Avoid THIS single Common Spanish Learning Mistake It Could Set You Back years

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Spanish PDF Collection, designed to make your Spanish learning journey easier and more effective!

In this video, we delve into one of the most common mistakes Spanish learners make that could seriously hinder their progress and set them back years. Whether you're just starting or have been learning Spanish for a while, this mistake is something you need to be aware of. We'll explore how this error often goes unnoticed, leading to incorrect pronunciation and grammar that can become deeply ingrained over time. We'll also provide practical tips and strategies to help you avoid falling into this trap, ensuring that your Spanish learning journey stays on track. Don't let this common mistake hold you back—watch this video to learn how to speak Spanish correctly and confidently!

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I just realized you haven’t been showing up in my feed anymore. Haven’t seen a post in months. Glad to see this one

CherryDempsy
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On YouTube I only listen to native speakers, and in actual classes of the past only once did I have a native speaker. She was Cuban. Most others were native English speakers. But I did find one thing disturbing with those classes. Just because I can mimic real good doesn’t mean I know the whole language. I went to a class years ago taught by my Cuban teachers and she literally stopped teaching me and centered on the other person who could never pronounce things. She could ask questions in English, I had to ask questions in Spanish and it was hard because of limited vocabulary.

Mom was a language major in college who learned from native speakers in Spanish and taught my brother and I as children which I don’t remember. But because I learned without an accent or little, the Spanish teacher thought I knew the whole language and put more pressure on me so I just turned off. But with you I relearn a lot, learn more, repeat what you say until I get it right even though I have no one to talk to in Spanish. I just love the language. I did however helped someone in my limited Spanish with directions. I’m sure I made a few mistakes, but I tried as no one else knew anything. And she understood me. I even understood her questions.

You’re a fantastic teacher. Listening to you speak I can even roll my r’s good. It’s grammar that’s always been hard. But I’ll get it one day.

I did notice one day on my walks there is a family of Spanish speakers. I don’t understand them but I walk slowly by them just to listen to see if there is something I understand.

lisanidog
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Much of this holds true in so many areas of life! Quick fix, the initial excitement, it’s so easy to get sucked in by someone who doesn’t have your best interest at heart. I do like some of them at the beginning for the free and quick introduction to getting started, but I’ve gotten far enough now that I completely understand your warning.

RedErin
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Oh forgot to mention that when I was in high school which was a boarding school, we had foreign kids. Iran, England, Honduras, El Salvador, one girl from Mexico, American girls whose dad’s worked in Saudi Arabia, my best friend was Pakistani, and of course kids from a lot of different states including the Bahamas and one girl from Alaska. I heard A lot of Spanish. The Hondurans laughed their butts off because I thought all of Honduras was jungle and they lived in trees. They understood that I wasn’t being disrespectful just didn’t know they had cities too. Spanish and Arabic I heard every day it was amazing. If some of them didn’t know English when they came by Thanksgiving they spoke better English than us native speakers. I really liked the Hondurans, Guatemalans and the Salvadorans. The girl from Mexico was nice and when my family went to California and then visited Tijuana, mom negotiated a coat for me which I still have all in Spanish and I understood much of it because it was easy Spanish. I’ve taken some French but not too much but Spanish is it for me. I didn’t know mom was fluent in German until she had to calm someone down in a restaurant all in German. I only know a little counting in German and some greetings and like Spanish mom was very picky about pronunciation. She probably learned some German from her dad though he was born in America. Spanish is my language I love more to learn and heard a lot in that boarding school. From the Iranian girls I learned to say hello in Arabic and write my first name in it. So many cultures were in that boarding school and I just adore people who speak other languages. I few years ago a cabbie who drove me to the doctor was from the Ivory Coast and practiced my limited French which was nothing more than thank you very much but I said it perfectly and he said I had no accent. I did meet a guy who worked in a gas station when I had a car years ago who spoke Spanish and he helped me a lot with pronunciation. He was happy that I knew at least a little and he was surprised that I had little to no accent with what little I could speak.

lisanidog
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As far as I'm concerned any language teacher must be a native speaker and have diplomas to prove that they are qualified. I sometimes have to cringe when I hear foreign language teachers speak, not just Spanish teachers but also French, German and English. How can you learn Spanish from someone with an American accent? At best you will finish up with a worse accent than your teacher. I often have to talk to people who work in Indian call centers, and it's very unusual if I can understand their English. This is because they have learnt English from non-native speakers and as the teaching gets passed down from one generation to the next it deteriorates until it's just a blur. Thanks for the video, keep up the good work.

paulparry
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To me the only way to learn Spanish is from a native speaker. I learn so much from you although I do it slowly so I can process it before moving on. I didn’t learn English in a day and won’t learn Spanish in a day. It’s a journey not a race to me.

lisanidog
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🤣🤣🤣 What a grave and terrible mistake your friend made pronouncing "n" instead of "ñ". Still it is a terribly funny story.

Thank you for your advice and your learning Spanish while you sleep series.

Erika-gmtf
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And with you I learned that new word and now I know ano and año. 🤣

lisanidog