How To Build A Fluent English Vocabulary (Without Feeling Overwhelmed)

  Рет қаралды 19,758

EnglishAnyone

EnglishAnyone

Күн бұрын

Learn more about Fluent For Life: tinyurl.com/mu8xv3rh
Get Frederick here: englishanyone.com/frederick
In this video, I'll show you how to build a fluent vocabulary without getting overwhelmed. This video is a response to a question I received from a learner:
Sometimes studying English seems like a burden to me because every so often I find myself storing too much information in my mind that would hinder me from having a smooth fluent conversation. For instance, I learned three different expressions that mean the same thing: “build a relationship,” “establish a rapport,” and “form a connection.” But I feel overwhelmed knowing that I need to learn all those expressions - or take ownership of everything I learn. When I think about my native language, I realized that I don’t know many different expressions for different situations, and I tend to use the same simple expressions over and over again just to keep the conversation going smoothly and keep it simple. I guess I know many other words to say but me trying to restore and incorporate them into the conversation is only leading to have more pauses and slow communications. So my question is why we as English learners are meant to know everything when maybe presumably 20% of what we learn might be good enough for a day to day life? I mean personally, I’m getting stuck in the middle of a conversation mostly because I know a lot but I'm not sure which words or expressions are better suited for any given situation.
Learners get stuck for a variety of reasons, but they all come from the doubts and questions about the language.
So, this video covers:
1. The core problem of doubt and uncertainty about grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation that leads to getting stuck in conversations
2. The solution of learning English as a FIRST language, and how to build a fluent vocabulary that you "level up" continuously (this includes replacing words with other words, and expanding your "vocabulary slots" as you understand more nuance)
Get fluent here: tinyurl.com/mu8xv3rh
Speak With Us:
Website: englishanyone.com
Facebook: / englishanyone
Twitter: / englishanyone
Instagram: @englishanyone
Cải thiện nói tiếng Anh Mỹ / 改善美式英語的發音 / 미국 영어 발음 향상 / アメリカ英語の話し言葉のアクセントを向上させる / Улучшение произношения американского английского языка / Meningkatkan berbicara bahasa Inggris Amerika / Melhore sua pronúncia do inglês americano / Mejora tu pronunciación en Inglés Americano / बात अमेरिकी अंग्रेजी में सुधार تحسين لهجتك الأمريكية الإنجليزية / שפר את המבטא האמריקאי שלך / Améliorez votre prononciation en anglais américain / Migliora la tua pronuncia in inglese americano
#EnglishFluencyGuide #LearnEnglishAsAFirstLanguage #SpeakFluentEnglishConfidently

Пікірлер: 17
@EnglishAnyone
@EnglishAnyone 10 ай бұрын
Learn more about Fluent For Life: tinyurl.com/y3pefj9h Get Frederick here: englishanyone.com/frederick In this video, I'll show you how to build a fluent vocabulary without getting overwhelmed. This video is a response to a question I received from a learner: Sometimes studying English seems like a burden to me because every so often I find myself storing too much information in my mind that would hinder me from having a smooth fluent conversation. For instance, I learned three different expressions that mean the same thing: “build a relationship,” “establish a rapport,” and “form a connection.” But I feel overwhelmed knowing that I need to learn all those expressions - or take ownership of everything I learn. When I think about my native language, I realized that I don’t know many different expressions for different situations, and I tend to use the same simple expressions over and over again just to keep the conversation going smoothly and keep it simple. I guess I know many other words to say but me trying to restore and incorporate them into the conversation is only leading to have more pauses and slow communications. So my question is why we as English learners are meant to know everything when maybe presumably 20% of what we learn might be good enough for a day to day life? I mean personally, I’m getting stuck in the middle of a conversation mostly because I know a lot but I'm not sure which words or expressions are better suited for any given situation. Learners get stuck for a variety of reasons, but they all come from the doubts and questions about the language. So, this video covers: 1. The core problem of doubt and uncertainty about grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation that leads to getting stuck in conversations 2. The solution of learning English as a FIRST language, and how to build a fluent vocabulary that you "level up" continuously (this includes replacing words with other words, and expanding your "vocabulary slots" as you understand more nuance) Get fluent here: tinyurl.com/y3pefj9h Speak With Us: Website: englishanyone.com Facebook: facebook.com/englishanyone Twitter: twitter.com/englishanyone Instagram: @englishanyone #EnglishFluencyGuide #LearnEnglishAsAFirstLanguage #SpeakFluentEnglishConfidently
@Rocky-bi5dv
@Rocky-bi5dv 10 ай бұрын
I learned "good crazy" & "bad crazy" for "crazy in a good/ bad way" in "Modern Love."
@margarita3885
@margarita3885 10 ай бұрын
This is a really working approach. Inuits have 50 words for the word "snow". Only this method would work in the case 😊
@MaybeMe...862
@MaybeMe...862 10 ай бұрын
For me learning English is the life long process, even though I studied it at school. On the other hand it took me 6 month to learn Italian without studying it at school! I went to Italy and I remember to memorise 20 words every day with translator from my native Lithuanian language. I did it for a week and then I put the dictionary away and with these basic words I started to speak to natives. I remmember my joy when I realised I can speak😊. So Andrew you a totally right we need to learn as natives, no school needed for that! Thank you for your wise advice😊.
@MC-bq9dj
@MC-bq9dj 10 ай бұрын
I understand you so well! It was unimaginable a few years ago. There's just one tiny step left so I can speak well too...😅😍
@DigitalKam
@DigitalKam 5 ай бұрын
You are a great man, I m from India
@zemfiramustafazade9348
@zemfiramustafazade9348 10 ай бұрын
Hi Drew. Today's topic is crucial and attractive. I enjoy watching you cause I comprehend all what you are saying. In order to build up our vocabulary one thing we can do is to learn how to say the same thing differently as we do it with other languages. But how can we do it correctly? Thank you for your time. 🥰
@EnglishAnyone
@EnglishAnyone 10 ай бұрын
You pay attention to natives and what they say. :)
@culapantaka
@culapantaka 6 ай бұрын
I am a Japanese from Tokyo. Almost everyday I hear you on KZfaq or Kajabi. Your stance to lead students to natural way to acquire a language should be more appreciated. Thank you always! Fluent for Life course is very nice, too!
@EnglishAnyone
@EnglishAnyone 6 ай бұрын
It's my pleasure to help you improve! :) Remember that you'd just say "I'm Japanese." Or, "I'm A Japanese person." 頑張ってください!
@yesseniagarciap.9341
@yesseniagarciap.9341 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for your spirit, your patience, your enjoyment and your love towards all of us who are learning. ❤
@AIohaa
@AIohaa 9 ай бұрын
I really want to watch your videos but 2 hours is a lot. Could you make a video explaining this article in a short way?
@silfredoesquivel2870
@silfredoesquivel2870 9 ай бұрын
Hello teacher, Could I ask you something? Being a english traductor at home by watching movies or videos can be usefull in order to develop speakinh skill?
@balasubramanianpandian1952
@balasubramanianpandian1952 10 ай бұрын
Is there any recommend vocabulary books?
@EnglishAnyone
@EnglishAnyone 10 ай бұрын
englishanyone.com/frederick :) you need to HEAR vocabulary as you learn it :)
@BENbG8
@BENbG8 9 ай бұрын
@EnglishAnyone You are currently saying "you don't need know to many worlds to be fluent" but my biggest problem when I saw some unknown words I'm lost all sense . And in most of situation I can't understand what thay would meaning from context
@CarlosLopez-bt2ty
@CarlosLopez-bt2ty 10 ай бұрын
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