00:00:00
I learned to speak 56 languages and I
00:00:03
learned each of them in under 24 hours
00:00:06
yes I know that sounds a little bit
00:00:08
ridiculous uh even to me but it is true
00:00:11
and it's actually the only way that I
00:00:13
could have posted 56 videos of me
00:00:16
surprising strangers by speaking their
00:00:18
language in just the past few years so
00:00:21
I've talked about this before but I was
00:00:23
actually terrible at learning languages
00:00:25
in high school not that I got bad grades
00:00:27
my grades were actually pretty good but
00:00:29
I just couldn't speak any of these
00:00:31
languages that I studied I would just
00:00:32
see this language textbook full of super
00:00:34
intimidating alphabets and scripts and
00:00:36
charts and tones and just become totally
00:00:39
overwhelmed you know and having grown up
00:00:41
in a monolingual English speaking
00:00:43
environment in the United States I would
00:00:45
just think to myself man it's either
00:00:47
Geniuses or Dutch people who can
00:00:50
actually learn to speak multiple
00:00:51
languages and I really wanted to learn
00:00:53
to speak but I would try by reading the
00:00:56
textbook which is how I thought you were
00:00:58
supposed to learn a language but I would
00:01:00
inevitably get bogged down in the
00:01:01
details and then just totally give up
00:01:03
but after I moved to China and started
00:01:05
learning Chinese I started experimenting
00:01:07
more and more with language learning on
00:01:08
my YouTube channel and especially since
00:01:10
this became my full-time job a few years
00:01:12
ago I actually started getting really
00:01:14
really good at learning languages to the
00:01:16
point where now I consider myself
00:01:19
possibly the world's leading expert on
00:01:21
how to learn a language as quickly as
00:01:23
possible which by the way does not make
00:01:25
me anything close to the world's
00:01:26
greatest polyglot there are millions of
00:01:28
people in this world who have way better
00:01:30
language skills than I do but having
00:01:32
gone from zero to basic conversational
00:01:34
ability in 56 languages from every
00:01:37
continent on the planet except
00:01:38
Antarctica I do think that I at least
00:01:40
have some experience in the topic of how
00:01:42
to learn any language quickly see what I
00:01:43
realize the problem with typical
00:01:45
language textbooks is is that they
00:01:47
frontload too much you have to learn all
00:01:49
of these alphabets and weird scripts and
00:01:52
charts and tones and grammar before you
00:01:56
even get to chapter one there are these
00:01:58
incredibly boring and by themselves
00:02:00
useless things that you're somehow just
00:02:02
expected to memorize out of context and
00:02:05
it isn't just textbooks that teach like
00:02:06
this this forms the basis of our
00:02:08
language learning pedagogy in almost all
00:02:10
language learning classrooms around the
00:02:11
world and while I do understand the
00:02:13
desire to create a solid foundation I
00:02:15
think you end up instead intimidating
00:02:17
beginners and mystifying language
00:02:19
learning you make language learning feel
00:02:21
like calculus when it's actually much
00:02:23
easier than that don't get me wrong
00:02:25
learning languages is hard but as Matt
00:02:27
versus Japan likes to say it's hard in
00:02:30
the way that exercise is hard not in the
00:02:33
way that calculus is hard it does not
00:02:35
take a genius to go jogging but it does
00:02:37
take a certain level of commitment and
00:02:39
this textbook Style by the way is also
00:02:41
not the way that 99% of people who
00:02:43
actually succeed at learning languages
00:02:46
actually learn their languages a really
00:02:47
interesting example of this is that most
00:02:49
Chinese Teachers like to teach you
00:02:50
Chinese characters on day one before you
00:02:53
even learn to speak because that's how
00:02:55
they first learned Chinese when they
00:02:56
went to elementary school in China but
00:02:58
what this overlooks
00:03:00
is that on their first day of elementary
00:03:02
school in China they already spoke
00:03:05
fluent Mandarin which they had learned
00:03:07
word by word phrase by phrase sentence
00:03:10
by sentence from their parents and not
00:03:13
from a textbook so by the time they were
00:03:15
learning the writing system they already
00:03:17
understood the entire essence of
00:03:20
Mandarin speaking and grammar to which
00:03:22
they could then apply the characters so
00:03:24
my system has two parts and part one is
00:03:27
speaking practice the key to my rapid
00:03:28
language learning is spending 1 hour per
00:03:30
day speaking with online Tutors or
00:03:32
friends and I do this for 10 to 15
00:03:34
sessions spread out over 3 weeks the
00:03:36
focus here is purely on practical
00:03:38
conversation skills I start from zero
00:03:40
from very basic phrases and then we
00:03:42
gradually build up to more and more
00:03:44
complex conversations and I Do by the
00:03:46
way actually have a free list of phrases
00:03:47
that I like to use for this purpose
00:03:49
which you can also check out at the link
00:03:50
in the description I like to call them
00:03:52
my magic sentences and I think speaking
00:03:54
from the very beginning literally day
00:03:56
one um is crucial because it helps to
00:03:59
Dem the language and it also helps to
00:04:01
get over your fear of speaking which is
00:04:03
precisely the problem that I had in high
00:04:04
school when I would spend all this time
00:04:06
studying my textbooks and then when it
00:04:08
came to actually speak I would be
00:04:10
petrified I wouldn't know what to say
00:04:12
because I had never actually spoken
00:04:13
before everything I learned had come
00:04:15
from the textbook plus the direct
00:04:17
interaction with native speakers helps
00:04:18
me internalize the flow of the language
00:04:20
very quickly an analogy that I often use
00:04:22
is that trying to learn to speak a
00:04:23
language by reading a textbook is like
00:04:26
trying to learn to ride a bike by
00:04:28
reading a textbook you know you're just
00:04:29
just studying the physics of how your
00:04:32
feet move and the rotations at this
00:04:34
number of RPM create this movement so
00:04:36
all I have to do is turn left into the
00:04:38
torque and like we've all been
00:04:40
brainwashed by school into thinking
00:04:42
that's how it works but it's not and in
00:04:44
theory maybe it is possible to learn how
00:04:46
to ride a bike by reading a physics
00:04:48
textbook but practically speaking you do
00:04:51
need to understand the rhythm of bike
00:04:53
riding and actually ride a bike in order
00:04:56
to learn how to ride a bike now part two
00:04:58
of my method is sentence mining after
00:05:01
each speaking session I collect and
00:05:03
record key words phrases or sentences
00:05:06
from the session into Anki a free flash
00:05:10
card program to gradually memorize what
00:05:13
I just learned in the speaking session
00:05:15
over the next few weeks by the way
00:05:17
always front card English and back card
00:05:19
target language to make flashcards that
00:05:21
force you to actively recall the words
00:05:23
rather than just passively recognize him
00:05:25
and I only put sentences whose grammar I
00:05:27
fully understand into Ani so so I have
00:05:29
to learn the grammar from my teacher
00:05:32
before I can go and memorize the
00:05:33
sentences and so this means that I'm not
00:05:35
just wrote memorizing sentences I'm
00:05:37
actually memorizing grammar as well by
00:05:39
natural osmosis what I'm definitely not
00:05:41
doing which I used to do in high school
00:05:44
all the time is memorize big conjugation
00:05:47
charts or memorize alphabets or memorize
00:05:51
tone rules or things like that and so as
00:05:53
I memorize these sentences I'm also
00:05:56
naturally memorizing the grammar of the
00:05:57
language as I said before the grammar of
00:06:00
most languages isn't too hard hard as in
00:06:02
calculus that this is really so
00:06:05
difficult um with the possible exception
00:06:07
of some Native American languages which
00:06:10
you know so for each language that I
00:06:13
study over these 15 sessions I end up
00:06:15
developing an decks you know that
00:06:18
contain anywhere from 50 to 100 cards
00:06:21
and that really is all you need to know
00:06:25
in order to have basic conversations in
00:06:28
any language about 50 to 100 words and
00:06:30
phrases and yes you also pick up other
00:06:32
things by osmosis from your speaking
00:06:34
sessions because you're continually
00:06:36
practicing as well so the anid deck
00:06:39
doesn't form the entire basis of what
00:06:40
you learn but it forms much of the key
00:06:43
grammar and vocabulary that you'll need
00:06:46
to actually have conversations in your
00:06:47
language and the phrases in the anid de
00:06:49
are all things that are natural and
00:06:53
immediately useful to me and I'm
00:06:55
typically not learning stuff that I
00:06:56
don't think I'll need to use a lot of
00:06:58
textbooks will start you out by focusing
00:07:00
on color and Direction words and I find
00:07:03
personally I never use those so why
00:07:06
would I learn those at the beginning as
00:07:07
the first things that I ever learned and
00:07:09
again I don't learn the alphabet or the
00:07:12
script in the very beginning either I
00:07:14
actually write everything into Anie the
00:07:16
way that the word or the phrase or the
00:07:18
sentence sounds to me rather than how
00:07:21
it's written in its native script which
00:07:23
I find actually helps me learn way
00:07:25
faster because I'm not so worried about
00:07:28
like what's sounds the CH make in this
00:07:31
language or like what does this weird
00:07:33
squiggle mean I don't really care I just
00:07:36
write what it sounds like to me I'll be
00:07:38
honest I do have very good auditory
00:07:40
memory but I do think you can do this
00:07:42
even if your auditory memory is not so
00:07:44
great you can actually put audio samples
00:07:46
into Anki as well so every time you load
00:07:48
up the card you get an immediate sound
00:07:50
cue for what it sounds like and you can
00:07:52
play the audio from native speaker so if
00:07:54
you do it like that you don't have to
00:07:55
worry that you're not perfectly
00:07:56
remembering the sound either I found
00:07:58
that learning the alphabet can come
00:07:59
later once I have an actual
00:08:01
conversational level um or never you
00:08:04
know because if you're not interested in
00:08:06
becoming literate in the language you're
00:08:07
studying you might not be interested in
00:08:09
becoming literate that's your choice you
00:08:10
know you can completely ignore the
00:08:13
alphabet or the script of the language
00:08:14
and so this way this way I'm not bogged
00:08:17
down in the task of learning a new
00:08:18
script from day one I do these anky reps
00:08:21
every day so I'm going to show you right
00:08:23
now let's load up um the language I'm
00:08:25
currently learning which is Scottish
00:08:28
glic so we have cows uh that's
00:08:34
NA okay good what whiskey do you
00:08:37
like
00:08:39
um
00:08:42
J it something like that right
00:08:46
J okay good that was good and you see
00:08:49
I'm learning things that both are
00:08:51
culturally relevant but um also like
00:08:54
these basic phrases you know sentences
00:08:56
like do you like or cheers or basic
00:09:01
nouns like cow things I can actually use
00:09:04
to build more complex conversations off
00:09:06
of Scotland is beautiful
00:09:10
um
00:09:13
ala ala Bria and you can see when I'm
00:09:15
learning these sentences and phrases I'm
00:09:18
not just memorizing sentences either I
00:09:19
mean I am memorizing sentences but these
00:09:22
are sentences that you know can be
00:09:24
modified and changed and a sentence like
00:09:27
Scotland is beautiful is the same thing
00:09:29
as a sentence like the Apple is tasty
00:09:33
you know they work the same way so if
00:09:35
you memorize Scotland is beautiful um
00:09:38
and you also know the words apple and
00:09:41
tasty then boom you have two sentences
00:09:43
there right you didn't have to memorize
00:09:45
two sentences you just needed to
00:09:47
memorize one to get that grammar and so
00:09:49
space repetition systems like Anki are
00:09:52
an absolute GameChanger because they
00:09:53
help me review these phrases at
00:09:55
intervals optimized for memory retention
00:09:58
so by reviewing my an for just a few
00:10:00
minutes every day I actually ensure that
00:10:02
these phrases stick in my long-term
00:10:04
memory ready to be whipped out in any
00:10:06
conversation though because I'm lazy I
00:10:08
actually do archive the decks of
00:10:10
languages that I'm not actively studying
00:10:13
meaning that I for get languages that
00:10:14
I've learned in the past and so right
00:10:16
now I can't speak anything like 56
00:10:18
languages at the same time so that's
00:10:20
basically it speak from day one use
00:10:22
sentence mining to record the key wordss
00:10:24
and phrases and then memorize everything
00:10:26
with space repetition software like anky
00:10:28
this approach has helped me learn
00:10:29
languages as quickly as possible while
00:10:31
ensuring that I don't get lost in
00:10:34
translation so if you're interested in
00:10:36
learning more about how I learn
00:10:37
languages make sure to check out my
00:10:38
master class the link in the description
00:10:40
below and now you can get speaking
00:10:41
practice with an AI tutor at my new
00:10:43
website your teacher.