Miền bắc nói "ăn" (đúng về đánh vần), nhưng miền Nam phát âm nghe là "ăng". Người nước ngoài sẽ dễ bị nhầm lẫn nếu học TV miền Bắc hoặc MN thì sẽ khó khi nghe miền kia phát âm
Hi! Wich link is the full pronunciation ? Also where can I find the text books you had ? Also as a recommendation a full flow chart of the progression would have been interesting :)
I’m not sure what my level is because I am Vietnamese in America and I learned from a young age with my mom. So I my pronunciation is good and I know a great amount of vocab to understand and listen however I need to work on my sentence structure and just making sentences like a native.
Lol thanks after watching this i went to sleep and in the next morning i was fluently in Vietnamese , but after thinking a moment i just realized that I'm Vietnamese lol
Hi Mr. Phi! Im interested to learn Vietnamese with an experienced teacher. Im here for almost a year. Im longing to have this formal study of Vietnamese language. Im studying by myself; now I feel the need to be guided by professional teachers. Thanks. Please advice me.
I like your teaching technic , I'm living in Vietnam Hcm city , I'm Indian , And I m learning online , pronouncing problem, so if try to speaking Vietnamese but Vietnamese people reaction yaaannnn , sometime I shy ... What i said
I have learning disabilities and fell for a Vietnamese women and I think she gave me 6 months to learn it to prove my self to her. I got my work cut out for me. Please wish me luck.
I just started learning Vietnamese with Duo Lingo. (I don't know if it is Northern or Southern dialect.) Although it has speaking exercises, I I think the software is accepting a very loose approximation to avoid learner frustration: I fear it is counteractive in the long run. What do you think? Hi! I'm not in Vietnam and don't have access to a Vietnamese teacher.
it's only going to teach you vocab. it's not listening* or speaking practice. many of the pronunciations are not correct, and they have a very narrow range of acceptable answers when translating. it's just flash cards but fancier, so it's not a viable way to learn a language on its own. they teach northern dialect btw. but anyway you are better off at least getting a teacher online if you want to learn, or you have to force yourself to talk and listen in the language if you can't get a teacher *the "listening" is a software voice, not how actual people talk
I tried Duolingo, too. 1. The pronunciation is exclusively Northern leveling out any difference between d, r or gi or between tr and ch or between s or x. But they have entered some Southern vocabulary as the word for spoon to give it an "overall approach". 2. You cannot enter Vietnamese letters directly. I made a bypass copying from MS Word. 3. Duolingo is too tolerant to wrong letters. You can succeed even when fully ignoring the intonation. 4. You learn composed words but not how they are composed as most syllables have their own meanings. 5. Duolingo tries to teach you Vietnamese as if it was English, with English proverbs ("See you later alligator" and LGBT stuff like "He cooks for his husband.") and the assumption of fixed pronouns for people (I, you, he / she / it, we, they) which Vietnamese doesn´t have to that extent. They fail to explain the differentiation between the exclusive (e.g. chúng ta) and the inclusive "we" (eg. chúng tôi). 6. Duolingo does hot give any hints about grammar or whatever, just words and sentences. 7. There are faults, as the word for color is in Duolingo pronounced like "mầu" but written like "màu". Indeed Vietnamese has two words for color, "mầu" and "màu" and they are pronounced as they are written. Then they write consistently "nhưng" (but), even if "những" (plural indicator) is meant. As I went almost half through there were more faults. 8. When having finished Duolingo you just will have learned 2,000 words of a language with about 40.000 words. Duolingo causes time loss. --- I read Vietnamese leaflets with fairy tales now and enter new words into Anki. I exercise Anki every day to memorize the strange vocabulary.
I’m wondering where I would place myself. I can speak Vietnamese with my family and friends in everyday conversations, daily interactions, but I don’t know the higher vocabulary words in Vietnamese church, where I can somewhat understand the message. I can understand Vietnamese but some words I wouldn’t know so I just ask what that word means. I don’t know how to read the Vietnamese with the tones with the letters, or the alphabet, it just confuses me to see the “dau” like dau sach, huyen, hoi. But I can text everyday vietnamese sentences without the tones. So my pronunciation with the reading of the words with the dau will just confuse me
Hi Rosie, there are many TV shows available in Vietnamese, depending on what you're interested in. For beginners, I would recommend watching children's shows or dramas with simple dialogue. As for how long it takes to learn Vietnamese, it varies from person to person depending on your language learning background and how much time you dedicate to studying and practicing. With consistent effort, most people can become conversational in a few months to a year. Good luck with your studies!
I really like this teacher
I agree that it takes about a year to get to B1/2, I’ve been living here for nearly 2 years but didn’t bother learning until a year ago. I did tons of self study and about 60 hours of classes. Now I feel like I can have pretty normal conversations about lots of things with people. I still kinda talk like a little kid and I don’t understand everything but it’s waaaay more than 1 year ago.
can you tell me where did you learn vietnamese?
Your video's are fantastic at teaching Vietnamese, keep it up, it's been really helpful :)
Cảm ơn anh
Người nước ngoài học tiếng Việt từ người bản ngữ ở miền Nam thì có thể có một số từ gây nhầm lẫn, ví dụ: Miền bắc nói "ăn" (đúng về đánh vần), nhưng miền Nam phát âm nghe là "ăng". Người nước ngoài sẽ dễ bị nhầm lẫn nếu học TV miền Bắc hoặc MN thì sẽ khó khi nghe miền kia phát âm
Hi! Wich link is the full pronunciation ? Also where can I find the text books you had ? Also as a recommendation a full flow chart of the progression would have been interesting :)
Chào Samuel, you can take alook a this link to learn more about our curriculum.
svff.info/our-curriculum/
@@LearnVietnameseWithSVFF cảm ơn
Seems a bit doubtful that it only would take less than 100 hours for A1 and A2 and then 40 hours for B1 +B2 =140 hours total
I’m not sure what my level is because I am Vietnamese in America and I learned from a young age with my mom. So I my pronunciation is good and I know a great amount of vocab to understand and listen however I need to work on my sentence structure and just making sentences like a native.
you must be A2 or B1, you can have a trial with SVFF to find out and start your lesson at the right level svff.vietnameseinpractice.com/trial
Chúc mừng năm mới, Phi!
dạ chúc mừng năm mới!
Bạn mới học tiếng Việt Hả
Lol thanks after watching this i went to sleep and in the next morning i was fluently in Vietnamese , but after thinking a moment i just realized that I'm Vietnamese lol
Where can I get this book.. I really need to learn Vietnamese so I can speak to my in law.. How much is the books?
We do sell our curriculum, contact us fir more informaion svffvn@gmail.com
Hi Mr. Phi! Im interested to learn Vietnamese with an experienced teacher. Im here for almost a year. Im longing to have this formal study of Vietnamese language. Im studying by myself; now I feel the need to be guided by professional teachers. Thanks. Please advice me.
You can register for a 30-minute free trial class with us click on this link: bit.ly/2BBB7aN
I like your teaching technic , I'm living in Vietnam Hcm city , I'm Indian , And I m learning online , pronouncing problem, so if try to speaking Vietnamese but Vietnamese people reaction yaaannnn , sometime I shy ... What i said
Now Are you leaned Vietnamese sir?
Hello. do you know if there are Vietnamese audio books with the southern dialect? thank you
contact us for more info svffvn@gmail.com
I have learning disabilities and fell for a Vietnamese women and I think she gave me 6 months to learn it to prove my self to her. I got my work cut out for me. Please wish me luck.
Good luck
I hope she's proven herself to you as well!
I do too
Great video! I wish there was a similar text book and program focused on central Vietnamese : (
I just started learning Vietnamese with Duo Lingo. (I don't know if it is Northern or Southern dialect.) Although it has speaking exercises, I I think the software is accepting a very loose approximation to avoid learner frustration: I fear it is counteractive in the long run. What do you think?
Hi! I'm not in Vietnam and don't have access to a Vietnamese teacher.
I'm sooooo in the same boat as you.
it's only going to teach you vocab. it's not listening* or speaking practice. many of the pronunciations are not correct, and they have a very narrow range of acceptable answers when translating. it's just flash cards but fancier, so it's not a viable way to learn a language on its own. they teach northern dialect btw.
but anyway you are better off at least getting a teacher online if you want to learn, or you have to force yourself to talk and listen in the language if you can't get a teacher
*the "listening" is a software voice, not how actual people talk
I tried Duolingo, too. 1. The pronunciation is exclusively Northern leveling out any difference between d, r or gi or between tr and ch or between s or x. But they have entered some Southern vocabulary as the word for spoon to give it an "overall approach". 2. You cannot enter Vietnamese letters directly. I made a bypass copying from MS Word. 3. Duolingo is too tolerant to wrong letters. You can succeed even when fully ignoring the intonation. 4. You learn composed words but not how they are composed as most syllables have their own meanings. 5. Duolingo tries to teach you Vietnamese as if it was English, with English proverbs ("See you later alligator" and LGBT stuff like "He cooks for his husband.") and the assumption of fixed pronouns for people (I, you, he / she / it, we, they) which Vietnamese doesn´t have to that extent. They fail to explain the differentiation between the exclusive (e.g. chúng ta) and the inclusive "we" (eg. chúng tôi). 6. Duolingo does hot give any hints about grammar or whatever, just words and sentences. 7. There are faults, as the word for color is in Duolingo pronounced like "mầu" but written like "màu". Indeed Vietnamese has two words for color, "mầu" and "màu" and they are pronounced as they are written. Then they write consistently "nhưng" (but), even if "những" (plural indicator) is meant. As I went almost half through there were more faults. 8. When having finished Duolingo you just will have learned 2,000 words of a language with about 40.000 words. Duolingo causes time loss. --- I read Vietnamese leaflets with fairy tales now and enter new words into Anki. I exercise Anki every day to memorize the strange vocabulary.
only if I can get this guy in my shop to sell the cars the way he's doing as a teacher in this video ; )
Thanks bro for the guidance
Dạ không có gì đâu
I’m wondering where I would place myself. I can speak Vietnamese with my family and friends in everyday conversations, daily interactions, but I don’t know the higher vocabulary words in Vietnamese church, where I can somewhat understand the message. I can understand Vietnamese but some words I wouldn’t know so I just ask what that word means.
I don’t know how to read the Vietnamese with the tones with the letters, or the alphabet, it just confuses me to see the “dau” like dau sach, huyen, hoi. But I can text everyday vietnamese sentences without the tones. So my pronunciation with the reading of the words with the dau will just confuse me
That's the exact same boat I am in, right now I can't really make much progress because I know quite a lot already.
i am vietnamese but can only understand it now, how long can it take for me to re learn it?
for basic conversation, around 3 months :D
Mr. Phi is good teacher, but I am bad student... >
anh cũng giỏi mà, còn đẹp trai nữa
Could you tel me how to get this book or online courses , I need
Chào bạn. you can take a look at this link : svff.info/our-curriculum/
Could you tel me how to get this book or online courses , I need , this my d
contact us via email, we do sell it in separate,
Is this a reupload?
Có TV show tiếng Việt. Cho người bắt đầu không ạ?
Hi Rosie, there are many TV shows available in Vietnamese, depending on what you're interested in. For beginners, I would recommend watching children's shows or dramas with simple dialogue. As for how long it takes to learn Vietnamese, it varies from person to person depending on your language learning background and how much time you dedicate to studying and practicing. With consistent effort, most people can become conversational in a few months to a year. Good luck with your studies!
I would like to buy VLS books
we only have the e-book you can take for SVFF SHOP. our textbook is actually updated 80% of it so it's not the same book anymore
Do you have a teacher who can speak Korean?
Yes we do :)
Is there a way to speak directly?
@@KevinsCrossFit you can contact us via this email, or fb.com/svffvn
you can contact us via this email svffvn@gmail.com , or fb.com/svffvn
Is it OK to send mail in Korean?
Hello :)))
Hi
Handsome