I want to learn German on my own but I don't know what to use; could any of you advice me some ressources I could use (textbook, grammar book, online course..)?
Also language thread general
>you mother language(s)
>the language you know
>the language you are still studying
1. go to their general
2. ready your google translate
3. translate only the most complex sentences you can think of
4. copypaste
5. ????
6. Profit!
YouTube, Duolingo, etc.
Also there is a game about learning languages, which seems pretty useful. It's called "influent"
Have a video of an American, who learns German, playing this game:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AltCLuxd7AA
>Portuguese
>English
>German
I'm using a course called "German, why not?" to learn the language and it's being pretty useful, you can download it for free if you search it on Google. It contains everything that you need to reach at least the B2 level. You should also use Duolingo obviously, since doing at least a lesson there each day will help you to get comfortable with how it's written, the nouns and their articles, etc, but anyways, the course that I've mentioned is the best for beginners really.
>>61473524
What the fuck is das Wort?
>>61473945
Google translator, nigger
>>61474038
I was just quoting the video :(
>>61473945
The word...
>>61474068
now you know why they call brazilian 'animals'
>>61473478
>>61473524
>>61473841
thanks for the advices I will try those.
>Spanish
>Spanish
>English
I learn with the British council web page, videos from the BBC (but these aren't options for you), and a web page named Memrise.
Move to Germany
Learn German because you're surrounded by it
it's the only way
I'm learning Korean now because I surmised it'd make learning Japanese easier, but I fear it'd only add to the list of languages I abandoned never to redeem. What's the standard procedure for jumping back into a language of which you understand only enough to be insulted by beginner courses?
>>61473314
Been there.
There's a bridge nearby that gives the best view in Germany.
Go learn vocabulary, and general phrases.
Then, speak it to others online or to yourself
Afterwords, you can buy grammar and verb books or use the web to clear it up.
After this, you can go to that general of your langauge state your reasons, and do not troll.
>>61473314
I use Duolingo for Russian and it's pretty good, if you want to start.
>>61473314
1. Portuguese
2. English
3. i`ll study german and French
>German
>English, French
>Currently learning Russian with help of girlfriend
>>61478224
East German gf or russian?
>>61473314
It's always the same shit when you want to learn Indo-European languages, you just have to be into it, then you do:
1st - Learn vocabulary - Learn the top 1000 most commonly used words, take your time, write them down, use a dictionary, flash cards, whatever, be sure to learn at least the top 100 nouns, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, etc.
2nd - Learn the most commonly used phrases and sentences. Know these very well.
3rd - Learn the Grammar
4th - Start speaking with actual people, get the pronounciation right.