Learning Luxembourgish On Your Own-Travel Tips by Balmoral International Group TravelA Story by RoseWays how to adapt and learn LuxembourgishStarting to learn a new language can feel
overwhelming. There seems to be so little you know and so much you don’t know.
Your head is filled with ideas to communicate and it seems like you can’t get
any across. How do you improve when you feel like you have everything to learn? The first step in language learning is
finding out your learning style. Think back during times where you studied
something before. How did you learn the material at hand? Did you find it
beneficial to read it, listen to a lecture on the topic or did it help you most
to drop the textbooks and try to learn by doing it yourself? There are three main learning types: people
who learn best with their eyes (visual types), people who learn best with their
ears (acoustic types) and people who learn best by doing (kinesthetic types).
If you learn by looking at graphs, images or text, you are more of a visual
learner. If you like listening to the radio or learn by listening to stories,
you probably belong in the category of acoustic learners. And if you’re the
type of person who gets the most out of experimenting, you likely belong to the
kinesthetic learners. Of course, sometimes you’re not fully in
one or the other category. There is no need to overthink this, the point is to
figure out which method will give you the most benefit and then start there.
You could even take a two-minute online test to determine your main learning
style. This doesn’t mean that you should ignore
all learning strategies but the one you think you excel in. Language can and
should be read, written, heard, and spoken. What I am getting at is simply to
start with your strengths so you can get some quick wins. For
visual learners: ·
Read small Luxembourgish text
or dialogue passages ·
Look up unknown words in a
dictionary ·
Discover patterns in sentences
to learn grammar (e.g., often there is an “s” at the end of verbs with “du”
-> du wunns, du heeschs,…) ·
Use different colours to mark
nouns of different genders (e.g., red for feminine words, blue for masculine
words and green for neutral words) For
acoustic learners: ·
Listen to Luxembourgish radio
and try to distinguish and repeat individual words ·
Make a song out of verb conjugations
(i.e., try singing “ech wunnen, du wunns, hie wunnt, etc.” to your favourite
tune) ·
Ask people around you to tell
you useful phrases in Luxembourgish that you can memorize and repeat
For
kinesthetic learners: ·
Memorize small Luxembourgish
sentences by connecting each word with a gesture ·
Make your own sentences and ask
a friend to correct them ·
Walk around while you repeat
words and sentences out loud For other tips and guides in touring
Luxembourg, do not hesitate to contact Balmoral International Group - Travel
& Tours. © 2015 Rose |
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Added on January 20, 2015 Last Updated on January 20, 2015 Tags: balmoral international group, balmoral international group lux Author
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