I didn't want to start another thread so I've dragged this one up.
Has anyone tried Babel or any of the other language apps?
I'm interested in learning French although Spanish might be more useful and I was wondering if these products are effective or if I should look elsewhere.
Results 31 to 39 of 39
Thread: Learning another language
-
09-11-2022 10:17 AM #31
-
09-11-2022 10:45 AM #32This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
IMO the best thing you can do (assuming going to live in France/Spain isn't an option) is get private lessons over Zoom or Skype or whatever – I did this during lockdown and made much faster progress than any other approach I've tried (group classes, working through books, Duolingo etc). The foundations I established in about 25 lessons allowed me to go back language books and make better progress on the higher level books. It's expensive though.
(BTW how did this thread survive so long on the main board?)
-
09-11-2022 10:53 AM #33
I was looking for something to help me with everyday practical conversations abroad. Duolingo I found to be pretty poor. Babell was much better and I took out a subscription with them. It served my needs well though obviously I had to put a fair bit of effort in.
Every gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
-
09-11-2022 10:57 AM #34
I use Reverso context for translations. Frantastique and coffee break French I’ve used in the past, up to a certain level it’s free but usually you need to pay something to really get serious about it.
-
09-11-2022 12:09 PM #35This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I think it's pretty different from normal italian, much like the dialect of german spoken in bavaria. Normal german speakers struggle to understand it in spoken or written form.
-
11-11-2022 09:28 AM #36
I started using Duolingo earlier this year to prepare for a trip to Berlin. It gave me enough to understand basic signs and little things like ordering and asking for the bill in restaurants. I’ve kept it up, and also started listening to the coffee break German podcast - I know they do a French one as well, think there might be Spanish too - and that has given me a much better understanding of the grammar aspect (the different cases in German are weird, and I’m still trying to get my head round them).
-
12-11-2022 07:32 AM #37This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Or
Der Mann hat den Hund gebissen.
German grammar is a minefield.
-
-
31-05-2023 10:08 AM #39
- Join Date
- May 2013
- Posts
- 1,106
Resurrecting this thread just to ask if anyone on here has any experience of 'in-person' language classes in Edinburgh?
Have found a few on google around the city with decent reviews but was looking to see if anyone had any personal experience of these?
Lots of great tips in this thread - but I'm keen for this to be face to face, to primarily target speaking (have been on Duolingo for years but feel need to try something more effective)
Many thanks
Log in to remove the advert |
Bookmarks