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Tips for Learning
a Foreign Language
Using
the Tools:
Foreign
languages are the ideal
subject area for the use of
memory techniques. Learning
vocabulary is often a matter
of associating a meaningless
collection of syllables with
a word in your own language.
Traditionally people have
associated these words by
repetition - by saying the
word in their own language
and the foreign language
time and time and time and
time again. You can improve
on this tedious way of
learning by using three good
techniques: |
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1. Using Mnemonics to link
words
This
is a simple extension of the
link method. Here you are
using images to link a word
in your own language with a
word in a foreign language.
For example, in learning
English/French vocabulary:
-
English: rug/carpet -
French: tapis - imagine
an ornate oriental
carpet with a tap as the
central
design woven in chrome
thread
-
English: grumpy -
French: grognon - a
grumpy man groaning with
irritation
-
English: to tease -
French: taquiner - a
woman teasing her
husband as she takes in
the washing.
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This technique was formalized by
Dr. Michael Gruneberg, and is known
as the 'LinkWord' technique. He has
produced language books (an example
is German by Association) in many
language pairs to help students
acquire the basic vocabulary needed
to get by in the language (usually
about 1000 words). It is claimed
that using this technique this basic
vocabulary can be learned in just 10
hours.
2. The Town
Language Mnemonic
This is a very elegant, effective
mnemonic that fuses a sophisticated
variant of the Roman Room system
with the system described above.
This depends on the fact that the
basic vocabulary of a language
relates to everyday things: things
that you can usually find in a city,
town or village. To use the
technique, choose a town that you
are very familiar with. Use objects
within that place as the cues to
recall the images that link to
foreign words.
Nouns in the town:
Nouns should be associated to the
most relevant locations: for
example, the image coding the
foreign word for book could be
associated with a book on a shelf in
the library. You could associate the
word for bread with an image of a
loaf in a baker's shop. Words for
vegetables could be associated with
parts of a display outside a
greengrocer's. Perhaps there is a
farm just outside the town that
allows all the animal name
associations to be made.
Adjectives in
the park:
Adjectives can be associated with a
garden or park within the town:
words such as green, smelly, bright,
small, cold, etc. can be easily
related to objects in a park.
Perhaps there is a pond there, or a
small wood, or perhaps people with
different characteristics are
walking around.
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Verbs
in the sports center:
Verbs can most easily be
associated with a sports
center or playing field.
This allows us all the
associations of lifting,
running, walking, hitting,
eating, swimming, driving,
etc.
Remembering Genders
In a language where gender
is important, a very good
method of remembering this
is to divide your town into
two main zones. In one zone
you code information on
masculine gender nouns,
while in the other zone you
code information on feminine
nouns. Where the language
has a neutral gender, then
use three zones. You can
separate these areas with
busy roads, rivers, etc. To
fix the gender of a noun,
simply associate its image
with a place in the correct
part of town. This makes
remembering genders easy! |
Many Languages, many towns
Another elegant spin-off of the
technique comes when learning
several languages: normally this can
cause confusion. With the town
mnemonic, all you need do is choose
a different city, town or village
for each language to be learned.
Ideally this might be in the
relevant country. Practically,
however, you might just decide to
use a local town with the
appropriate foreign flavor.
3. The
hundred most common words
Tony Buzan, in his book 'Using your
Memory', points out that just 100
words comprise 50% of all words used
in conversation in a language.
Learning this core 100 words gets
you a long way towards being able to
speak in that language, albeit at a
basic level. The 100 basic words
used in conversation are shown
below:
| 1. A,an |
2.
After |
3.
Again |
4. All |
5.
Almost |
| 6. Also |
7.
Always |
8. And |
9.
Because |
10.
Before |
| 11. Big |
12. But |
13. (I)
can |
14. (I)
come |
15.
Either/or |
| 16. (I)
find |
17.
First |
18. For |
19.
Friend |
20.
From |
| 21. (I)
go |
22.
Good |
23.
Good-bye |
24.
Happy |
25. (I)
have |
| 26. He |
27.
Hello |
28.
Here |
29. How |
30. I |
| 31. (I)
am |
32. If |
33. In |
34. (I)
know |
35.
Last |
| 36. (I)
like |
37.
Little |
38. (I)
love |
39. (I)
make |
40.
Many |
| 41. One |
42.
More |
43.
Most |
44.
Much |
45. My |
|
46. New |
47. No |
48. Not |
49. Now |
50. Of |
|
51. Often |
52. On |
53. One |
54. Only |
55. Or |
|
56. Other |
57. Our |
58. Out |
59. Over |
60. People |
|
61. Place |
62. Please |
63. Same |
64. (I) see |
65. She |
|
66. So |
67. Some |
68. Sometimes |
69. Still |
70. Such |
|
71. (I) tell |
72. Thank you |
73. That |
74. The |
75. Their |
|
76. Them |
77. Then |
78. There is |
79. They |
80. Thing |
|
81. (I) think |
82. This |
83. Time |
84. To |
85. Under |
|
86. Up |
87. Us |
88. (I) use |
89. Very |
90. We |
|
91. What |
92. When |
93. Where |
94. Which |
95. Who |
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96. Why |
97. With |
98. Yes |
99. You |
100. Your |
(Extract reproduced from Use Your
Memory by Tony Buzan with the
permission of BBC Worldwide Limited,
© Tony Buzan)
Summary
The three approaches to learning
foreign languages shown here can be
very effective. They help to point
out:
- the most important words to
learn
- show how to link words in
your own language to words in a
foreign language, and
- show how to structure recall
of the language through use of
the town mnemonic.
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