Reading Books Edition.
What are /int/ approved ways to learn a language? I personally:
>read books
>watch media
>practice conversations with other native speakers around town when ordering food
I am learning Japanese with Elementary Japanese vol 1 hasegawa
it is ok
Bumping. I know more of you fuckers are learning a language.
>>60805610
Watch this white dude speak japanese, it will probably inspire you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttyRMwuVTes
Right now Duolingo
Fluent in spoken mandarin, practicing my reading via mandarin translated manga.
I'm also learning Russian on duolingo.
Does anyone know of any good popular Russian forums? I feel like /rus/ isn't the best way of learning conversation.
>>60806168
>I feel like /rus/ isn't the best way of learning conversation.
I feel the same with /lat/. I am aware of hispanchan but I doubt that there is a Russian version.
Bump.
I'm currently 33% """Fluent""" on Duolingo and only a level 11 German.
for reading, I lurk /deutsch/ threads, their autism keeps me amused. and I listen to German propaganda:
http://www.dw.com/de/deutsch-lernen/s-2055
>>60806211
2ch.hk
Just an ugly content-free bump
I'm learning Welsh on the side of what I'm already learning, but resources for learning it are almost non-existent. I hate Duolingo so that doesn't help.
>>60807830
Cheers m8 for this.
>>60810065
1. Why would you learn Welsh
2. Why would you hate Duolingo
>>60810116
1. Because all of the other languages I'm learning except for French have non-latin alphabets and I need a break. Also, Welsh is cute.
2. I've tried it for a few different languages. It's doesn't really teach you anything except for canned sentences. It's not even a good supplementary resource. The only thing I liked about it was that it's good for pinching vocab lists from.
hellotalk is a good app!
>>60810409
>non-latin alphabets
You learning Russian? And if so, what would you recommend for grammar?
It's kinda true that duolingo has been useful mostly only for vocab.
I recomend Barons guides for language grammar rules and verbs.
>>60805516
I recommended doulingo and memrise, I'm learning Japanese, German, Chinese and English on this both web sites
>>60810607
Yeah, it's one of my majors. Our tutors hate the textbook we use, so I won't recommend it. I like Schaum's Russian Grammar and RT's Russian learning website (thank you Putin-san). I also use a textbook that's entirely in Russian, but I forget what it's called. Duolingo's Russian course is pretty bad.
>>60811256
This. So far I've just been using Memrise and it's great. I'll start duolingo soon