How I Made Chinese Easy
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- Опубліковано 6 лип 2024
- In this video, I share with you how I made learning Chinese easy. If you follow the advice in this video, you will not only make learning Chinese easier but it will no doubt speed up the entire process too. Watch, take notes, and reach out if you have any additional questions!
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0:00 Intro
1:15 Chinese tones.
1:30 Chinese characters
3:35 Chinese pronunciation
4:30 Chinese grammar
5:30 How to make Chinese easy
5:40 3 Factors to learning Chinese
5:48 Factor 1
6:00 Factor 2
13:10 Factor 3
18:00 Learning Chinese as a whole
Get your FREE pdf- 418 Phrases To Make You More Fluent In Mandarin- mandarinbp.com/418-phrases-yt WATCH THESE NEXT Mandarin Pronunciation Guide ua-cam.com/video/FlaJ12tmtu4/v-deo.html
How Chinese Characters Work ua-cam.com/video/NryURgnLdlw/v-deo.html
The character "匹" means "pair", because in the acient times, a horse pairs to a carriage, so the measuring word for a horse which tracts a carriage is "匹"
In modern mandarin, 匹 is also used as a counter word for a certain amount of fabric being traded as commmodity.
For example, a fabric market is called a 布匹市场 instead of a 布市场
in brief:
This video discusses why Mandarin Chinese is considered one of the most difficult languages for English speakers to learn and provides insights on how to make the learning process easier.
The speaker, a Mandarin coach with 10 years of experience, identifies the specific aspects that make Mandarin challenging to learn, including:
1. Tones: Unlike English, Mandarin uses tones to distinguish meaning. This can be difficult for English speakers to master.
2. Chinese characters: Learning the thousands of characters required to read and understand Mandarin can be time-consuming and challenging.
3. Pronunciation: Mandarin has sounds not found in English, and mastering these sounds can be tough without proper coaching. Furthermore, the language has a large number of homophones, words that sound the same but have different meanings.
4. Grammar: Chinese grammar, including word order and measure words, is substantially different from English, which can pose difficulties for learners.
However, the speaker argues that while these factors make Mandarin challenging to learn, it doesn't have to feel difficult or take an inordinate amount of time. They share a revelation they've had after 10 years of experience teaching and learning Mandarin: The approach to learning is a major determinant of the difficulty level.
Initially, the speaker struggled to learn Chinese using traditional methods like textbooks, rote memorization, and grammar drills. They found these methods boring, demotivating, and ineffective. Then, they discovered the power of comprehensible input, which is understanding messages in the form of written or spoken Chinese. They also began using memory palace techniques and spaced repetition software to learn and remember Chinese characters and words. This method helped them to master over 3000 characters in a few months, a process that usually takes years using traditional methods.
The speaker also improved their understanding of Chinese by reading and listening to Chinese sentences repeatedly, which helped them naturally develop a feel for the language and understand Chinese grammar. They also found that mastering a few tongue positions helped them pronounce Mandarin sounds that don't exist in English.
The speaker argues that with the right approach, learning Mandarin can be genuinely easy and fun. They recommend the Mandarin Blueprint method, a comprehensive curriculum that uses effective memory techniques, flashcards, and comprehensible input to take learners from zero to near-native proficiency. The speaker emphasizes that the efficiency, effectiveness, and enjoyment of the methods and tools you use greatly affect how easy or hard Chinese becomes for you.
The speaker discusses the difficulty of learning Chinese and highlights three main factors contributing to the ease or difficulty of language acquisition.
1. The Methods: They recount how they used a biased approach and various video resources to learn Chinese and found these to be the best strategies for quick and effective learning. They suggest that different learners might find other methods more useful, but these worked best for them.
2. Life Circumstances: They share how they started a business, Mandarin Blueprint, and how life circumstances (like getting married, starting a family, and managing a business) affected their language learning journey. As their responsibilities increased, their dedication to learning Chinese dwindled. They discuss their struggle with motivation, bad habits, and a lack of physical health, which affected their enthusiasm for self-improvement and learning Chinese.
3. The Individual Learner: Ultimately, the speaker points out that the learner is the most significant factor in the language learning process. Their personal situation, motivation, discipline, mindset, and commitment are crucial to how challenging or enjoyable the language learning journey is.
The speaker shares their personal transformation, where they improved in building and maintaining good habits, developed a balance between various life areas, set aside time to immerse in Chinese media, and stopped taking themselves too seriously about making mistakes in speaking Chinese. They stress the importance of being persistent, patient, humble, and curious in the language learning journey.
In closing, they encourage viewers to look at the difficulty of learning a language as a combination of the language's complexity, the effectiveness of the learning approach, and the learner's personal characteristics. They advise people to remain consistent, have a positive mindset, maintain good health, trust the language acquisition process, continue discovering new resources, live in the moment, and to laugh at their mistakes.
They end by promoting their Mandarin Blueprint courses and encourage viewers to check out their video on integrating Chinese learning into their lifestyle through habit-building.
The speaker discusses the difficulty of learning Chinese and highlights three main factors contributing to the ease or difficulty of language acquisition.
1. The Methods: They recount how they used a biased approach and various video resources to learn Chinese and found these to be the best strategies for quick and effective learning. They suggest that different learners might find other methods more useful, but these worked best for them.
2. Life Circumstances: They share how they started a business, Mandarin Blueprint, and how life circumstances (like getting married, starting a family, and managing a business) affected their language learning journey. As their responsibilities increased, their dedication to learning Chinese dwindled. They discuss their struggle with motivation, bad habits, and a lack of physical health, which affected their enthusiasm for self-improvement and learning Chinese.
3. The Individual Learner: Ultimately, the speaker points out that the learner is the most significant factor in the language learning process. Their personal situation, motivation, discipline, mindset, and commitment are crucial to how challenging or enjoyable the language learning journey is.
The speaker shares their personal transformation, where they improved in building and maintaining good habits, developed a balance between various life areas, set aside time to immerse in Chinese media, and stopped taking themselves too seriously about making mistakes in speaking Chinese. They stress the importance of being persistent, patient, humble, and curious in the language learning journey.
In closing, they encourage viewers to look at the difficulty of learning a language as a combination of the language's complexity, the effectiveness of the learning approach, and the learner's personal characteristics. They advise people to remain consistent, have a positive mindset, maintain good health, trust the language acquisition process, continue discovering new resources, live in the moment, and to laugh at their mistakes.
They end by promoting their Mandarin Blueprint courses and encourage viewers to check out their video on integrating Chinese learning into their lifestyle through habit-building.
Chat gbt is that you
Just watch the video bro
❤
@@Mascabar saved me 20 minutes
@@Mascabar why lol
I am an Arabic native speaker.. I have been studying Mandarin for less than a year and I am still facing issues with my tones😢... but thanks to you I know now that I have to find my "voice" to give the right tones as all I did was mimicking other voices and always end up tired
加油!
@@MandarinBlueprint 谢谢!
You can treat tones as "singing", just imagine starting and ending the syllable from any tunes ranging from "dol" to "sol", I think that helps.
@@lyri-kyunero thx a lot! I will definitely try this method
احس بالأُلـفة، اي نصايح تساعد دراسة الصيني؟
I had a similar journey learning German. My parents had always strived to send me abroad to Germany for my degree(from a lower middle income Southeast Asian household). I learned it since I was 8, up until graduating high school. The usual pitfalls of rote memorisation, learning grammar rules and memorising vocab. In those nearly eight years my German was conversational at best and I still struggled to follow native speakers. After moving to Germany I realised my current method wasn't going to last. So I started just immersing myself in German everywhere. Read German books, listened to German audiobooks, playing my games in German, conversations with my German uni mates. Now I barely remember anything from the German I learnt in school but I'm mostly fluent and about to finish my bachelor's thesis in German! Looking for a new language to challenge myself with and improve my CV and Chinese seems like the ultimate challenge, glad I found this channel. Keep up the great work.
Excellent, you’ll love what we do here. Also, if you’re serious about taking Mandarin to the next level, check out www.mandarinblueprint.com
Sehr beeindruckend 🙌🏻
deutsch ist aber ... unpraktisch.
Honestly the reading sounds much more fun than the speaking
I want to be honest with you guys, first time when I clicked on a video on this channel about a week ago my impression was twofold. A guy from my screen was looking right to my soul with his bald eyes and his voice was so confident that in combo I couldn't move and was pretty sure that he is trying to make me sell my house and send all the money to him - everything looked too good to be true without a trick. But I decided to give it a chance (to watch it further, not to sell my house), I watched more videos, relaxed and openminded, and I understood that it was not a trick, it was pure truth which is so alien on UA-cam that I couldn't believe it. Such sacred bundle of priceless techniques and simple answers to hardest questions were alike to a strike of a hummer on top of my head.
I closed UA-cam sat and thought. Nah it's still too good, so I sent some of these videos with pronunciations to my Chinese friends, and of course they said that he talks just like a native and they wouldn't be able to say if he is native or not if they were watching videos with eyes closed. Well. Then I believed.
How happy I am that my Chinese language journey has started just two months ago, and without a guide to this mad world of Chinese complexity and overall amount of aspects, JUST IMAGINE, I randomly decided to study PRONUNCIATION and RADICALS first, what a lucky shot, and now thanks to this channel I can gently correct my future path and have such a nice and fun jorney without suffer and pain. I love Chinese language.
Wholeheartedly, thanks.
Thrilled to help! 继续加油!
不要半途而废!
Greetings! I'm here not as a Chinese learner, but as a Japanese learner. I find that both languages present similar "roadblocks" and many of your suggestions were very helpful for me as well!
The tones are actually the very first thing that I started out with learning. Then, during the first couple of weeks after being exposed to writing down the characters and pinyin together, I accidentally came across a picture online that describes what direction each stroke is done as and what the name of the stroke is. Understanding the strokes made it a little easier to understand what I was looking at even if I could not understand what character I was looking at. A level of understanding just needs a foothold to build your foundation from. I also highly recommend going through a online dictionary that will can translate between mandarin, pinyin and english, with the bonus of an example of how to properly pronounce the character and the bonus of multiple sentences that show the character in use.
Any example of such online dictionary please? Any you used? Thanks
I learned to speak fluent Chinese after living one year in Taiwan. The reason why is I spoke with local people only went to school for a couple hours a day and did self study. Living in the target language community is a key to success
What else were you doing then? Imo, and from my experience - what i have seen from my classmates. 1 year is not enough for fluency.
@@barrelrolldog people define fluency differently
@@alisah6915 Ok yes you are right, i was fluent after one day actually.
Tones don't always cause more troubles than grammar when trying to get yourself understood, I would personally use a lot of sentence arrangement practices with my students to improve their sense of Mandarin grammar. With vocabularies collected around a certain theme, sentence practices can be easily created and most students liked it.
Mandarin grammar? There is really no such thing.
Thanks for sharing your personal language learning journey with us, which I find very relatable! Great video on learning about Mandarin, or any languages really. Very inspiring!
this video was really motivating and you story was very interesting to hear, i love your videos and thank you for helping us all
Amazing video. You're speaking from your heart with the wisdom acquired. The insights you share are priceless! I hope more people could realise all this before they make that long and unnecessary journey we took.
Motivation is a huge one.
thanks a lot for this, really gives a motivation sparkle and makes you understand just how incredibly effective it is to simply enjoy learning something in general, no matter what it is
Thank you. You give me hope to get my Chinese back on track❤️I loved learning chinese
Love your videos. I'm currently on that road, driving the crappy car that is current learning methods. I can relate to everything you mentioned in your video. I am not afraid to throw down some of what I've learned to a native Chinese speaker. I've always been interested in language. I'm probably going to sign in to the Mandarin Blueprint in the coming months. Thanks 👍
YO ! That's crazy ! I know this means nothing to you but I wanted to share my story. I decided to start learning Chinese this year and as someone with a problem-solver mindset, I decided to study Chinese so efficiently that I'll just learn exponentially faster than anyone. I thought really hard on my own how to accomplish that, learned about the nature of the language and judged what I needed to do first, and set out a plan regardless of the classes I had in school. I've come to have an approach that is exactly like yours with my own tools. I decided to ignore the teacher's advice on what to do in what order (but still used her courses to get better and practice). I'm only at the beginning of this journey, but I'm already leaping ahead of everyone in my class now, and that's without counting the exponential growth that I'm expecting with the hidden first part the grind of learning many characters
No need to compare yourself to your classmates kid, there is always someone ahead of you. Plus, you need to come at language learning from a more humble mindset, because studying chinese will humble you!
One thing that it has not been mentioned is “learning phonetics” for me it’s one of the keys to fluency and really mastering whatever language you want to speak
Learning Chinese maybe in the future. But the method you described is awesome and can be applied to learning in general. Cheers and 谢谢你
wow ,i iwll share your video to my students ,is awesome
谢谢老师!
totally wonderful
Thank you for demystifying the process. Do you produce similar videos for native Mandarin Chinese speakers seeking help with English pronunciation?
"I've discovered there are three main factors that affect the difficulty." Me too: vocabulary, vocabulary, and vocabulary. Everything else is rounding error.
It's amazing how many words are in supposed "children's material" or "comprehensible input". Little kids know a huge swath of words and it takes forever to catch them
Muy buena la data ( información ) de tu video. Y sobre todo hay que disfrutar lo
Disfrutar el aprendizaje y progresar con el error.
I enjoy learning Chinesse day by day.
多谢
I started with mandarin classes in january, following the HSK books, the traditional way with a chinese teacher, repeating, writing, repeating wrtiting.. no explaining. so things dont stick to much, just the stuff you are doing at the moment.
i bumped into mandarin blueprint little over a week ago and gave it a try. i did it comletely from the beginning (the pronunciation course). I flew through the course and i must say its quite well done. wat suprised me is that even if you are working on pronunciation, it covers quite a lot of stuff from the HSK 1. so even though you are "just getting to know the pronunciation", in the background you are learning HSK 1 as well.
thanks!
Aprendo ingles mirando tus videos y tambien mandarin, genial
I am on 6:00 of this video and before I continue to watch I have to say your pronunciation is excellent.
Could you read a mini story with your voice so that we can listen to it everyday. Thank you very much
This method works!
I'm actually learning Japanese in the moment, and this thing about how learning the ideographic characters actually makes the whole thing much easier is actually really counterintuitive. I remember before doing it I actually thought the opposite would be true.
I recommend using skritter for learning 汉字
A lot goes into acquiring another language!😊
Hello! I’m from Sweden and just started my journey on learning Chinese, I will probably buy your blueprint today to use the best approach in learning ☺️👍
Great. We Look forward to welcoming you!
You have to have fun learning any language.
I’m a new learner (about 6 months in). A huge ah-ha moment for me was stumbling across character particles. Suddenly a whole bunch of characters made sense and I could make decent guesses at the context or even meaning of new characters. I’m still very much a beginner and can only use basic phrases, but realizations like that give us beginners a great sense of forward movement.
by particles you mean the radicals ?
@@danbo967 yeah, that is what I meant, although I think particles are a thing too, where a character that isn’t a radical is used in composition to form a new character
love how pros tell you how easy stuff is that they ace at :)
It was HARD for a LONG time though!
@@MandarinBlueprint i believe !!
A brilliant summary. My answers to the seven "You" questions: Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, and yes.
Yes Brian!
I am Moroccan and I love learning languages. I am now learning Russian and Korean together and I recently started learning Chinese
Take Finnish next.
How ?? 🤐
@@userr717 When you want something with passion you'll find solutions to it and dedicate yourself to it
I love memory palaces and I hope you don’t mind my mentioning it, Anthony Metivar is the magician with these. I use it for Lao but Lao is easier for me because I had already learned some Chines and love the magic and Mandarin. A felt the grammar has a logic to it and it is not that different to English really. It has amazing logic and beauty to it. I am impressed with your work as it has a natural logic to it also. I studied at University for 2 years and still could barely speak it but it has given me the skeleton to hand flesh on, so as to speak. But I learned by tackling big books that were bilingual. I learned to read it quickly. But I haven’t studied for 14 years and only now, living in Lao, I am motivated to learn again and have the advantage of having lots of Chinese visitors here now. Thanks for being inspiring. I am just about to start with it again.
Awesome video. I need this for learning Hindi. Including pictures of tongue position for the four T and four D sounds in Hindi.
As somebody currently learning Japanese (and about to travel to Japan for the first time in 2 days) there's a lot of good advice here that's universal to learning any language. I myself found that it boils down to personal commitment: if you're just going through the motions and expecting some tangible outcome then yes it's going to be a long and miserable process. However if you tackle it from a perspective that works for you the process is going to feel much more worthwhile.
Ultimately it boils down to how willing are you to venture outside your comfort zone and cast aside your preconceptions of how language works based on your mother tongue.
How’s Japan? 😄
@@Nohablogringo- Very wonderful! I've heard stories prior to coming but I'm still in awe of how convenient everything is, from the transportation to the Konbinis and vending machines haha
about chinese media - my chinese teacher back in high school used to play us an episode of a chinese drama every week and it was so useful :D we had to get out a notebook and write down any words we recognized while watching. there are sooo many of them and all the teenage girls loved the romance dramas, it really helped
I do that by myself I love Chinese action dramas.
That’s actually how I learn, too
homonyms - same meaning (not same writing)- homophone = same sound (not necessarily same writing) homograph = same writing (with different meaning) - Chinese has not only homophones, but also homographs.
8:20-8:45 for a second I thought there are some connections between the different meanings of shi - like shi4 (city) and shi4 (market) - I believe it comes from the same idea that every city in China has a marketplace. Many other words like mai3 to buy and mai4 to sell, I believe the sound mai at the beginning was something like "to trade" and later it became more specific and mai3 became to buy and mai4 to sell. But it's only my observation and never found any research study that would confirm my thesis.
I've watched 7k hrs of japanese animes and unfortunately wasn't studying them while watching so I only learned a few terms every now and then. If only it was that easy.
老哥厉害了👍👍👍我上学的时候语文是最烂的那一门😂
As the characters are pronounced in mandarin and dialects differently, they share the same meanings for them. In fact it doesn't matter how the characters are pronounced. People will understand you when you show them the characters.
saying "oh shî" has never been more funny
Hi I have a question have you created a anki card with remenbering hanzi simplified for mandarin?
I m interesting to use a deck with this method to improve my Chinese skill
Hey strikeback, It's great that you're interested in this! So currently, we use Traverse for our flashcards. I would like to suggest that you explore the Mandarin Blueprint Challenge. This will grant you access to the first three phases of our course, where you'll receive an introduction to the Hanzi Movie Method, along with our MB decks.
For more information, please visit: go.mandarinblueprint.com/the-mb-challenge.
Additionally, you can learn more about the Hanzi Movie Method by clicking here
www.mandarinblueprint.com/blog/chinese-mnemonics/
such great advice but i have to say that i always expect to see a course of some sort being promoted in these sorts of videos lol, makes me doubt everything tbh
This video should have a million views
Thanks
When you said “our data shows” it triggered some Chinese that I’ve heard over and over again I don’t have keyboard on my phone but zi’liao xian’shi
I'm just starting out to learn chinese because I am meeting a friend from China next month and wanted to impress her a little 😁 altho 1 month is way too short to learn anything I think.
I am polyglot - I speak 5 languages: one of Moroccan berber language, Classical Arabic, French, Spanish, English). Few years ago, I started learning Turkish from their drama/music - i understand 60% of the conversation- I still have a lot to learn but I stopped putting effort into it about 2 months ago because I accidentally discovered kdrama and surprisingly I liked it- I found myself trying to learn Korean without a second though hhhh- I started watching videos like these but they make me frustrated- my ultimate goal (was an old desire) is to learn Chinese, but finding myself getting drawn to learn Korean is making me worry. I don’t know if learning Korean will help me eventually learn chinese better or make it easier yo learn. Some people say, learning Japanese is more helpful to learn first before learning Chinese, but I have no desire putting time and effort into it (Japanese). I am wondering if learning Korean will have any advantage as far as learning chinese? Any idea? Thank you in advance
It will slightly as far as I know. Chinese had a huge influence on the vocabularies of Japanese and Korean, and other Asian languages, so you should be able to find some words, specially more technical or formal ones, that have certain similarities in pronunciation. In terms of grammar I've just heard they're really different, so probably not much to gain there.
Chinese kids don't learn tones.They acquire them naturally. Great tips!
Not 100% true. Tones are mainly dealt with in elemtary school in China when teaching Pinyin, and there is a multiple chocie question on pronunciation of words/phrases in the College Entrance Exam.
I speak Polish so the Chinese is easy to pronounce.
4:30 44 stone dead lions (in Mandarin).
Hey Mandarin Blueprint Coach, I did Heisig method for a year and learned the core definition and how to write the 3k most common hanzi. Then I spent a year and half learning the core pinyin and tone for those 3k. What should I do next? I can identify and say the 3k correctly with around 93-95% accuracy depending on sleep, lol. Just grab some college textbooks and go forward?
You've completed the build stage. Congrats! Now GET (immerse) and ACTIVATE (practice output) and you'll make the progress you want.
@@MandarinBlueprint Great, thank you!
@@MandarinBlueprint So how long should an average person expect to be able to have basic to mid level conversations in Mandarin?
I want to purchase your course, but I'm scepticle.
What’s your best show recommendations
We have an entire Immersion Resource list within the Mandarin Blueprint Method, so that depending upon your level you can watch shows that are at your level of Mandarin.
My earliest run in over something Chinese was in Korea a guy in front of me in a Seoul market place called the Korean vendor, Chinese, hilarity ensued after that 😂😂😂 all I heard were shouts of “I no Chinee! YOU Chinee!👉 and lost of things breaking & someone running in the opposite direction. Fun memories 😂 but at the time, it kind of did get me to look into China because I wanted to know what that reaction was all about.
I would love to book your course - but 997,- $ is just not possible for me… I guess I’ll wait and hope to get some BF coupon in November 🤷♂️
The MB Challenge is an inexpensive starter option: mandarinbp.com/challenge
Hi, I'm very new to learning zhōngwén. Why did you say 只 as zhī instead of zhĭ ?
Was it a mistake or something subtle in the tones?
Thank you.
From later in the video, I think you meant a long narrow cat
(ↀᆽↀ),,===================,∫ zhī māo
只 is a heteronym (多音字) with multiple pronunciations, and both zhī and zhĭ are correct depending on the usage and context.
只 zhī - measure word for many animals (not all), one of a pair (eyes or ears), utensils (such as chopsticks, straws) or boats
只 zhĭ - adv. meaning "only/merely/just"
@@MandarinBlueprint Perfect, thanks!
I'm Chinese. I still fail Chinese. :)
I find myself recognising and recalling the meanings fairly quickly, but I can't seem to get my head around the tones
It will come in time! Keep working on it.
Just FYI
I gave up on Chinese because of the writing. Later, a gal from Taiwan told me I should have learned traditional characters (and learn simplified later if I want). Because the traditional characters have more parts, but the parts have more meaning.
Learn whatever system is relevant to you, if you are going to china - simplified. If you are going to taiwan or HK - Simplified. Thats it.
My dumbass thought "Red" and "Read" don't sound the same... then I realised it was past tense.
😂😂
How do I join your class really I find my self confused and lost 😞
Gladys, I am sorry to hear you are feeling confused. We can absolutely help you, you can buy The Mandarin Blueprint Method here -> www.mandarinblueprint.com/buy-the-blueprint/
5:16 一匹布
You know what is crazy, English has tones itself, many! But we are not taught etymology and English History, we are taught vocabulary and pronouncing words by repotition and by commands as it's just the way we do it, so it! But most by parroting parents accents.. wood and whould as totally different tones, even without the accent of questioning
6:50
7:36
I guess horses has a specific measure word beacuse of the importance of horses in ancient china
Yo, what’s the cartoon at 16:19 brother?
Incidentally, that's the Japanese Anime, "Conan". Luke must have been watching a Chinese dub!
had I been at home without stress I would excel at Chinese or or German Russian -if I took them
If it's any consolation I am chinese speak cantonese, can read & write chinese, 10 yrs & still can't master mandarin ( due to lack of practice ) !!!!
There are tones in English too. Ex: "to" and "two" and "too". Next time you're in an elevator, try saying "I'm going to two too". Try to say that without using different tones. You can't.
why am i here, i am a native Chinese speaker😅,不过老师讲课很吸引人,就当练英语听力了😂😂
I like to criticize English lessons. Sometimes I watch teaching English videos and say 'That is wrong.'
But English is not the same everywhere.
@@Jordan-Ramses LOL, Chinese isn't the same everywhere either, especially pronunciation-wise. I'll occasionally watch Chinese comedy UA-cam videos (where different people come on stage and perform comedy monologues), and sometimes I will completely understand one person and hardly understand the next person at all due to their accent. I'm the most accustomed to Chinese people with 'southern' accents (less 捲舌, sometimes almost none at all) because they are the ones I converse with the most. In fact, I've picked up somewhat of a southern accent in Chinese. I used to feel self-conscious about that, but it no longer bothers me.
@@photo200 I've lived in America for 50 years. I am pretty intelligent and educated. So it's just when I hear an English lesson and they say that things that I say are wrong. I am thinking what?? No, that is what we say in America.
Question: did you learn Chinese while living in China? Learning a language while in the country has a huge advantage that is almost impossible to replicate outside of it.
This is a great question, the answer is both at various times. They learned plenty independently while not in China but a lot while they were there also.
the links to the courses is broken :(
We’ll look into it, but you can just go to www.mandarinblueprint.com
@Mandarin Blueprint thank you! that's what I did, and signed up. :)
I think another reason is how it is taught. Instead of translating it in Chinese order everyone puts it in English order.
Can I join and use in China? Pay In China?
Your website does not accept WeChat or Alipay 😭
@@ChinaCoachLeBlanc We can accept for the single payment option. Please get in touch at contact@mandarinblueprint.com
Level 1 language. Who gave them levels, on what criteria.
Which part of the video are you referring to?
The levels were given by The Foreign service Institute of the USA, it is based on how long they expect to have to spend to teach an ambassador from zero to proficient.
I think it is fun to write characters over and over again until they are burned into my memory😁
I am studying chinese now and have a hard time finding native speakers to chat with.
The only catch is that to use your system I have to cough up $997 on an all or nothing basis - as opposed to being able to buy the lessons piecemeal, and seeing how it goes before spending a lot of money, sight unseen. In short, I'm not possibly going to spend that much money on those terms. Plus, I've been studying languages successfully for some decades, so most of what you are saying is familiar, and further there is no end of free materials that anyone can use with no financial risk at all. So, in general, I agree with most of what you are saying, but I'll keep my money in my pocket. Thank-you very much.
Sure, enjoy our free materials. Also, very easy to dip your toes into the course so that it’s not sight unseen, just do The Mandarin Blueprint Challenge for $7 (mandarinblueprint.com/challenge) - that gives you access to the first three phases of the curriculum. Finally, I’d just add that our curriculum has a 90-day “no matter what” money back guarantee, so if you spend three months using it and decide that you don’t think it will save you more than the equivalent of $997 in saved time, we’ll give your money back, no problem.
It took the native Chinese speakers years to learn enough characters.
5:04 scariest moment
I also have this problem it is so hard😥
Keep working and you’ll get there!
Because the vocab....end.
Interesting.......Concise summary to put you off completely😖
😅
你好厉害,完全听不出是歪果仁😅
哈哈,第一次看到“歪果仁”这个词,也谢谢你的夸奖!
Tempting to start learning. I speak mandarin at home but I speak like an 8 year old whenever the topic is about work, girlfriends, psychology and complicated topics with my dad. Sometimes I just blurt out 中文不会说! 你为什么不会英文!!!!! 😡😡😡 to my dad 😂😂😂😂! Can’t read as well, I’m using voice recognition for the above characters.
I’d be weird to have a non native as a teacher, cuz I’m ethically Chinese myself 😂😂😂😂😂😂. Tempted to start your course though!
Or using long sentences to describe English words I want to use cuz my Chinese vocabulary is low. 😂 ‘I bought some cybersecurity stocks’ = 我买的股票是那个公司把电脑弄得安全。 😂😂😂😂 cringe
If you're thinking about it, you should just go ahead and do it! We'll even give you a push by granting you access to our free webclass dfl0.us/s/e4f730bb . Enjoy
I WAS THINKING,
HOW MUCH YOU ARE TELLING WITHOUT TELLING ANYTHING!
Thank you for sharing that in all caps
one punch man in chinese?!
"100 characters a day easily"
I give up.
Of course it’s gradual but it took me about 6 years to read Japanese (similar writing system). It’s definitely a test of endurance. You do get a few prodigies on the internet that learn it way faster though.
Totally possible with this method: ua-cam.com/video/SUVHMEUld4I/v-deo.html
11:15 Reading 100 56 🤦♂
Mind over matter 2023
That would be the "You" component... 😁
But if you become good in chinese already you can still consider Chinese easy when you are not practing chinese a lot