tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post8677941566321149491..comments2024-03-18T09:47:18.076-07:00Comments on Forever a student: My language historyVladimirhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05898612218295828520noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post-51203212070058641112021-12-13T00:37:10.081-08:002021-12-13T00:37:10.081-08:00Hi Hristian,
thank's for the comment and all ...Hi Hristian,<br /><br />thank's for the comment and all the best to you and your studies.<br /><br />VladimirVladimirhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05898612218295828520noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post-90573273197183399102021-12-12T11:02:52.706-08:002021-12-12T11:02:52.706-08:00Hello Vladimir,
I am a fan of your work, since I ...Hello Vladimir,<br /><br />I am a fan of your work, since I found your videos on YouTube! Keep going and growing! I am following your adivces on languages as I had a similar destiny to yours! I speak a bit of many lanugages, but during the first lockdown I decided to finally start learning them one by one, giving each language about half a year of more (my case with Arabic, as it is way different to our Indo-European language family). What I do is that I buy some really good self-teaching books that include the alphabet, pronunciation, followed by different units with dialogues, grammar and exercise. Then I have some practise with media in that language and then I find native speakers, so I can practise. And typically the last step is to go to a country, where that language is spoken. Oh, and I start thinking in that language - that's what I find pretty helpful as well!<br />Btw, I am Bulgarian myself and really like Slovakia, and I actually have friends from Kosice! <br /><br />Good luck on your future plans,<br />HristianHrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06952185957566366277noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post-39248490258509515032019-05-23T12:59:28.408-07:002019-05-23T12:59:28.408-07:00Education is free in my country. For the rest I ei...Education is free in my country. For the rest I either had scholarships or worked during the summer as a waiter/bartender to save money so I could pay the studies off. Vladimirhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05898612218295828520noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post-18350215103190734292019-05-23T11:16:44.072-07:002019-05-23T11:16:44.072-07:00Wow you keep going to so many schools to study. Ho...Wow you keep going to so many schools to study. How do you even afford that?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6275372772077650637.post-84527065844358683692016-01-29T19:02:28.898-08:002016-01-29T19:02:28.898-08:00there's so many ways you could practise! for e...there's so many ways you could practise! for example, i speak cantonese fluently. taiwanese is close to hokkien and i was born bred hokkien. mandarin i picked up via conversations so we could practise that, too! if you're on line messenger, add me! :Dsgrmse.http://sgrmse.comnoreply@blogger.com