23 episodes

Who said language learning has to be difficult? Join Rita, Raffaele and the teams from the Easy Languages network as they share their stories of language learning and answer your questions. Members get bonus content, monthly Q&As, discounts and many more perks. Learn more at easy-languages.org/podcast!

Easy Languages: Stories of Language Learning Easy Languages

    • Education

Who said language learning has to be difficult? Join Rita, Raffaele and the teams from the Easy Languages network as they share their stories of language learning and answer your questions. Members get bonus content, monthly Q&As, discounts and many more perks. Learn more at easy-languages.org/podcast!

    22: It’s a Wrap (For Now)

    22: It’s a Wrap (For Now)

    It’s a wrap for season 1! The Easy Languages Podcast is taking a break. We hope you have enjoyed the past 21 episodes, found our language stories interesting, and our tips useful and actionable. As for the future… stay tuned on the Easy Languages YouTube channel and on our website: easy-languages.org


    On behalf of the Easy Languages team, thanks for listening, and happy language learning!

    • 1 min
    21: 4 Asian Languages You Can Learn Together (With Hyperpolyglot & Author Tim Keeley)

    21: 4 Asian Languages You Can Learn Together (With Hyperpolyglot & Author Tim Keeley)

    Join Rita in this special episode and listen to our remarkable guest, Tim Keeley - a hyperpolyglot & author - as he tells us about his fantastic life journey in 30 languages and gives us valuable insights into the historical and cultural ties that bind 4 of the major East Asian Languages: Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean and Japanese. Tim explains - examples in support - the fascinating similarities these languages share and how it is an advantage to learn them together.


    Show Notes


    Polyglot Conference
    Polyglot Gathering

    Polyglots mentioned in this episode:



    Richard Simcott
    Luca Lampariello
    Judith Meyer

    Map of Japan

    Ryukyuan languages, Japan

    Chinese Dynasties Timeline

    Scripts & Language Structure:



    Alexandre de Rhodes & the Vietnamese Script
    Hiragana, Katakana & Romaji
    Old Names for Japan
    Korean Script (Hangul)
    “Japan Made English” (Wasei-Eigo)
    Particles in Korean & Japanese

    • 39 min
    20: New Languages for New Worlds: ConLangs and the Case of Esperanto

    20: New Languages for New Worlds: ConLangs and the Case of Esperanto

    In this episode we introduce artificial languages: a group of languages spoken, among other places, on Avatar's Pandora, or Tolkien's Middle-Earth. But the first stop of our trip is actually in Eastern Europe, where Esperanto was created in 1887.


    In the second part of the episode, we answer questions from two of our listeners, Anna and Joanna.


    Tune in and join the language talk!


    Show Notes


    Esperanto



    Esperanto (Wikipedia)
    16 Grammar Rules (Wikiversity)
    6 Basic Phrases in Esperanto (HiNative)
    World Esperanto Congress (Universala Esperanto-Asocio, in Esperanto)

    Other Constructed Languages (Wikipedia)



    Latino sine Flexione
    Klingon
    Naʼvi
    Dothraki
    Valyrian languages
    Elvish languages
    Toki Pona

    13 Sentences to Deconstruct a Language



    How to Learn (But Not Master) Any Language in 1 Hour (The Tim Ferriss blog)

    • 26 min
    19: The Hardest Language in the World (Isn’t the One You Think…)

    19: The Hardest Language in the World (Isn’t the One You Think…)

    What makes some languages harder to learn than others? In this episode, we attempt to entangle the objective factors - as to why a language is complex - from the subjective ones. We also dedicate a section to talking about our experiences with those languages which we traditionally think are the most difficult to master.


    Show Notes


    Foreign Service Institute Language Rankings (Foreign Language Training)

    Can We Measure Language Difficulty by the Numbers? (Ofer Tirosh, TowardsScience)

    Rank of Language Difficulty (Michael Campbell, Glossika Blog)

    What is the Hardest Language to Learn? (Steve Kaufmann, The Linguist Blog)

    Past tense ending in Turkish: ‑mış (TurkishTexbook)

    13 Russian Verbs of Motion to Move Your Learning Forward (Kelly Virginia Phelan, FluentU)

    Chinese Classifiers: What Are They And How To Use Them ( Angie, ChineseEdge)

    Japanese Formal & Informal Speech (Lydia Thron, Wyzant)

    Conjugation of The Verb To Eat in Japanese (JapaneseVerbConjugator)

    • 27 min
    18: This is Why We Use Subtitles in 2 Languages

    18: This is Why We Use Subtitles in 2 Languages

    Join Rita and Raffaele in this new episode as they discuss the importance of using comprehensible input throughout your language learning journey, and how a certain degree of difficulty is needed and welcome while consuming language-related content.


    In the second part of the episode, they share a few resources like apps, books, and courses that make use of this principle and have helped them in the past and can help you too!


    But what does Rita really think about all this? Can you believe that even in-comprehensible input can help?


    Show Notes


    Comprehensible input (British Council)
    Linguist (definition) (Cambridge Dictionary)
    Dog/Language Learning meme (Fluent Forever)

    Resources mentioned:



    Rosetta Stone
    Lingq
    Storylearning Books
    Interlinear Books

    YouTube videos:



    Does Input Have to Be "Comprehensible"? (Matt vs Japan)
    Why Did You Learn Esperanto? (Easy Esperanto 1)

    • 32 min
    17: The Spirit of the Sakha Language (Yakut) With Tatiana O. & Olga Y. From Easy Sakha

    17: The Spirit of the Sakha Language (Yakut) With Tatiana O. & Olga Y. From Easy Sakha

    Yakutia, also known as the Sakha Republic, the land where the Taiga meets the Tundra, is one of the coldest inhabited areas in the world and home to one of the most unique and thrilling languages and cultures in the Russian Federation. At Easy Languages, we are happy to count Easy Sakha as one of those languages.


    In this episode, you'll listen to Tatiana O. & Olga Y. share all the essential facts about their fascinating language, the Sakha language, and give us their tips for learning languages in the second section.


    And if you want to learn some basics in Sakha, become a member & join us for a fun after-show!


    Show Notes


    What is Sakha/Yakut?



    Sakha Tyla (Britannica)
    Yakut Alphabet/Script (Omniglot)
    About Yakut language / Sakha tyla (Life in Yakutia Channel)
    How similar are Tatar and Sakha/Yakut languages? With Eli from Russia (Life in Yakutia Channel)
    Similarities Between Turkish and Yakut (Siberian Turkic language)
    (Bahador Alast Channel)
    History of Sakha: The Story of an Indigenous Siberian People (Left Handed Asians Channel)
    YAKUT PEOPLE, CULTURE, & LANGUAGE (IloveLanguages! Channel)
    10 Facts You Didn’t Know about Yakutsk (theculturetrip)
    Map of the Sakha Republic in the Russian Federation
    Resources for learning Sakha:
    What People Wear in the Coldest Place on Earth (Yakutsk, Russia) | Easy Sakha 1 (Easy Languages Channel)
    Language Links Database
    Sakha Lessons
    Wordle in Sakha:


    https://sakhatyla.ru
    https://sakhatyla.ru/blogs/news/wordle
    https://wordle.afanasev.net
    https://wordle.tylytaay.ru

    Application to learn Sakha

    • 33 min

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