Learn Nice French
Monday, January 29th, 2007    Subscribe To Our FeedThere are many reasons for which people have to learn French. Maybe you are changing jobs, and you need French for business and promotion, or you want to move to a French speaking country, or you have personal reason to study it, all in all you will have to become fluent eventually, and be able to converse in French. How can you learn nice French step by step? The first thing you should do after you read the article may be to analyze your learning method. Why? Because a lot of your efforts to learn nice French may be very time consuming if you don’t study the right way.
First of all, it all depends on how much time you’ve got and what approach you’re using. To make sure you learn nice French, in a relatively short period of time – and by short I mean a few months – you should definitely try the modern approach to learning French as a foreign language. What does that imply? Well, with the new learning models, you don’t study grammar, syntax and spelling passively, you don’t learn some rules by heart, and the more you accumulate the better. The key to successful learning is the actual use of language in context. If you want to learn nice French, make sure you use it all the time.
If you’ve learned some new words, you need to practice them until you make sure they have stuck to your mind. A useful method to learn new words is not to take a dictionary and learn some vocabulary items by heart, but to find the words in context, by reading, writing or solving puzzles. Once you found out the meaning of a new word, you can then try to make it fit in your own formulas. Play with it in your mind, make sentences – coming to think in a foreign language is the aim of learning as such – enter Internet forums and learn nice French words there too.
What I’m trying to point out is that in order to learn nice French, you have to understand what I mean by language in action. Your memory needs to cling to something in order to register a new item. This is why learning in context is so important, because you don’t learn by heart; you understand a specific structure in which a word appears. Next time a similar case appears, you may be sure that your memory will access the right “record”.
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