#iemtakn6
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Our volunteers look into many questions every day; sometimes it takes them a little while to answer.
Make it descriptive, including relevant context, but also to the point. This way you improve your chances of getting a more relevant and specific answer.
hi, what have you been using to learn until now?
duolingo and
Learn French With Alexa
right duo so not very suprising
it's very bad at teaching languages and concepts
so, what you basically need right now is grammar
grammar is basically how sentence building and syntax works in a language
it's a collection of rules, some are very general, some are more specific, that direct how the language is built and spoken
while you don't need to learn it all, it's basically gonna unlock the doors for you for how to actually solve the sentences and language
you can bruteforce it through hundreds/thousands of hours of media listening and reading until it clicks, but it's usually way easier to have it explained
I recommend you follow this link: https://www.lawlessfrench.com/learn-french/french-for-beginners/
A self-study French course divided into loosely themed units with grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation lessons; cultural tips; and assorted quizzes.
it's a collection of grammar lessons ordered from beginner level onwards
if you have any specific inquiry, feel free to ask
I do the games thing, I've been playing Frog Detective, it's quite fun. I think it is less effective practice than textbook work or other serious, academic type of studying; however, for learning vocabulary, I find it much funner and more memorable than other methods. The story of a game and the emotional connection really does a lot for memory, in my experience. (and of course this is true for other media as well; story/interaction > flashcards for me)