This is very helpful. Day two of using lingq for Korean. Starting as an upper Beginner who really wants to take their language learning seriously. It was helpful to find lingq after watching Steve’s 90 day challenge in Korean.
The tip about using an external program to make an mp3 and use the transcript created by lingq is really useful. Since many (older) hungarian videos dont have subtitles
I really enjoy studying with your great system. Way better, more effective and definitly more motivating than the things we do in school. May I ask when Thai will be added? Or aren't you planning on adding it? Greetings from Germany ❤
We add languages as volunteers complete the basic requirements. We have yet to find a volunteer for Thai. If we get our basic content requirements met, we will add it. For more information, you can write in to LingQ support especially if you are a volunteer for Thai!
Love the link Platform, only thing I wish you guys had was the nekudot in Hebrew and similar vowel systems for other languages. would make proper pronunciation in those languages when reading a lot easier.
Hi there, here's a post on the LingQ Blog that you will find helpful. www.lingq.com/blog/how-to-import-ebooks-on-lingq/ Let us know if you have any other questions at all. Thanks!
The Chrome extension has stopped working for a couple of days now, and I would appreciate your help with this issue. I find the content inside LingQ a bit boring, and I prefer exporting things on my own. Thank you!
Did you say you learn 250 words a day? Is that from blue all the way to known? How can you manage this? What I do is put the word up a step the next time I see it in another context and I guessed it right. But now I've heard you do this so my method seems too slow with how Lingq is supposed to work. I know it's a matter of taste but I'd rather have some guidelines as to how many words I could be learning a day. I'm studying Mandarin if that makes any difference, thanks
As I say in the webinar, you won't learn words right away. Initially you are just getting exposure, over time you will start to realize you know words you have LingQed and can move these to Known. Once you get to an intermediate stage, adding 250 words is possible in many languages where multiple variants of the same words exist or where there are words that are similar to words in your own language.
It also depends on the degree of familiarity to a language you already know, how many new words you LingQ every day and how strict you are with the definition of “known“. I’ve gone through 30 to 100 new LingQs a day for a long time and mark my words as known the moment they don’t interrupt my reading flow anymore. With that setup so to say it isn’t a rare occurrence anymore to break through 100 new known words a day. With mandarin it’s up to you to decide if you want to let the tones out of the criteria to mark a word as known. And don’t hang yourself up on numbers. I just started mandarin a week ago and my stats are 6764 read, 337 LingQs and literally 9 known. That language is so enormously different from any other that it takes a lot of time at the start to even see a little bit of progress.
This is very helpful. Day two of using lingq for Korean. Starting as an upper Beginner who really wants to take their language learning seriously. It was helpful to find lingq after watching Steve’s 90 day challenge in Korean.
LingQ is a godsend for learning vocabulary
Im really happy i found lingq, thank you all! I am currently studying Hungarian
The tip about using an external program to make an mp3 and use the transcript created by lingq is really useful. Since many (older) hungarian videos dont have subtitles
Me too I have recently rediscovered them. The last couple of years have been really tough.
Afrikaans! Yay! It's wonderful to see someone learning my first language.
Amazing family. Thanks for your work.
I like you steve ❤❤❤
I really enjoy studying with your great system. Way better, more effective and definitly more motivating than the things we do in school.
May I ask when Thai will be added?
Or aren't you planning on adding it?
Greetings from Germany ❤
We add languages as volunteers complete the basic requirements. We have yet to find a volunteer for Thai. If we get our basic content requirements met, we will add it. For more information, you can write in to LingQ support especially if you are a volunteer for Thai!
Just signed up today :)
Thank you amazing 👍 I am new and struggling with the app.
Please let us know if you have any questions at all about the app. We're here to help :)
Love the link Platform, only thing I wish you guys had was the nekudot in Hebrew and similar vowel systems for other languages. would make proper pronunciation in those languages when reading a lot easier.
Hi there, thanks so much for your suggestion. I will pass it on to the development team. Glad to hear you're enjoying LingQ!
I like how Marks says “thank you … Steve”, “thank you, dad” probably doesn’t sound as professional 😅
I am interested in using storytel ebooks on LingQ. Can yiu explain how you do that?
Hi there, here's a post on the LingQ Blog that you will find helpful. www.lingq.com/blog/how-to-import-ebooks-on-lingq/
Let us know if you have any other questions at all. Thanks!
How do you make a playlist with different languages in it?
Hi there, unfortunately it isn't possible to make a playlist with content in different languages currently.
@@LingQCentral Ok thanks. It would be perfect for those learning multiple languages.
The Chrome extension has stopped working for a couple of days now, and I would appreciate your help with this issue. I find the content inside LingQ a bit boring, and I prefer exporting things on my own. Thank you!
UA-cam is blocking this functionality at the moment. Sorry about that. We are working on a new approach for importing subtitles.
Did you say you learn 250 words a day? Is that from blue all the way to known?
How can you manage this?
What I do is put the word up a step the next time I see it in another context and I guessed it right. But now I've heard you do this so my method seems too slow with how Lingq is supposed to work.
I know it's a matter of taste but I'd rather have some guidelines as to how many words I could be learning a day. I'm studying Mandarin if that makes any difference, thanks
As I say in the webinar, you won't learn words right away. Initially you are just getting exposure, over time you will start to realize you know words you have LingQed and can move these to Known. Once you get to an intermediate stage, adding 250 words is possible in many languages where multiple variants of the same words exist or where there are words that are similar to words in your own language.
It also depends on the degree of familiarity to a language you already know, how many new words you LingQ every day and how strict you are with the definition of “known“. I’ve gone through 30 to 100 new LingQs a day for a long time and mark my words as known the moment they don’t interrupt my reading flow anymore. With that setup so to say it isn’t a rare occurrence anymore to break through 100 new known words a day. With mandarin it’s up to you to decide if you want to let the tones out of the criteria to mark a word as known. And don’t hang yourself up on numbers. I just started mandarin a week ago and my stats are 6764 read, 337 LingQs and literally 9 known. That language is so enormously different from any other that it takes a lot of time at the start to even see a little bit of progress.