So, in brief: 1. You become happier 2. You live longer 3. You make more friends 4. You get better financial opportunities 5. You get healthier 6. You (literally) become smarter Isn't it the best hobby in the world?
You don’t necessarily make friends. If you learn a language in school or on Duolingo, you don’t have any native speakers to talk to, so by learning a language doesn’t get in touch with any new people
@@afjo972 complete nonsense. The Internet gives you an instant opportunity to communicate both in writing and verbally in professional communities, amateur communities and other communities.
Cats when you are speaking in any new language you cannot think in your language then translate it in your brain, before saying the word , because this action takes a fraction of a second in your brain to process it then you sounds as if you do not know the language. You have to think in English not in Spanish. The perfect American or English accent is very difficult to learn because the tongue already knows the position to pronounce each letter of the native or mother language and when you try to position it differently you just give up. The children are able to do it easily but if you learn any foreign language as an adult it is very difficult . I have been living in USA for more than 50 years and cannot get rid of my Sofia Vergara’s accent . BTW I am also Colombian . We Latins living in Miami use a lot of Spanglish among us.
@@Tamake872 english is my second language, but still, its my most used language every day, at the start its hard to make thoughts or even something coherent, but over time youll get to think more and more in other language
I have attempted (in school) Spanish and French, only picking up a minimal amount. Now as an older adult I tried to learn Korean (so I could understand the K-Dramas I was watching). I was having to relearn the same words over and over. Now, at almost 70, I am going to try my hand at Irish. No one to talk to. I just love their ancient culture and mythology. But I may revisit Korean again too.....
I am from Ankara, Turkey , at age 18 I moved to the USA ( Portland, Oregon ) and learnt English..At age 27 I moved to China ( Shenzhen, Guangdong ) and I learnt Mandarin Chinese. Now at 46 I started studying Spanish online and next year I will be moving to Colombia to improve my Spanish.. I have to admit I am not certain that learning these two foreign languages has made that kind of a big difference in my brain in terms of exercising it like a muscle, but I know for a fact that it has changed my life in ways unimaginable and it has enriched my life beyond belief ...
Hi Leila ! I have to admit life has been very awesome so far : ) About 13 years ago I was working for a company in China and decided to quit my job to start building my dream life, which is to keep traveling the globe and working online to make money to support the life style so I got into stock trading and through a lot of hard work , failures and lessons, I have made it work : ) I even recently open a UA-cam channel where I post my daily trades. So basically, I have my own day-trading business and I specialize in the US stocks only.. I am currently traveling in Turkey, after here will be South America, and after that who knows we will see : ) Cheers ! @@leilaholivia
Oh thats interesting, thanks for sharing, i saw you speak chinese on your channel now too so you seem very comfortable with the language, very impressive
Thanks Leila : ) Yes I speak Chinese , it was a big goal of mine because it is one of the hardest languages to learn but living in China really helped for sure. Where are you writing from ? Do you live in the USA ? @@leilaholivia
I'm trilingual--English as mother tongue and then the serial study of Japanese and French. I just started German three months ago and have been doing something in all four languages every day. This video helps me confirm what I've been experiencing. What's most wonderful about language #4 is that my mind is so much more "at ease" with language acquisition.
@@Kenoticrunner That's so cool! I'm german and have studied Italian for a few years now; and I thought of starting with Japanese this year! Mainly because I'm intersted in their culture and also I didn't want to learn another western european language, although that would be way easier...
@@aelie8198 I lived in Japan for 4 years. U would suggest learning to speak formal Japanese through your classes. It's better to err on side of formality in Japanese: you will make a better impression. Of course you can learn slang but only to speak to people you know ---children, teens and maybe to your Japanese tutor if they are very young.
I started Russian from English. Not because I wanted to use the language but as a builder of memory cells. I also fill my time with Ukrainian and French. I don't consider it language learning because I do not speak to others. The long term benefits for me have been good. Probably because I don't pressure myself. Consistency is the key. Never, ever miss a day. Great video from Olly.🎉
wow, i wondered why writing out my feelings in spanish is different and almost made me feel a little detached from them, but now it makes perfect sense
Thing about the trauma is totally true. I’m fluent in both French and Portuguese but much more bad experiences happened to me in Portuguese when I was a child and French was totally a way to escape that. I feel much more comfortable and sociable and relaxed when speaking French today then when speaking Portuguese. Even my perception about myself changed completely once I started living in a different language context. It’s crazy cause it’s really like having a second life.
The point about recognising different patterns and finding foreign concepts less alien than monolingual people is something I noticed about myself quite recently. I used to translate everything and would struggle when certain words don’t have a good translation or when a sentence structure was vastly different from my native languages. But over time I felt less of an urge to translate things and sort of became more “accepting” of strange concepts and sentence structure in other languages.
May I ask roughly how long it was before you started feeling comfortable not translating back into your native tongue? I'm currently in the process of picking up my second language, and i'm still in the phase of having to translate everything back to English in my head; I was wondering how long before the second language would start to "stick" in that way, haha :)
Never translate everything. I think the key is to memorise a couple of "sample sentences" that you know to be correct. And then, you can form other sentences in the same model. Also, don't go, "oh, you slice off this syllable and add that one, and then it's the plural past tense" or whatever. Memorise the tables: "fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron". Even though one of my Spanish teachers said, "es una locura". It's not. It works. 🙂
This was very interesting. I started learning Spanish at 23, when I lived in Andalucia and 3 years later I'm still learning, but I speak with a B2 level. I started learning French 6 months ago and I just spoke to a native and she said that I sound like someone who has been learning French for 3 years, not 6 months. Of course, the grammar rules are basically identical with Spanish & English has more than 2K words that are French. So I am in a fantastic position to learn this language. However, i remembered my biggest mistake in Spanish was being too embarrassed of myself to speak. So, I often wouldn't try which meant it took me way longer to learn. It wasn't until I went to a Spanish speaking place, in the middle of nowhere where I had to speak Spanish that I actually made progress. So I knew that I could not repeat the same mistake with French. Mistakes are often really funny anyway and make a great story
After I learned English, I think differently, it’s magical, it’s like I have adopted another personality of mine, when I speak my native language Chinese, I always be introvert and socially anxious while I speak English I could be honest
You start being more confident about yourself because learning English has that superior feeling like people vieview you a very Educated person and people treat you with respect.
Has anyone else when using a third language and not knowing a word then switch to your second language to finish the thought/sentence rather than switching to first language? It happens all the time for me. I’d like to understand the science behind it. 🤔
Yes, I wasn't aware, but now after reading your comment, I think you're right. Currently I'm learning italian. If I don't know a word, I switch to english and after that to my mothertongue. But I also see the effect the other way around. I'm also learning a little Irish on a very basic level. But often some irish words pop up in my head whenever I try to write and speak proper english and lack of vocabulary 😅
This happens to me when I'm speaking Japanese (I'm not fluent at all so I struggle a lot with vocabulary) but I thought it was because I'm learning Japanese using English and not my native language (Spanish)
1-English 2-French (basic conversational) 3-ASL (limited conversational) 4-Spanish (also limited conversational) Linguo-glitch moment: i was conversing in French when my brain got stuck in mid-sentence .. this was a phone call so the other person wouldn't have seen my hands move toward each other (in ASL) when "con" (Spanish word) took the correct placement where "avec" was missing. I had misplaced the French word for "with," and I have two other standby languages stored in my brain. American Sign Language "with" uses both hands (in almost this shape 👍) with fingers curled onto palms and thumb out, with palms facing to each other, and then moving toward each other until the middle-knuckle segments meet flat. ASL's origin began in French language structure, and it has developed into more of a thought-concept language rather than the word-for-word "Signed English" version. It's a fascinating language that uses hand shape, orientation, placement, and movement, along with facial expressions and body movement, to converse in thought-concept with a looser sentence structure than spoken languages. There is no grammar rule that says you must sign the sequence as "Shirt Mine Blue" or "Shirt Blue Mine." It's less common (less acceptable?) to put the adjectives before the noun as we do in spoken English. Never Stop Learning! ❤
One thing I would like to ad to the study method, is that you want to be moving after about 45 minutes of inactivity (standing while studying does help) and then for about 15 minutes get your heart pumping just a bit, like walk on some steps, just take a regular walk (preferably a bit faster than normal but any exercise is good exercise) this helps to create focus and helps you learn and remember/make memories better while also making you happy, cus it’s exercise! Also another thing for your eyes is to look away after 30 minutes at something about 30 feet away (10 meters) for at least 30 seconds (closing your eyes also works).
Olly, this is one of your all time greatest videos. A member of my Spanish conversation group had a stroke last year and for several weeks could not communicate in English but could in Spanish.
I work as a part-time interpreter and I know many of my colleagues can easily work in other fields than interpretation but they amazingly stayed with it. I think you are right, the sense of satisfaction and joy(after conquering the pressure and brain challenge), plus helping others, are just so rewarding!! And I LOVE the fact of being able to less emotional but more rational while using 2nd language in life. I wish you all best luck in taking on a new language. I might sooner or later try a different one. Have a lovely day!
So true, changing to another language is more than just using different words, but the whole way of thinking becomes different. Because language is attached to culture and has a great impact on how to say s.th. Ich bin Deutsche, I do speak english quite well, hablo español un poco и я учу по-русски. 😅
I've been working on learning Spanish for the past 6 months. I'm a nurse and we have a lot of spanish speaking families. I'm tired of requiring a translator! I've figured a few things out with the most important ones being: 1. I need to understand the rules of the language and 2. I need to learn as many verbs as possible. I studied to be an English teacher before switching to nursing,. I'm doing pretty well, though I don't have the kind of time to devote to studying daily as I'd like. My coworker is from Mexico, and I practice with her. My biggest hindrance is my lack of confidence when speaking! I'm working on it though... I took French in highscool and a little in college. I feel like I sound better when speaking it! It's probably just the familiarity though
Find some Spanish UA-cam videos that you like. Maybe there is something about hospitals or nursing and that. Do not watch it with English subtitles. If at all, choose Spanish subtitles.
Wooow the doing therapy in your second language to emotionally detach and think more logically is such a good idea!! I wonder how far you can take this though because I'm an "empath" for lack of a more scientific name, and that doesn't go away in Spanish or French. In fact if I'm angry, I feel like the words in Spanish can better fit what I want to say with more passion. I often break into Spanish swearing when I'm angry 🤣 it's very satisfying. 😂
@@storylearning honestly there's just something in my soul that awakens 🤣 like "la madre que te parió" (and that's a tame example) like bro... they go directly for the bloodline 🤣 the ancestors even don't escape the wrath of a mildly inconvenienced spanish woman (in my experience) 🤣
@@storylearning yeah I'd love to learn more about the different personality types and if/how they differ in this field. I have a feeling that some people can feel MORE emotive in a language if they're passionate about that language.
As a bilingual Spanish speaker I was able to learn enough Russian in 1 year to hold conversations with native speakers. Attending language meetups and practicing with apps like Tandem has proved invaluable. Bottom line: conversing with native speakers provides the context to help my brain retain the information I care about🧠🤓
@@braddo7270I was first exposed to it during overseas deployment and always wanted to learn it one day. Opens up cool travel opportunities and new friendships around the 🌏
@@HCRAYERT.I've learned more cultural history and geography by learning this language than I ever imagined. All by simply talking to people in different countries, in their language.
I consider myself as a Polyglot but my mother tongue is Brazilian Portuguese, my 1st foreign language obviously was English and then I decided for German because the proximity from English and then now I have decided to came back to Romance Languages with Italian because it is for me the most near romance language from Brazilian Portuguese than Spanish
Id love to know how this works for different neurotypes and also with age. When I learnt conversational french 15 years ago I found it expressed a new or different part of my personality which was fun. And I could see how French language patterns and French style of discourse fit together, and in contrast to what happens in my native British English. fascinating But now I am struggling with the basics in German... literally taking years to (fail to) learn simple vocabulary.
I fully experience that heal trauma one!!! I wasn't able to discuss anything about how I felt or what I was thinking in my native language. I had no problem with comprehension in my first language, but I just couldn't really talk. It confused and bothered me for so many years until I suddenly came to study abroad, and I was able to talk to a therapist finally in my second language. People were asking me why I didn't get a therapist in my native language, like they were wondering if I'd feel getting more barriers talking about myself in a second language. But then no. Despite I didn't know as many words in my second language, I talk better. Because there're just so many emotions associated with all the words in my native language, that I just can't talk about anything, because talking about anything in my first language would overwhelm me with emotions. (Then I learned a third language, but not really fluent. And an interesting thing I found is that I'm now able to calm myself by thinking in my third language. Because I don't actually talk to anyone in my third language. By thinking in my third language, I sort of manage to limit my brain activity, which is therapeutic to me.)
I'm watching this in a foreign language 😎 I speak French (mother tongue), English (C1-C2), Hungarian (C1), German (B1-B2) and Russian (B1-B2), and I'm slowly starting Latvian too (I'm not even afraid and I'll surely learn it super fast because I'm used to it + this time I'll be directly immersed in the country), and it's true that it does make me happy. The sole feeling of being able to understand something people around you don't is just really cool. I'm just 18 now, I don't want to count how many languages I'm able to use but I'm sure I want to continue as long as I'm mentally able to do it, no matter how much it became useless with new technologies.
Hello! Do you have good resources for Hungarian ? I am learning it, and am having trouble finding material that is for native speakers. Also any advice for it ? :D
I’ve been learning German on Duolingo since Sept 2021, as no one else in my household speaks German, I speak to my dog in German… I find it so easy to learn and utilise German thanks to actually being diagnosed and medicated for ADHD.
Dann wünsche ich dir noch reichlich Erfolg beim fortlaufenden Erlernen der deutschen Sprache! Deinem Hund natürlich auch - er ist ja schließlich gezwungenermaßen allzeit deiner sprachlichen Bemühungen ausgesetzt ;)
I am also learning languages using Duolingo; I learnt Dutch first since I am studying in the Netherlands. And I was very excited when I met a Dutch family in Dubai, because I was transitting there, and had a conversation with them, mostly in Dutch
My great grandfather lost his English in his old age, his original language was a French/First Nation dialect. Also my friends mother who was Dutch, lost her English in old age. Curious as to how their second language was ‘stored’ in their brains.
I start with listening only. For at least the better part of a year but preferably for the span of all four seasons, gradually daring myself to mimic what I hear, but without any pressure on myself. Then I begin learning how to read what I’m now accustomed to hearing, likewise gradually expanding the exercise to include reading aloud, reading silently, and reading alongside recorded speech. This stage lasts for a few more years, or perhaps several, but again and most importantly, with me feeling no sense of obligation, only enthusiasm. I don’t even fully comprehend what I’m hearing and reading at this stage. But that’s A-okay. Finally, after many years of exposure, coupled with loads of penalty-free practice, when I realize that I do indeed understand lots if not most of the target language, as both spoken and written, I move on to sink or swim. I go to places and/or events where I have no choice but to find my own voice. For me, this is the best way to approximate learning another language in a fashion similar to the first. Oh, and, for a bonus round (so to speak) I find any means of experiencing how native speakers of that given tongue learn English. This “learning English in reverse” literally and figuratively brings my journey full circle, right back home. Cheers, Olly!
I speak Indonesian natively and while growing up surrounded by Mandarin speakers, Balinese, East + Central Javanese, and Kupang language. I can understand French now as I grow older. If you have kids, make sure they learn multiple languages AND music or singing. You will be surprised at how intelligent they will grow up to be.
Yes! In the professional field for example, even if you don't know the duties, speaking another language opens new doors bcs you can always learn the job but not the language if that makes sense 😊😊
Perception of the world: I'm so in line with what is said! As vocab change, and sometimes the very structure of the sentences, you cannot depict the world the same way in different languages. The world becomes bigger with more than one language. It's also a very good point not to think in one's mother tongue when only logic is needed. Better yet, when having an argument, don't do it in your birth language if you can. It feels a lot more like being in a controlled zone.
I'm a native English speaker who speaks Spanish relatively fluently, especially when I worked on a daily basis with native Spanish speakers. I also learned Dutch at the beginning of 3 years in the Netherlands, which was 30+ years ago--but I still speak Dutch to my dogs. I also learned some basic French while living in Nederland. Languages are fun and really do force you to express yourself differently. Now I have a strange urge to learn Welsh because it sounds so beautiful when spoken by @TheWelshViking.
I like how I actually learned english as a second language and now that im fluent in it, I watch english UA-cam videos to learn other languages lol. I actually gotta remind myself sometimes that english isn't even my first language, when I feel like im wasting my time watching these videos. Cause thats literally how I learned english in the first place. "Wasting" my time watching english UA-cam all day, reading english comments and writing comments in english myself (just like this one). Turns out I didn't waste my time after all huh.
I’ve been trilingual in English, Hindi, and Marathi since birth, can understand Gujarati and just finished A2 of French Uncovered. Can’t wait to begin B1 Olly. For some reason, my first three have become so internalised that it’s hard to believe my brain is doing all this work!
After round about three months of studying Spanish (because I have a true motive); I have started mentally and subconsciously translating everything that I hear-- and comments under every UA-cam video that I watch-- into my target language (German and French are also on the pipeline). There is so much pure joy in learning languages.... especially the urge to converse with native speakers, on a daily basis (#1 for me).
"What does a bilingual cat say?" lol, love it. I grew up bilingual and learned 3 additional modes of communication in addition to that. Anyone I grew up with will all agree that I am different. I have to agree. I see the world differently. I wouldn't say I am smarter, I believe anyone, within reason, can do this. I would say I have worked very hard to get here... I earned it. I would like it if many more people enjoyed this freedom. It is freedom.
im kind of a bilingual baby... I mean my main language is English but my mom and grandparents spoke mandarin around me too so I could communicate with them but not as well. Im not fluent in mandarin but I can easily tell the difference between sounds in mandarin. I also learnt French but now im tryna learn Swedish and Polish but like... polish is killing me so idk if it makes learning languages easier
As an Indonesian, I was born a biligual already. I speak Bahasa Indonesia, which is the official language of the country and a local language spoken only where I live. I started taking English more seriously back in 2018, got interested in Spanish in 2019. Recently, I've just started learning Turkish and Italian. I simply love all these languages and it doesn't rule out the possiblity of adding another language in the future😊 Top benefit number 1 is that it makes you happy, couldn't agree more ❤
OMG... You talked about knowing 2 languages and having a trauma to your brain you might recall the 2nd language and not the 1st. I had an experience of that. It was short. I had surgery and as they were waking me up I started using my second language. American Sign Language. I must have been talking a lot with it because they were about to call for an interpreter. I don't even recall speaking with my hands at all. I finally got out that it's a second language... Just to put it in perspective, I had servical spinal surgery and they went through the front if my neck. I ended up with a lot of neck trauma because they cut me about an inch too high and had trouble reaching my surgery area. So when I woke I didn't want to use my voice. I always use my hands when I have a sore throat and don't want to speak. Another thing that happens with me... Sometimes I can't remember a word in English (oddly my native language) and I will try to explain it in ASL it's crazy. Light and off were 2 when I was younger once.
I am a Native English speaker, American English; west coast. I learned Spanish in high school and I’m pretty good at it. I would not say that I’m fluent. I’ve also studied Irish Gaelic (our heritage), Italian (my heritage) and now American Sign Language. I’m a beginner in it all. If I had a superpower, it would be to be a Polyglot!
Oh yes, if they ask which superpower I would like to have, I'd always go for speaking every language in the world. Btw I'm also learning Italian and Irish, they're so beautiful ❤.
These kinds of videos are so motivating. And it being easier to learn a thrid language after having learned your second is sooo true tho. It feels like a superpower tbh
This was by far my favourite of your videos. So many usable tips and so many motivating ideas. I have seen so much of this in my own language study/use but didn't realize the whys behind it.
For me my first language is English. In School from age 12 through age 17 I learned Spanish which I loved. Then I learned a little German which I might go back to eventually. More recently I've been challenging my brain at learning Japanese hardcore. After I feel I've gotten to a confident level in (Speaking, reading, and listening) in Japanese then I want to learn both Korean & Chinese. I currently live on the East coast of the USA at age 24 going on 25, and before I turn 30 I want to move to Japan
You have a new subscriber...MOI! I am not quite fluent in Spanish, but I understand the basics and can get around in a Spanish-speaking town if I need / want to. I grew up in Texas, where I felt it was important to learn Spanish and I recently came to Lousiana where I naturally feel encouraged to learn French. I love languages! Seeing the similaries between the romance languages blows my mind. Thank you for the fascinating information!
Few years ago i started my knowledge in English , today I until not are a fluent speaker yet , but I can understood everything, so now I’m thinking about to learn French , I from Brazil 🇧🇷, my maternal tongue are the Portuuese, but I’m trying everyday to learn more and more.
A few days ago I was made fun of by a complete stranger (a troll) on UA-cam with the words "What a waste of time to learn Greek. 😂 So sad." Well I'm not sad for benefiting my brain in so many ways at once. 😎 As a person with bad mental health who speaks less or more 4 foreign languages plus my native one I can confirm that learning languages first brings joy, calmness, enthusiasm and a feeling of satisfaction and second it helps you to overcome hurtful events. Also as a person with zero concentration I can say learning languages helps me to stay focused and purposeful as well.
@@Giannis-zm5no Greek is a very distinguishing and interesting language that has influenced so many other languages in the whole world. Learning it or teaching it cannot be a waste of time. Plus Greek has been entertaining me and making me smarter for more than 8 years. But an ignorant mind can't understand how knowledge can be entertaining... It's their problem after all. Greetings from Bulgaria.
@@loraivanova8635 I’m pretty sure that troll didn’t really think before speaking … let’s not pay attention to people like them . Learning about the significance of the Greek language is only one Google search away . You made a great choice ! Greeting from Thessaloniki , Greece :)
There's nothing sad about learning Greek. You made that choice for a reason, and if the reason is only because you enjoyed your holiday in Greece, than that's okay. I started to learn Spanish because, during the MJ tour, I went to Argentina because that was the last concert I could go to. There, I met many people who seemed nice, but only spoke Spanish. ... Now, I'm fluent in Spanish.
A question to the author of the video. Any ideas if one is learning 2-3 languages at the same time? How not to forget and do not mix up the words from one language to the other? Thanks in advance.
I am danish, lived in Germany as a child, learned english in school, have a child with an italian, so I speak italian too. And a little bit french and spanish. I love being a polyglot 😁. Love from Denmark 🇩🇰
Thank you for sharing these great news. My native language is Mandarin and I have been speaking English for many many years. I do find I can be detached emotionally when speaking English. I am translating Chinese poetry into English. I find the subtle feelings that I can easily expressed in Mandarin are very hard for me to put into English and trigger similar emotional reactions for me. I am lucky that I have a colleague to work with me and he is able to get the some of the feeling expressed in English after my lengthy explanation!!
Very interesting. My mother tongue is English and I went through trauma when I was young. I first started to talk about it in German and then French: now I can manage in English and all better!
As a native Portuguese who can speak and understand English fluently, sometimes I don't even realize I'm listening to an English YT video until some time later, same with soms videogames when playing. Actually, once I mislead one of my friends by telling him that a certain game was in Portuguese, but he said he couldn't switch the language. Then I hopped in the game and realized that it was actually in English 😅 Edit: Even when looking up something on the internet, I already write in English by instinct. Also, idk why, but I find it easier to express my feelings in English than Portuguese
Same here, but for me, it's German and English. It can feel really weird for an instant when one English video has ended and the next one is in German, then I'm like, wtf is that? But only for a moment. Funnily enough, if something is complicated, such as tax regulations, I've been asking ChatGPT to translate the German original to simple English for me, because English really is easier to understand.
I came across this video because I'm studying Egyptian Arabic. American-English is my first language, Punjabi second, Spanish third and now Arabic! It's the hardest and TONS of fun while very HARD also. I can feel the positive effects on my brain... it's AWESOME. Great video!
Mi lengua materna es el castellano,y entiendo el inglés. Es una gran satisfacción para mí ver un video,y darme cuenta después de que lo ví (porque estaba muy concentrado en el tema) ,que el video estaba en inglés y no en español 😄. Es una tontería,pero realmente me alegra el día. Estoy pensando estudiar Japonés y Alemán ;estudiar idiomas me han cambiado la vida,me han ayudado a superar mi depresión.
It's 2024 and I've started learning Italian, my native language is Turkish, I've already learned enough English and now I'm learning Italian. I'll come here at 1 January 2025 and write my level of Italian. See you guys in 2025, arrivederci 👋🏼
@9:00 When it was too late to benefit my kids, I heard that if you play a nonnative language (Telemundo, for instance) for the first 6 mos of the kid's life, it makes it *much* easier for the kid to learn languages throughout it's life.
I came back to rewatch this as a lot of Ollie's videos need to be watched more than once. There's so much to learn from. I grew up totally bilingual in Afrikaans and English. I did my schooling in Afrikaans and my tertiary studies in English. We went to an English church and had many English friends. We had tv programs in Afrikaans and English. I think this is the case for most Afrikaans people in South Africa and it's similar for Zulu people who also have to speak a lot of English. I didn't even think twice about it growing up. Now that I've been learning other languages, it's even more fascinating. It's true what Ollie said, I store my English and Afrikaans in one part of my brain and my other languages in another part. I have to keep practicing the other languages if I want to keep them up but I can still communicate so easily in the first two languages, even if I don't use one of them for a long time. I don't speak much Afrikaans except to my family when I see them but it comes back way easier than the others I learned later in life. It's just there, I don't have to exercise it. So amazing. Also, when we talk as a family we often switch between Afrikaans and English, even substituting different words in the same sentence and no-one gets lost. It's quite handy being able to use the best words of both languages 😅
Spanish has always been easy to learn as native English speaker because there are so many words that are similar or the same just pronounced differently vs 3 alphabets, tons of homophones and sentence rearrangement.
As a native Spanish speaker pls don't generalize us. Cubans and mexicans have waay different rhythms of speech😂 Colombians and panamanians as well. It's like saying that all English speakers are from England or the US. Nevertheless this is a good video. Now that I'm learning a 3rd language I've become more interested in how knowing 2nd or 3rd languages improves mental agility and prevents illness like Alzeimer's and Dementia, Imo😊
Mexicans and Cubans and everyone else who’s native doesn’t speak the way Spanish is taught or standard version. It’s a lot of slang, personal intonation and accent etc. different regions add their own taste and twist to Spanish. But the standard Spanish language is the way he described it and it is a syllable-based language. Now, just cuz native speakers don’t follow the standard Spanish way doesn’t mean it’s not true.
LOL! The "What does the bilingual cat say?" joke completely cracked me up! 🤣🤣 All this makes complete sense with what is happening inside my head with learning my second language (Korean). I find that the best way to learn any word is to connect it with a situation, not a meaning. If I connect it with a situation, I'm also connecting with the emotions of that situation, I'm connecting it with how and when that word might be used and I'm connecting it with a powerful memory that acts as a hook. Of course, I record their meanings in English (usually with a number of phrases rather than words to trigger my memory) but I don't connect them with a 'meaning'. For example, Korean "망했다" (munghedda) means basically, "I screwed it up!", but it's connected in my head with a thing I actually did screw up, not with any English words, so that whenever I hear that word, that situation immediately flashes into my head and I feel the meaning. THESE are the words I just don't really forget, unlike when I first started I simply remembered meanings of words directly connected to my native language, which just doesn't work. All that does is connect the new language to the old one in it's pathway so that you have to follow that path back through your old language - painstakingly translate everything through your old language - a pathway that never improves. Perhaps THIS is why school textbook learning just doesn't really work - it teaches intellectually, like remembering a phone number - that's a different kind of memory entirely. This is why story learning does work much better - particularly if you're not living in the culture your language is spoken in - you can at least situate that word with the situation in the story while your brain slowly embeds that word in memory connected together with various usages over time. I often do this too with new words, not with Olly's course, but with stories I listen to on UA-cam. But those words inevitably end up being connected to my own life in some way eventually anyway. I suspect that the success one has in integrating a language into their own life is pretty essential to obtaining various levels of fluency. And I always try to use them if I can as soon as a situation presents itself. I'm constantly trying them out on my Korean friends, lol! 😂 In fact, this might be the only advantage for language beginners to living in the country that your new language is spoken. Living in my adopted country where I can actually hear the language everyday, in my experience, hasn't really helped me learn the language faster at all. What it HAS done is enable me to make those situational connections (connections with emotions and situations and memories) within the culture that I'm living. All my hooks and memories of my words and connections are situated in my new culture. Had I learned my new language in my native culture I would have had to make connections with my memories and situations in THAT culture, which wouldn't have worked near as well. As a beginner, living in the culture doesn't help you much with becoming fluent faster at ALL, because you can't have conversations or understand anything because you simply don't know enough anyway. It's only when you reach intermediate level that living in the culture that you are learning the language helps because you can start to have conversations and understand. What it DOES help you with is learning words and connecting them to the situations within that culture. The other thing is that a lot of words ONLY make sense in their own culture (as in Korean compared to English speaking cultures in general), so not knowing the culture would make it a lot more difficult to understand what many words mean if there is no real usage or existing word in your own culture.
This is why foreign language teachers recommend that the learner write a life diary in the new language and include experiences events and thoughts.💕💕🎯🎯🏅🏅
I am 53 i am bilingual since 5 years old. However I would want to say it depends whom I am arguing with. I am currently leaning a third language ( Italian) . I am still in beginner stage. I have downloaded your KIT. I hope to reach B1 maybe in 12 months 🧐🤔.
I had already read a few articles about it, watched a few vids and even shared links on my edublogs but it's always enriching to learn more about these benefits and spread the new findings on that field. Thank you so much!
My son's speaks Setswana and English as home languages, we moved back home and he's had to go to an Afrikaans school. I thought it was a good idea especially from a social and economic view however he's frustrated and he's not coping. I'm so happy to have come across this video
There's a certain feeling for me as a non-native English speaker getting told (and fully understanding!) to learn more languages. "I'm 4 parallel universes ahead" type of stuff
I'm a therapist and I have a lot of ASD clients and I may be on the spectrum myself, and we tend to have major executive function, EQ and communication difficulties. I'm starting to sell my ASD clients on second language acquision. I wonder if it can upgrade the neurodivergent brain as good as any therapy.
Anyone has this experience when you sing something in a group or hearing someone singing in another language and your brain thinks its your mother language but its not? Can you explain this ? How is it called ?
As far as I understand, dopamine isn’t the happiness or reward chemical, it’s the motivation or anticipation chemical. It’s linked with addiction because it makes it feel like there will be a reward, which explains why it isn’t maximal after something good happens but before.
To be honest, i was looking for this for a long time. I have been learning Japanese for 3 years..And it seems so hard to me that many many times I wanted to give up.. And I always wandered that I'm working so hard and if it has any kind of impact on my brain
I have been learning French for a long time. Finding the expressions in a foreign language that fit my feelings is very interesting. Language is indeed related to the perception of things! I once experienced a personality change when I spoke a foreign language. Now I get used to it and it won't happen anymore, but there are slight mood swings between the language. My boyfriend said that my tone of voice changes according to the language I speak. My voice is higher in English and lower in French. I'm glad to hear that language learning delays memory loss when we get old! Recently, my grandmother forgot many things and now she has Alzheimer's. It scares me the most! I'll keep on learning the language and will try speaking it with young people when I get old!
Your videos are truly so valuable, I always come away from them feeling so much smarter and assured in my language learning journey! I learned some French in high school, but now I’ve been learning Korean and Japanese as a hobby- it’s truly my favorite thing, it equally makes me feel so accomplished/smart and also just feels fun!
As an Indonesian, I speak 5 languages. 1. Sundanese, local west Java province. 2. Indonesian, for school and work. 3. English, for deeper education and entertainment. 4. Arabic, well I am Muslim and spent 1 year learning. 5. Japanese. Now I work in Japan.
I'm Brazilian and surely Portuguese is my Mother tong. One year and six months ago I started to learn English (I love Sabaton and country music). Then, I watched many videos about German culture, society, History, etc. These are my objectives English and German.
I hope you right by saying you never to old to learn a new language. I am a 72 year old South African and born bilingual. i cannot say which is my mother tongue as I think and speak in both languages equally well. I speak English and Afrikaans. Afrikaans is derived from Dutch so this allows me to understand languages spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium and to a degree in Germany. I have now been studying Mandarin for three years on Duolingo without skipping a day between lessons but its going slowly. What keeps me going is that feeling you mentioned when you understand or recognize whats been said when watching a Chinese movie. The talking part is particular difficult due to the different tones in Chinese Mandarin.
Something funny that happens to me after learn English is when I'm speaking in my native language (Spanish) some words like: Vaca - Cow Volver - Get back Rapido - Faster I pronounce v and r like in English, like a f. I think, after to learn languages, it Influences a lot in your native language. 👍😃
That's funny- as a native speaker of English, I've found that speaking Spanish affects me the same way! R's become harder to pronounce in English words; Freeway becomes Fdeeway, Ready= Rrready, Really?=Rdeely? 😂 It seriously takes a minute to fully switch out of one language into the other.
Lol, if someone knows Spanish and wants try psychotherapy, Argentina, and specifically Buenos Aires, it has the higher ratio of psychologists in the world. Probably the cheapest ones in the current exchange rate in dollars.
I’m from India I know 4 languages (learning more) and currently living in Spain . It’s been a year in Spain and I’m so happy with my progress that I can express my emotions and feelings in Spanish and I recently cried over something and I expressed how I felt in Spanish 😂😂
6:23 this is what I’ve tried to explain for so long. At times I can’t understand what someone is saying because my brain thinks they are talking in another language for a moment.
As Tagalog speaker, we have many words for Rice, these are Bigas (Uncooked Rice), Kanin (Cooked Rice), Palay (Unhusked Rice), Sinangag (Fried Rice), Malagkit (Sticky Rice), Tutong (Burnt or Toasted Rice), Puto (Rice Cake), Bahaw (Left-over Cooked Rice), Mumo (crumb; rice left on plate after eating).
I am from a border town along the US-Mexico border. Learned English in school and playing video games, spoke Spanish at home. I have accents in both languages lol. I currently use them both everyday, but I have gone months without speaking one or the other. This video is cool, made me realize that there is basically no separation in my brain between languages. I guess I am a monolingual bilingual or something like that. If I don't consciously pick a language to think in, it switches back and forth, usually when an idea is more easily thought about in the other language, but sometimes seemingly randomly, typically minutes to hours.
My thinking sort of alternates between German and English, too. German is my native language, and English my favourite one. Often, I don't get around to actually SPEAKING any English for years (Covid, I'm looking at you), but the language is always there, ready to spring into action.
Learning languages have opened up so many friendships (not really opportunities since I only need English for my career). Recently I became friends with an Argentinian from a class and also several Japanese people through an exchange program.
Boost your brain NOW with one of these easy languages! 👉🏼ua-cam.com/video/jXfj5BKdZCA/v-deo.html
What happens if you start with a hard language as your second language and then go for an easy one for your third language?
You should look into the Japanese language learning games Shujinkou, Koe, Nihongo Quest N5, and Wagotabi.
So, in brief:
1. You become happier
2. You live longer
3. You make more friends
4. You get better financial opportunities
5. You get healthier
6. You (literally) become smarter
Isn't it the best hobby in the world?
You don’t necessarily make friends. If you learn a language in school or on Duolingo, you don’t have any native speakers to talk to, so by learning a language doesn’t get in touch with any new people
@@afjo972 Ok then maybe I should say "it allows you to make more friends".
@@1langueen100jours,
you explained every bit of motivation to learn, in one comment. 👏 👏 👏
@@afjo972 complete nonsense. The Internet gives you an instant opportunity to communicate both in writing and verbally in professional communities, amateur communities and other communities.
You're getting faster, harder, scooter😅
2:22 When she said "do you know how smart I am in Spanish?", I nearly cried...
I feel you.
I feel the same way!!
Cats when you are speaking in any new language you cannot think in your language then translate it in your brain, before saying the word , because this action takes a fraction of a second in your brain to process it then you sounds as if you do not know the language. You have to think in English not in Spanish. The perfect American or English accent is very difficult to learn because the tongue already knows the position to pronounce each letter of the native or mother language and when you try to position it differently you just give up. The children are able to do it easily but if you learn any foreign language as an adult it is very difficult . I have been living in USA for more than 50 years and cannot get rid of my Sofia Vergara’s accent . BTW I am also Colombian . We Latins living in Miami use a lot of Spanglish among us.
@@Claudette68 I learn English as a foreign language, and it's difficult to think in other way
@@Tamake872 english is my second language, but still, its my most used language every day, at the start its hard to make thoughts or even something coherent, but over time youll get to think more and more in other language
@@yamane-ruka2 That's nice
At the end of the day, my friend from Syria was correct. He said you get a soul for every language you learn.
Wow, I like that!
Me, too. I will start using that to inspire people struggling with learning a second language.
Nice. I sure hope he's right.
I have attempted (in school) Spanish and French, only picking up a minimal amount. Now as an older adult I tried to learn Korean (so I could understand the K-Dramas I was watching). I was having to relearn the same words over and over. Now, at almost 70, I am going to try my hand at Irish. No one to talk to. I just love their ancient culture and mythology. But I may revisit Korean again too.....
Love it! You're never too old to learn a new language.
@@storylearning I am just hoping to someday succeed!
You'll get there!
@@donnawitteried3213 Ofc, never too late to learn something new!
Omg om learning Korean and Irish
I am from Ankara, Turkey , at age 18 I moved to the USA ( Portland, Oregon ) and learnt English..At age 27 I moved to China ( Shenzhen, Guangdong ) and I learnt Mandarin Chinese. Now at 46 I started studying Spanish online and next year I will be moving to Colombia to improve my Spanish.. I have to admit I am not certain that learning these two foreign languages has made that kind of a big difference in my brain in terms of exercising it like a muscle, but I know for a fact that it has changed my life in ways unimaginable and it has enriched my life beyond belief ...
What kind of work do you do that allows you to move around? Bc that sounds awesome
Hi Leila ! I have to admit life has been very awesome so far : ) About 13 years ago I was working for a company in China and decided to quit my job to start building my dream life, which is to keep traveling the globe and working online to make money to support the life style so I got into stock trading and through a lot of hard work , failures and lessons, I have made it work : ) I even recently open a UA-cam channel where I post my daily trades. So basically, I have my own day-trading business and I specialize in the US stocks only.. I am currently traveling in Turkey, after here will be South America, and after that who knows we will see : ) Cheers ! @@leilaholivia
Oh thats interesting, thanks for sharing, i saw you speak chinese on your channel now too so you seem very comfortable with the language, very impressive
Thanks Leila : ) Yes I speak Chinese , it was a big goal of mine because it is one of the hardest languages to learn but living in China really helped for sure. Where are you writing from ? Do you live in the USA ? @@leilaholivia
I'm also from Ankara, Kahraman kazan. Good to see you here 😎
I'm trilingual--English as mother tongue and then the serial study of Japanese and French. I just started German three months ago and have been doing something in all four languages every day. This video helps me confirm what I've been experiencing. What's most wonderful about language #4 is that my mind is so much more "at ease" with language acquisition.
How good are you in Japanese
@@L4zyasz Between N2 and N3.
@@Kenoticrunner That's so cool! I'm german and have studied Italian for a few years now; and I thought of starting with Japanese this year! Mainly because I'm intersted in their culture and also I didn't want to learn another western european language, although that would be way easier...
do you have any tips for someone who's just started learning japanese?
@@aelie8198
I lived in Japan for 4 years. U would suggest learning to speak formal Japanese through your classes. It's better to err on side of formality in Japanese: you will make a better impression. Of course you can learn slang but only to speak to people you know ---children, teens and maybe to your Japanese tutor if they are very young.
I started Russian from English. Not because I wanted to use the language but as a builder of memory cells.
I also fill my time with Ukrainian and French. I don't consider it language learning because I do not speak to others. The long term benefits for me have been good. Probably because I don't pressure myself.
Consistency is the key. Never, ever miss a day.
Great video from Olly.🎉
wow, i wondered why writing out my feelings in spanish is different and almost made me feel a little detached from them, but now it makes perfect sense
It’s a wonderful thing!
I’m 63 and learning German. Really enjoying it. ❤
Ich wünsche dir viel Erfolg 😁
The brain is sooo brilliant and complex, it's ridiculous! We are sooo blessed!
Thing about the trauma is totally true. I’m fluent in both French and Portuguese but much more bad experiences happened to me in Portuguese when I was a child and French was totally a way to escape that. I feel much more comfortable and sociable and relaxed when speaking French today then when speaking Portuguese. Even my perception about myself changed completely once I started living in a different language context. It’s crazy cause it’s really like having a second life.
The point about recognising different patterns and finding foreign concepts less alien than monolingual people is something I noticed about myself quite recently. I used to translate everything and would struggle when certain words don’t have a good translation or when a sentence structure was vastly different from my native languages. But over time I felt less of an urge to translate things and sort of became more “accepting” of strange concepts and sentence structure in other languages.
May I ask roughly how long it was before you started feeling comfortable not translating back into your native tongue? I'm currently in the process of picking up my second language, and i'm still in the phase of having to translate everything back to English in my head; I was wondering how long before the second language would start to "stick" in that way, haha :)
Never translate everything. I think the key is to memorise a couple of "sample sentences" that you know to be correct. And then, you can form other sentences in the same model.
Also, don't go, "oh, you slice off this syllable and add that one, and then it's the plural past tense" or whatever. Memorise the tables: "fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron". Even though one of my Spanish teachers said, "es una locura". It's not. It works. 🙂
This was very interesting. I started learning Spanish at 23, when I lived in Andalucia and 3 years later I'm still learning, but I speak with a B2 level. I started learning French 6 months ago and I just spoke to a native and she said that I sound like someone who has been learning French for 3 years, not 6 months. Of course, the grammar rules are basically identical with Spanish & English has more than 2K words that are French. So I am in a fantastic position to learn this language. However, i remembered my biggest mistake in Spanish was being too embarrassed of myself to speak. So, I often wouldn't try which meant it took me way longer to learn. It wasn't until I went to a Spanish speaking place, in the middle of nowhere where I had to speak Spanish that I actually made progress. So I knew that I could not repeat the same mistake with French. Mistakes are often really funny anyway and make a great story
After I learned English, I think differently, it’s magical, it’s like I have adopted another personality of mine, when I speak my native language Chinese, I always be introvert and socially anxious while I speak English I could be honest
So interesting! Thanks for sharing.
Language is more than just verbal. It's not only about learning words and sentences. It's also includes gestures and cultures.
@@paradisesunprincess true
Same bruh same
You start being more confident about yourself because learning English has that superior feeling like people vieview you a very Educated person and people treat you with respect.
I think the same is true for learning musical instruments. After you learn one, you can learn other instruments much easier!
Yeah, I can say from experience that is very true.
Has anyone else when using a third language and not knowing a word then switch to your second language to finish the thought/sentence rather than switching to first language? It happens all the time for me. I’d like to understand the science behind it. 🤔
Yep. Code-switching gets more interesting once you know 3 or more languages. I love it.
Yes, I wasn't aware, but now after reading your comment, I think you're right. Currently I'm learning italian. If I don't know a word, I switch to english and after that to my mothertongue.
But I also see the effect the other way around. I'm also learning a little Irish on a very basic level. But often some irish words pop up in my head whenever I try to write and speak proper english and lack of vocabulary 😅
This happens to me when I'm speaking Japanese (I'm not fluent at all so I struggle a lot with vocabulary) but I thought it was because I'm learning Japanese using English and not my native language (Spanish)
Happens to me too.🙂
1-English
2-French (basic conversational)
3-ASL (limited conversational)
4-Spanish (also limited conversational)
Linguo-glitch moment: i was conversing in French when my brain got stuck in mid-sentence .. this was a phone call so the other person wouldn't have seen my hands move toward each other (in ASL) when "con" (Spanish word) took the correct placement where "avec" was missing.
I had misplaced the French word for "with," and I have two other standby languages stored in my brain.
American Sign Language "with" uses both hands (in almost this shape 👍) with fingers curled onto palms and thumb out, with palms facing to each other, and then moving toward each other until the middle-knuckle segments meet flat.
ASL's origin began in French language structure, and it has developed into more of a thought-concept language rather than the word-for-word "Signed English" version. It's a fascinating language that uses hand shape, orientation, placement, and movement, along with facial expressions and body movement, to converse in thought-concept with a looser sentence structure than spoken languages. There is no grammar rule that says you must sign the sequence as "Shirt Mine Blue" or "Shirt Blue Mine." It's less common (less acceptable?) to put the adjectives before the noun as we do in spoken English.
Never Stop Learning!
❤
I felt this joy when I was able to converse in Italian on a trip. Plus, people are more open when you speak their language.❤
One thing I would like to ad to the study method, is that you want to be moving after about 45 minutes of inactivity (standing while studying does help) and then for about 15 minutes get your heart pumping just a bit, like walk on some steps, just take a regular walk (preferably a bit faster than normal but any exercise is good exercise) this helps to create focus and helps you learn and remember/make memories better while also making you happy, cus it’s exercise!
Also another thing for your eyes is to look away after 30 minutes at something about 30 feet away (10 meters) for at least 30 seconds (closing your eyes also works).
Olly, this is one of your all time greatest videos. A member of my Spanish conversation group had a stroke last year and for several weeks could not communicate in English but could in Spanish.
Which language is his native tongue?
He should think about moving to Florida
@@kandacehead9544 English
I work as a part-time interpreter and I know many of my colleagues can easily work in other fields than interpretation but they amazingly stayed with it. I think you are right, the sense of satisfaction and joy(after conquering the pressure and brain challenge), plus helping others, are just so rewarding!! And I LOVE the fact of being able to less emotional but more rational while using 2nd language in life. I wish you all best luck in taking on a new language. I might sooner or later try a different one. Have a lovely day!
So true, changing to another language is more than just using different words, but the whole way of thinking becomes different. Because language is attached to culture and has a great impact on how to say s.th.
Ich bin Deutsche, I do speak english quite well, hablo español un poco и я учу по-русски. 😅
I've been working on learning Spanish for the past 6 months. I'm a nurse and we have a lot of spanish speaking families. I'm tired of requiring a translator! I've figured a few things out with the most important ones being: 1. I need to understand the rules of the language and 2. I need to learn as many verbs as possible. I studied to be an English teacher before switching to nursing,. I'm doing pretty well, though I don't have the kind of time to devote to studying daily as I'd like. My coworker is from Mexico, and I practice with her. My biggest hindrance is my lack of confidence when speaking! I'm working on it though...
I took French in highscool and a little in college. I feel like I sound better when speaking it! It's probably just the familiarity though
Sounds like a great plan. Best of luck!
@@storylearning Thankyou! I really like your channel ❤
Find some Spanish UA-cam videos that you like. Maybe there is something about hospitals or nursing and that. Do not watch it with English subtitles. If at all, choose Spanish subtitles.
Wooow the doing therapy in your second language to emotionally detach and think more logically is such a good idea!! I wonder how far you can take this though because I'm an "empath" for lack of a more scientific name, and that doesn't go away in Spanish or French. In fact if I'm angry, I feel like the words in Spanish can better fit what I want to say with more passion. I often break into Spanish swearing when I'm angry 🤣 it's very satisfying. 😂
Spanish swearing is the best 😅
Interesting thought. Let me know what you find out!
@@storylearning honestly there's just something in my soul that awakens 🤣 like "la madre que te parió" (and that's a tame example) like bro... they go directly for the bloodline 🤣 the ancestors even don't escape the wrath of a mildly inconvenienced spanish woman (in my experience) 🤣
@@storylearning yeah I'd love to learn more about the different personality types and if/how they differ in this field. I have a feeling that some people can feel MORE emotive in a language if they're passionate about that language.
As a bilingual Spanish speaker I was able to learn enough Russian in 1 year to hold conversations with native speakers. Attending language meetups and practicing with apps like Tandem has proved invaluable. Bottom line: conversing with native speakers provides the context to help my brain retain the information I care about🧠🤓
Impressive! Keep up the good work.
Why russian? Genuine question.
I need to know too.
@@braddo7270I was first exposed to it during overseas deployment and always wanted to learn it one day. Opens up cool travel opportunities and new friendships around the 🌏
@@HCRAYERT.I've learned more cultural history and geography by learning this language than I ever imagined. All by simply talking to people in different countries, in their language.
I consider myself as a Polyglot but my mother tongue is Brazilian Portuguese, my 1st foreign language obviously was English and then I decided for German because the proximity from English and then now I have decided to came back to Romance Languages with Italian because it is for me the most near romance language from Brazilian Portuguese than Spanish
Impressive! Keep up the good work.
Id love to know how this works for different neurotypes and also with age.
When I learnt conversational french 15 years ago I found it expressed a new or different part of my personality which was fun. And I could see how French language patterns and French style of discourse fit together, and in contrast to what happens in my native British English. fascinating
But now I am struggling with the basics in German... literally taking years to (fail to) learn simple vocabulary.
I fully experience that heal trauma one!!! I wasn't able to discuss anything about how I felt or what I was thinking in my native language. I had no problem with comprehension in my first language, but I just couldn't really talk. It confused and bothered me for so many years until I suddenly came to study abroad, and I was able to talk to a therapist finally in my second language. People were asking me why I didn't get a therapist in my native language, like they were wondering if I'd feel getting more barriers talking about myself in a second language. But then no. Despite I didn't know as many words in my second language, I talk better. Because there're just so many emotions associated with all the words in my native language, that I just can't talk about anything, because talking about anything in my first language would overwhelm me with emotions. (Then I learned a third language, but not really fluent. And an interesting thing I found is that I'm now able to calm myself by thinking in my third language. Because I don't actually talk to anyone in my third language. By thinking in my third language, I sort of manage to limit my brain activity, which is therapeutic to me.)
Grammar + reading + listening + writing + speaking + thinking= learning successfully.
I'm watching this in a foreign language 😎
I speak French (mother tongue), English (C1-C2), Hungarian (C1), German (B1-B2) and Russian (B1-B2), and I'm slowly starting Latvian too (I'm not even afraid and I'll surely learn it super fast because I'm used to it + this time I'll be directly immersed in the country), and it's true that it does make me happy. The sole feeling of being able to understand something people around you don't is just really cool.
I'm just 18 now, I don't want to count how many languages I'm able to use but I'm sure I want to continue as long as I'm mentally able to do it, no matter how much it became useless with new technologies.
Keep it up 😉..
Omg, Latvian! Its first time, when i see someone who learns Latvian🫣
@@meoomia_ Man ir vajadzīgs jo es tagad dzīvoju Latvijā :)
Hello! Do you have good resources for Hungarian ? I am learning it, and am having trouble finding material that is for native speakers.
Also any advice for it ? :D
This is hands down the best language learning video I have ever seen, and I have been at this for almost 16 years. Thank you for this.
Wow, thank you!
I’ve been learning German on Duolingo since Sept 2021, as no one else in my household speaks German, I speak to my dog in German… I find it so easy to learn and utilise German thanks to actually being diagnosed and medicated for ADHD.
Dann wünsche ich dir noch reichlich Erfolg beim fortlaufenden Erlernen der deutschen Sprache! Deinem Hund natürlich auch - er ist ja schließlich gezwungenermaßen allzeit deiner sprachlichen Bemühungen ausgesetzt ;)
I am also learning languages using Duolingo; I learnt Dutch first since I am studying in the Netherlands. And I was very excited when I met a Dutch family in Dubai, because I was transitting there, and had a conversation with them, mostly in Dutch
Is your dog a German Shepard? 👀
My great grandfather lost his English in his old age, his original language was a French/First Nation dialect. Also my friends mother who was Dutch, lost her English in old age. Curious as to how their second language was ‘stored’ in their brains.
I'm learning Russian, and it is so fascinating how different their sentence structures are. Such a fun and beautiful language. Так интересно )
привет, как успехи?
Are their sentence structure hard?
I start with listening only. For at least the better part of a year but preferably for the span of all four seasons, gradually daring myself to mimic what I hear, but without any pressure on myself. Then I begin learning how to read what I’m now accustomed to hearing, likewise gradually expanding the exercise to include reading aloud, reading silently, and reading alongside recorded speech. This stage lasts for a few more years, or perhaps several, but again and most importantly, with me feeling no sense of obligation, only enthusiasm. I don’t even fully comprehend what I’m hearing and reading at this stage. But that’s A-okay. Finally, after many years of exposure, coupled with loads of penalty-free practice, when I realize that I do indeed understand lots if not most of the target language, as both spoken and written, I move on to sink or swim. I go to places and/or events where I have no choice but to find my own voice. For me, this is the best way to approximate learning another language in a fashion similar to the first. Oh, and, for a bonus round (so to speak) I find any means of experiencing how native speakers of that given tongue learn English. This “learning English in reverse” literally and figuratively brings my journey full circle, right back home. Cheers, Olly!
I speak Indonesian natively and while growing up surrounded by Mandarin speakers, Balinese, East
+ Central Javanese, and Kupang language. I can understand French now as I grow older.
If you have kids, make sure they learn multiple languages AND music or singing. You will be surprised at how intelligent they will grow up to be.
Wow. I had no idea there were that many benefits to learning a language!
So many benefits!
Yes! In the professional field for example, even if you don't know the duties, speaking another language opens new doors bcs you can always learn the job but not the language if that makes sense 😊😊
Like watching anime without subtitles for example
Perception of the world: I'm so in line with what is said! As vocab change, and sometimes the very structure of the sentences, you cannot depict the world the same way in different languages. The world becomes bigger with more than one language.
It's also a very good point not to think in one's mother tongue when only logic is needed. Better yet, when having an argument, don't do it in your birth language if you can. It feels a lot more like being in a controlled zone.
I'm a native English speaker who speaks Spanish relatively fluently, especially when I worked on a daily basis with native Spanish speakers. I also learned Dutch at the beginning of 3 years in the Netherlands, which was 30+ years ago--but I still speak Dutch to my dogs. I also learned some basic French while living in Nederland. Languages are fun and really do force you to express yourself differently. Now I have a strange urge to learn Welsh because it sounds so beautiful when spoken by @TheWelshViking.
I like how I actually learned english as a second language and now that im fluent in it, I watch english UA-cam videos to learn other languages lol. I actually gotta remind myself sometimes that english isn't even my first language, when I feel like im wasting my time watching these videos. Cause thats literally how I learned english in the first place. "Wasting" my time watching english UA-cam all day, reading english comments and writing comments in english myself (just like this one). Turns out I didn't waste my time after all huh.
I’ve been trilingual in English, Hindi, and Marathi since birth, can understand Gujarati and just finished A2 of French Uncovered. Can’t wait to begin B1 Olly. For some reason, my first three have become so internalised that it’s hard to believe my brain is doing all this work!
Absolutely amazing, isn't it?
After round about three months of studying Spanish (because I have a true motive);
I have started mentally and subconsciously translating everything that I hear-- and comments under every UA-cam video that I watch-- into my target language (German and French are also on the pipeline).
There is so much pure joy in learning languages.... especially the urge to converse with native speakers, on a daily basis (#1 for me).
Love languages keeps me focused 👍
Absolutely!
"What does a bilingual cat say?" lol, love it. I grew up bilingual and learned 3 additional modes of communication in addition to that. Anyone I grew up with will all agree that I am different. I have to agree. I see the world differently. I wouldn't say I am smarter, I believe anyone, within reason, can do this. I would say I have worked very hard to get here... I earned it. I would like it if many more people enjoyed this freedom. It is freedom.
So insightful. Keep up the great work!
¡¡Este video es absolutamente fantástico!! Muchas gracias!!!!
En efecto.
im kind of a bilingual baby... I mean my main language is English but my mom and grandparents spoke mandarin around me too so I could communicate with them but not as well. Im not fluent in mandarin but I can easily tell the difference between sounds in mandarin. I also learnt French but now im tryna learn Swedish and Polish but like... polish is killing me so idk if it makes learning languages easier
As an Indonesian, I was born a biligual already. I speak Bahasa Indonesia, which is the official language of the country and a local language spoken only where I live. I started taking English more seriously back in 2018, got interested in Spanish in 2019. Recently, I've just started learning Turkish and Italian. I simply love all these languages and it doesn't rule out the possiblity of adding another language in the future😊 Top benefit number 1 is that it makes you happy, couldn't agree more ❤
how's ur spanish now?
@@muazax havent been practicing that much so I guess it’s a bit rusty now 😂
@@theajessica19 oh okay, I thought u have become Polyglot rn
It’s really pleasure to watching this video as a foreigner English speaker
OMG... You talked about knowing 2 languages and having a trauma to your brain you might recall the 2nd language and not the 1st. I had an experience of that. It was short. I had surgery and as they were waking me up I started using my second language. American Sign Language. I must have been talking a lot with it because they were about to call for an interpreter. I don't even recall speaking with my hands at all. I finally got out that it's a second language... Just to put it in perspective, I had servical spinal surgery and they went through the front if my neck. I ended up with a lot of neck trauma because they cut me about an inch too high and had trouble reaching my surgery area. So when I woke I didn't want to use my voice. I always use my hands when I have a sore throat and don't want to speak.
Another thing that happens with me... Sometimes I can't remember a word in English (oddly my native language) and I will try to explain it in ASL it's crazy. Light and off were 2 when I was younger once.
What an amazing story!
I am a Native English speaker, American English; west coast. I learned Spanish in high school and I’m pretty good at it. I would not say that I’m fluent. I’ve also studied Irish Gaelic (our heritage), Italian (my heritage) and now American Sign Language. I’m a beginner in it all. If I had a superpower, it would be to be a Polyglot!
Oh yes, if they ask which superpower I would like to have, I'd always go for speaking every language in the world.
Btw I'm also learning Italian and Irish, they're so beautiful ❤.
These kinds of videos are so motivating. And it being easier to learn a thrid language after having learned your second is sooo true tho. It feels like a superpower tbh
This was by far my favourite of your videos. So many usable tips and so many motivating ideas. I have seen so much of this in my own language study/use but didn't realize the whys behind it.
Awesome!
Glad it was helpful!
For me my first language is English. In School from age 12 through age 17 I learned Spanish which I loved. Then I learned a little German which I might go back to eventually. More recently I've been challenging my brain at learning Japanese hardcore. After I feel I've gotten to a confident level in (Speaking, reading, and listening) in Japanese then I want to learn both Korean & Chinese. I currently live on the East coast of the USA at age 24 going on 25, and before I turn 30 I want to move to Japan
Go for it!
Ganbatte ne.
Go for it !
Cheering on for you!
You have a new subscriber...MOI! I am not quite fluent in Spanish, but I understand the basics and can get around in a Spanish-speaking town if I need / want to. I grew up in Texas, where I felt it was important to learn Spanish and I recently came to Lousiana where I naturally feel encouraged to learn French. I love languages! Seeing the similaries between the romance languages blows my mind. Thank you for the fascinating information!
Few years ago i started my knowledge in English , today I until not are a fluent speaker yet , but I can understood everything, so now I’m thinking about to learn French , I from Brazil 🇧🇷, my maternal tongue are the Portuuese, but I’m trying everyday to learn more and more.
wonderful video. I'm going to write my feelings in English to see if this theory works for me. my mother tongue is Portuguese
A few days ago I was made fun of by a complete stranger (a troll) on UA-cam with the words "What a waste of time to learn Greek. 😂 So sad." Well I'm not sad for benefiting my brain in so many ways at once. 😎
As a person with bad mental health who speaks less or more 4 foreign languages plus my native one I can confirm that learning languages first brings joy, calmness, enthusiasm and a feeling of satisfaction and second it helps you to overcome hurtful events. Also as a person with zero concentration I can say learning languages helps me to stay focused and purposeful as well.
Super interesting! Thanks for sharing.
As a Greek language teacher , I can tell you it’s definitely NOT a waste of time
@@Giannis-zm5no Greek is a very distinguishing and interesting language that has influenced so many other languages in the whole world. Learning it or teaching it cannot be a waste of time. Plus Greek has been entertaining me and making me smarter for more than 8 years. But an ignorant mind can't understand how knowledge can be entertaining... It's their problem after all. Greetings from Bulgaria.
@@loraivanova8635 I’m pretty sure that troll didn’t really think before speaking … let’s not pay attention to people like them . Learning about the significance of the Greek language is only one Google search away .
You made a great choice !
Greeting from Thessaloniki , Greece :)
There's nothing sad about learning Greek. You made that choice for a reason, and if the reason is only because you enjoyed your holiday in Greece, than that's okay.
I started to learn Spanish because, during the MJ tour, I went to Argentina because that was the last concert I could go to. There, I met many people who seemed nice, but only spoke Spanish. ... Now, I'm fluent in Spanish.
A question to the author of the video. Any ideas if one is learning 2-3 languages at the same time? How not to forget and do not mix up the words from one language to the other? Thanks in advance.
Good question! Check out the story of how I learned my languages here: ua-cam.com/video/ZtQwAr1vT5c/v-deo.html
I am danish, lived in Germany as a child, learned english in school, have a child with an italian, so I speak italian too. And a little bit french and spanish. I love being a polyglot 😁. Love from Denmark 🇩🇰
That’s quite normal for many Europeans. 😊
Thank you for sharing these great news. My native language is Mandarin and I have been speaking English for many many years. I do find I can be detached emotionally when speaking English. I am translating Chinese poetry into English. I find the subtle feelings that I can easily expressed in Mandarin are very hard for me to put into English and trigger similar emotional reactions for me. I am lucky that I have a colleague to work with me and he is able to get the some of the feeling expressed in English after my lengthy explanation!!
Very interesting. My mother tongue is English and I went through trauma when I was young. I first started to talk about it in German and then French: now I can manage in English and all better!
As a native Portuguese who can speak and understand English fluently, sometimes I don't even realize I'm listening to an English YT video until some time later, same with soms videogames when playing.
Actually, once I mislead one of my friends by telling him that a certain game was in Portuguese, but he said he couldn't switch the language. Then I hopped in the game and realized that it was actually in English 😅
Edit: Even when looking up something on the internet, I already write in English by instinct. Also, idk why, but I find it easier to express my feelings in English than Portuguese
I hear you. I find it easier to express certain thoughts and feelings (like longing) in Afrikaans - not my first language.
Fascinating!
Same here, but for me, it's German and English. It can feel really weird for an instant when one English video has ended and the next one is in German, then I'm like, wtf is that? But only for a moment.
Funnily enough, if something is complicated, such as tax regulations, I've been asking ChatGPT to translate the German original to simple English for me, because English really is easier to understand.
Emotion is the basis of all learning.
I came across this video because I'm studying Egyptian Arabic. American-English is my first language, Punjabi second, Spanish third and now Arabic! It's the hardest and TONS of fun while very HARD also. I can feel the positive effects on my brain... it's AWESOME. Great video!
this is my super power
I'm learning a few languages at once. My thoughts and even dreams have been pretty interesting lately.
Hebrew, Arabic / arabic egyptian, cantonese / mandarin, spanish, luganda.
Mi lengua materna es el castellano,y entiendo el inglés. Es una gran satisfacción para mí ver un video,y darme cuenta después de que lo ví (porque estaba muy concentrado en el tema) ,que el video estaba en inglés y no en español 😄. Es una tontería,pero realmente me alegra el día. Estoy pensando estudiar Japonés y Alemán ;estudiar idiomas me han cambiado la vida,me han ayudado a superar mi depresión.
It's 2024 and I've started learning Italian, my native language is Turkish, I've already learned enough English and now I'm learning Italian. I'll come here at 1 January 2025 and write my level of Italian. See you guys in 2025, arrivederci 👋🏼
I just started Japanese, so I will join you next year with a comment. Good luck brother
Japanese in 2025
@9:00 When it was too late to benefit my kids, I heard that if you play a nonnative language (Telemundo, for instance) for the first 6 mos of the kid's life, it makes it *much* easier for the kid to learn languages throughout it's life.
Could be!
Super interesting!
I came back to rewatch this as a lot of Ollie's videos need to be watched more than once. There's so much to learn from.
I grew up totally bilingual in Afrikaans and English. I did my schooling in Afrikaans and my tertiary studies in English. We went to an English church and had many English friends. We had tv programs in Afrikaans and English. I think this is the case for most Afrikaans people in South Africa and it's similar for Zulu people who also have to speak a lot of English.
I didn't even think twice about it growing up. Now that I've been learning other languages, it's even more fascinating. It's true what Ollie said, I store my English and Afrikaans in one part of my brain and my other languages in another part. I have to keep practicing the other languages if I want to keep them up but I can still communicate so easily in the first two languages, even if I don't use one of them for a long time. I don't speak much Afrikaans except to my family when I see them but it comes back way easier than the others I learned later in life. It's just there, I don't have to exercise it. So amazing. Also, when we talk as a family we often switch between Afrikaans and English, even substituting different words in the same sentence and no-one gets lost. It's quite handy being able to use the best words of both languages 😅
After learning Japanese learning Spanish feels like I'm cheating
😂
Crazy just how different Japanese is compared to Indo-European languages
Spanish has always been easy to learn as native English speaker because there are so many words that are similar or the same just pronounced differently vs 3 alphabets, tons of homophones and sentence rearrangement.
Same! After trying koine Greek, German (as a native English speaker) is SO easy.
But how can you say that!?
As a native Spanish speaker pls don't generalize us. Cubans and mexicans have waay different rhythms of speech😂 Colombians and panamanians as well. It's like saying that all English speakers are from England or the US. Nevertheless this is a good video. Now that I'm learning a 3rd language I've become more interested in how knowing 2nd or 3rd languages improves mental agility and prevents illness like Alzeimer's and Dementia, Imo😊
Mexicans and Cubans and everyone else who’s native doesn’t speak the way Spanish is taught or standard version. It’s a lot of slang, personal intonation and accent etc. different regions add their own taste and twist to Spanish. But the standard Spanish language is the way he described it and it is a syllable-based language. Now, just cuz native speakers don’t follow the standard Spanish way doesn’t mean it’s not true.
LOL! The "What does the bilingual cat say?" joke completely cracked me up! 🤣🤣
All this makes complete sense with what is happening inside my head with learning my second language (Korean). I find that the best way to learn any word is to connect it with a situation, not a meaning. If I connect it with a situation, I'm also connecting with the emotions of that situation, I'm connecting it with how and when that word might be used and I'm connecting it with a powerful memory that acts as a hook. Of course, I record their meanings in English (usually with a number of phrases rather than words to trigger my memory) but I don't connect them with a 'meaning'. For example, Korean "망했다" (munghedda) means basically, "I screwed it up!", but it's connected in my head with a thing I actually did screw up, not with any English words, so that whenever I hear that word, that situation immediately flashes into my head and I feel the meaning. THESE are the words I just don't really forget, unlike when I first started I simply remembered meanings of words directly connected to my native language, which just doesn't work. All that does is connect the new language to the old one in it's pathway so that you have to follow that path back through your old language - painstakingly translate everything through your old language - a pathway that never improves. Perhaps THIS is why school textbook learning just doesn't really work - it teaches intellectually, like remembering a phone number - that's a different kind of memory entirely. This is why story learning does work much better - particularly if you're not living in the culture your language is spoken in - you can at least situate that word with the situation in the story while your brain slowly embeds that word in memory connected together with various usages over time. I often do this too with new words, not with Olly's course, but with stories I listen to on UA-cam. But those words inevitably end up being connected to my own life in some way eventually anyway. I suspect that the success one has in integrating a language into their own life is pretty essential to obtaining various levels of fluency. And I always try to use them if I can as soon as a situation presents itself. I'm constantly trying them out on my Korean friends, lol! 😂
In fact, this might be the only advantage for language beginners to living in the country that your new language is spoken. Living in my adopted country where I can actually hear the language everyday, in my experience, hasn't really helped me learn the language faster at all. What it HAS done is enable me to make those situational connections (connections with emotions and situations and memories) within the culture that I'm living. All my hooks and memories of my words and connections are situated in my new culture. Had I learned my new language in my native culture I would have had to make connections with my memories and situations in THAT culture, which wouldn't have worked near as well. As a beginner, living in the culture doesn't help you much with becoming fluent faster at ALL, because you can't have conversations or understand anything because you simply don't know enough anyway. It's only when you reach intermediate level that living in the culture that you are learning the language helps because you can start to have conversations and understand. What it DOES help you with is learning words and connecting them to the situations within that culture. The other thing is that a lot of words ONLY make sense in their own culture (as in Korean compared to English speaking cultures in general), so not knowing the culture would make it a lot more difficult to understand what many words mean if there is no real usage or existing word in your own culture.
This is why foreign language teachers recommend that the learner write a life diary in the new language and include experiences events and thoughts.💕💕🎯🎯🏅🏅
great ! English is my third language and I love it. these kind of videos help me in first time when I start learning new languages. thanks a lot
I am 53 i am bilingual since 5 years old. However I would want to say it depends whom I am arguing with. I am currently leaning a third language ( Italian) . I am still in beginner stage. I have downloaded your KIT. I hope to reach B1 maybe in 12 months 🧐🤔.
I had already read a few articles about it, watched a few vids and even shared links on my edublogs but it's always enriching to learn more about these benefits and spread the new findings on that field. Thank you so much!
My son's speaks Setswana and English as home languages, we moved back home and he's had to go to an Afrikaans school. I thought it was a good idea especially from a social and economic view however he's frustrated and he's not coping. I'm so happy to have come across this video
There's a certain feeling for me as a non-native English speaker getting told (and fully understanding!) to learn more languages.
"I'm 4 parallel universes ahead" type of stuff
I'm a therapist and I have a lot of ASD clients and I may be on the spectrum myself, and we tend to have major executive function, EQ and communication difficulties. I'm starting to sell my ASD clients on second language acquision. I wonder if it can upgrade the neurodivergent brain as good as any therapy.
I think so. Probably more with Asperger's, though.
Interesting thought. Let me know when you find out more!
Anyone has this experience when you sing something in a group or hearing someone singing in another language and your brain thinks its your mother language but its not? Can you explain this ? How is it called ?
As far as I understand, dopamine isn’t the happiness or reward chemical, it’s the motivation or anticipation chemical. It’s linked with addiction because it makes it feel like there will be a reward, which explains why it isn’t maximal after something good happens but before.
To be honest, i was looking for this for a long time.
I have been learning Japanese for 3 years..And it seems so hard to me that many many times I wanted to give up..
And I always wandered that I'm working so hard and if it has any kind of impact on my brain
You can be certain it is!
I’m a month and a half in my Japanese learning and I made my first joke in Japanese. It felt fantastic!!
I have been learning French for a long time. Finding the expressions in a foreign language that fit my feelings is very interesting. Language is indeed related to the perception of things!
I once experienced a personality change when I spoke a foreign language. Now I get used to it and it won't happen anymore, but there are slight mood swings between the language. My boyfriend said that my tone of voice changes according to the language I speak. My voice is higher in English and lower in French.
I'm glad to hear that language learning delays memory loss when we get old! Recently, my grandmother forgot many things and now she has Alzheimer's. It scares me the most! I'll keep on learning the language and will try speaking it with young people when I get old!
By far the best video I’ve seen on this topic! I’m learning Swahili and been feeling kinda demotivated lately. This video gave me a motivation boost 🔥
Your videos are truly so valuable, I always come away from them feeling so much smarter and assured in my language learning journey!
I learned some French in high school, but now I’ve been learning Korean and Japanese as a hobby- it’s truly my favorite thing, it equally makes me feel so accomplished/smart and also just feels fun!
Wow, the point about making rational decisions is absolutely fascinating
As an Indonesian, I speak 5 languages.
1. Sundanese, local west Java province.
2. Indonesian, for school and work.
3. English, for deeper education and entertainment.
4. Arabic, well I am Muslim and spent 1 year learning.
5. Japanese. Now I work in Japan.
It's nice to see a positive video under the psychology tag:so many of them are negative. Enjoy life and be what you can be!
I'm Brazilian and surely Portuguese is my Mother tong. One year and six months ago I started to learn English (I love Sabaton and country music). Then, I watched many videos about German culture, society, History, etc.
These are my objectives English and German.
I hope you right by saying you never to old to learn a new language. I am a 72 year old South African and born bilingual. i cannot say which is my mother tongue as I think and speak in both languages equally well. I speak English and Afrikaans. Afrikaans is derived from Dutch so this allows me to understand languages spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium and to a degree in Germany.
I have now been studying Mandarin for three years on Duolingo without skipping a day between lessons but its going slowly. What keeps me going is that feeling you mentioned when you understand or recognize whats been said when watching a Chinese movie.
The talking part is particular difficult due to the different tones in Chinese Mandarin.
Something funny that happens to me after learn English is when I'm speaking in my native language (Spanish) some words like:
Vaca - Cow
Volver - Get back
Rapido - Faster
I pronounce v and r like in English, like a f.
I think, after to learn languages, it Influences a lot in your native language. 👍😃
That's funny- as a native speaker of English, I've found that speaking Spanish affects me the same way! R's become harder to pronounce in English words; Freeway becomes Fdeeway, Ready= Rrready, Really?=Rdeely? 😂 It seriously takes a minute to fully switch out of one language into the other.
Lol, if someone knows Spanish and wants try psychotherapy, Argentina, and specifically Buenos Aires, it has the higher ratio of psychologists in the world. Probably the cheapest ones in the current exchange rate in dollars.
Interesting!
I’m from India I know 4 languages (learning more) and currently living in Spain . It’s been a year in Spain and I’m so happy with my progress that I can express my emotions and feelings in Spanish and I recently cried over something and I expressed how I felt in Spanish 😂😂
6:23 this is what I’ve tried to explain for so long. At times I can’t understand what someone is saying because my brain thinks they are talking in another language for a moment.
As Tagalog speaker, we have many words for Rice, these are Bigas (Uncooked Rice), Kanin (Cooked Rice), Palay (Unhusked Rice), Sinangag (Fried Rice), Malagkit (Sticky Rice), Tutong (Burnt or Toasted Rice), Puto (Rice Cake), Bahaw (Left-over Cooked Rice), Mumo (crumb; rice left on plate after eating).
I am from a border town along the US-Mexico border. Learned English in school and playing video games, spoke Spanish at home. I have accents in both languages lol. I currently use them both everyday, but I have gone months without speaking one or the other. This video is cool, made me realize that there is basically no separation in my brain between languages. I guess I am a monolingual bilingual or something like that. If I don't consciously pick a language to think in, it switches back and forth, usually when an idea is more easily thought about in the other language, but sometimes seemingly randomly, typically minutes to hours.
My thinking sort of alternates between German and English, too. German is my native language, and English my favourite one. Often, I don't get around to actually SPEAKING any English for years (Covid, I'm looking at you), but the language is always there, ready to spring into action.
Thanks for explaining why i cannot do one thing at a time and how easy continue being multitasks 🙏🏻😮❤❤❤❤❤❤
Learning languages have opened up so many friendships (not really opportunities since I only need English for my career). Recently I became friends with an Argentinian from a class and also several Japanese people through an exchange program.
I learnt Japanese in school and now 20 years later I've started learning Spanish.
Enjoy the easy ride of Spanish