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Jana, something that I believe helps me with language recall is that I practice reading Spanish out loud. I believe you use different parts of your brain for reading and speaking and the Spanish vocabulary would be easier to remember if it was available in more than one place in your brain.
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Correct, and even better record yourself and listen to yourself. Boy, aren't you for a surprise! EDIT: Funny! I hadn't read completely what you said, but upon reading jana's reply #5, I noticed what I highlighted in red. I said, funny because I suspect you are right, the brain does keep different places to store different but related stuff and connects to them when needed or something like that. Of course this is pure speculation but it does ring like true. It is like a computer that reserves buffers which might be temporary or permanent for data etc... In my way of learning English I went gradually doing certain things that I considered necessary to do in order to do them automatically. Necessary to fool my mind, which kept on stating that I needed grammar to learn English but I also arrived to the conclusion that I didn't need grammar because I knew how to read, write and express myself in my own language, so I didn't need to do that again in English. What I am trying to say here is that I, instinctively, did what you are proposing but in a bigger scale . ![]() That was over 30 years ago and I stopped pretty much all of my "conscious" efforts to learn more English and get rid of my accent, at around the 12 or 14 months after arriving to the country. Last edited by chileno; August 01, 2013 at 07:44 AM. |
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Thank you. Remember you can also contact me on Skype. Quote:
I see that you are in Korea. Are you learning Korean? If so, if I were you, I would try to acquire the knowledge of how to write their characters and how to recognize which character comes before or after another one. That is to say the hierarchy of the characters. This will give access to their dictionary, hence a bilingual dictionary. Once I get that, that language is mine within a year. ![]() |
#7
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It's different from Spanish because having English as my first language, and Tagalog as my second, I have a lot of background in it, but with Korean, I'm starting from scratch. |
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