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I just wanted to give some context before I talk about Anki. Since I am not necessarily a self learner and I donβt want to mislead anyone. But I do think itβs possible to self-learn.
I wanted to learn Korean, and a method that I enjoyed. Thereβs probably a bunch of videos online that explain it. But me personally I have the English translation on the front with the classification of the word in squared brackets. βTo read [verb]β. Then I would have the Korean word in the back that I searched up on naver dictionary βλ¨Ήλ€β.
I would try to learn 20 a day but sometimes itβs just tough. Maybe thatβs why it took me 4 months to reach 1000.
Thereβs a 10 000 word vocab list on wiki pidea, I just search them up on naver dictionary first before making a flash card.
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I donβt know much about language learning, but Iβd like to document this. So I apologize if my writing is sloppy. Iβm typing this up on my phone.
Anyways, I like seeing measurable results. I only started Anki 4 months into Korean. Becuase I just procrastinated a lot. But it was really motivating to see the number go up when I added cards.
I also started doing comprensible input along side with the flashcards. So whenever I watch content where some sentences have complex grammar structures.I get the meaning from the amount of vocabulary I have gone over.
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Hopefully I can also be a better writer since this write up was somewhat sloppy. But everyone starts somewhere. Iβll write a 2000 ankideck.
Also for my skill level. I certainly cannot speak well, but I can watch beginner content and understand maybe half at times.
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