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fromirelandtokorea · 10 months
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Korean Masterlist:
FROMIRELANDTOKOREA’S LESSON MASTERLIST
Seeing as I have a masterlist for ALL of my posts, including resources, books, etc (find it here) I wanted an organised lesson one! I hope this will help everyone! Updated: 10 March 2020
HANGUL/READING:
Lesson 1: Hangul Basic Consonants Pt.1 Lesson 2: Hangul Basic Consonants Pt.2 Lesson 3: Hangul Basic Consonants  Lesson 4: Diphthongs Lesson 5: Aspirated and Double Consonants Lesson 6: Batchim Pt.1  Lesson 22: Batchim Pt. 2 NEED TO KNOW:
Lesson 17: How Korean Age Works Lesson 18: Levels of Politeness in Korean Lesson 105: Korean Holiday Chuseok
VOCABULARY:
Lesson 7: Hello, Thank You, Goodbye, Yes and No Lesson 8: I’m Sorry Lesson 9: Please, More, a Little Lesson 14: Native Korean Numbers and Uses Lesson 16: Sino-Korean Numbers and Uses Lesson 19: Days of the Week Lesson 20: Months Lesson 21: Body Parts Lesson 23: School Subjects Lesson 24: School Vocabulary Lesson 25: Family Lesson 42: Today, Tomorrow, Now etc. Lesson 58: Vegetables Lesson 59: Fruit Lesson 60: Emotions Lesson 61: Food and Drink Lesson 68: Sports Lesson 69: Places in Town Lesson 79: Animals  Lesson 80: Clothes  Lesson 84: Sickness Pt. 1 Lesson 85: Sickness Pt. 2 Lesson 86: Sickness Pt. 3 Lesson 93: Transportation Lesson 94: Halloween  Lesson 102: The House Lesson 103: Shopping Lesson 106: Dating, Love, Marriage Lesson 107: Random Vocabulary GRAMMAR: Lesson 10: It Is, What is It? Lesson 12: This Is, What is This? Lesson 13: This, That, It, Thing Lesson 26: Have/Don’t Have Lesson 17: 15 Useful Verbs Lesson 27: Present Tense Conjugation Lesson 28: Past Tense Conjugation Lesson 29-32: Future Tense 1 2 3 4 Future Tense Meanings and Examples 1 2 3 4 Lesson 33: How to Form Korean Sentences Lesson 34: Don’t + Verb Lesson 35: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가 Lesson 36: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가 Pt 2 Lesson 37: Object Marking Particle ~을/를 Lesson 38: Want To -고 싶어요 Lesson 39: Location Marking Particles ~어디, ~에, ~에서 Lesson 40: Negative Sentences Lesson 41: Negative Sentences with 하다 Lesson 43: Who? Lesson 44: Why, How, How much? Lesson 45: From - To - , From - Until - Lesson 46: Therefore, So Lesson 47:  And, With ~하고, ~(이)랑 Lesson 48:  But, However, ~그렇지만, ~그런데 Lesson 49:  To/From Someone Lesson 50: Plural Nouns Lesson 51: Telling Time Lesson 53: -지 마세요 (지마) Lesson 54: -(으)세요 Imperative Lesson 55: -아/어/여 주세요 Lesson 56: -도 Too, Also, As Well Lesson 57: -만 Only Lesson 62: Can, Cannot - (으)ㄹ 수 있다/없다 Lesson 63: Present/Past/Future Progressive Lesson 64: A bit, Really, Very, Not really, Not at all Lesson 65: Changing Nouns into Verbs -는 것  Lesson 66: Counters 개 + 명 Lesson 67: To Be Good/Bad At Lesson 70: Have to, Should, Must Lesson 71: Still, Not Yet Lesson 72: Already Lesson 73: (으)로 Lesson 74: If, In Case Lesson 75: Let’s Lesson 76: Pronouns + Possessive Pronouns Lesson 77:ㄹ/을 것: Lesson 78: Doable/Worth Doing Lesson 81: (으)ㅂ시다 Lesson 82: 처럼 Like Lesson 83: More….Than Lesson 87: 좋다 vs 좋아하다 Lesson 88: -ㄴ가 Lesson 89: 다, 더 - All, More Lesson 90: Behind, In Front of, Beside Lesson 91: Written Descriptive Form Adjectives Lesson 92: Before -ing Lesson 95: To be Similar to/The Same as -같다 Lesson 96: To Care/Not Care Pt.1 Lesson 97: To Care/Not Care Pt.2 Lesson 98: Connecting Verbs Lesson 99: Might, Perhaps, It’s Possible Lesson 100: To Want 원하다 Lesson 101: Korean Conjunctions Lesson 104: From A to B Lesson 108: Narrative Tense Lesson 109:  -지/-죠 Lesson 110:  -니 Lesson: 111: -ㅂ/습니까  Lesson 113: Shall I? Lesson 114: Agreeing/Disagreeing
PHRASES:
Lesson 11: Where Are You From? I’m From Lesson 52: Self Introduction  Lesson 112: Travelling Phrases Pt 1
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fromirelandtokorea · 10 months
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Should I redo this as a 2023 version??? Probablyyyy
Lesson Masterlist
Updated: 28 November 2016
POST DISCLAIMER
IRISH IN KOREA - LINKS ETC
cao.ie Language Related Studies Ireland - UCC Language Related Studies Ireland - UCD Language Related Studies Ireland - DCU
Lessons:
Lesson 1: Hangeul Basic Consonants Pt 1
Lesson 2: Hangeul Basic Consonants Pt 2
Lesson 3: Hangeul Basic Vowels
Lesson 4: Diphthongs
Lesson 5: Aspirated and Double Consonants
Lesson 6: Batchim Pt 1
Lesson 7: Hello, Thank You, Goodbye, Yes, No
Lesson 8: I’m Sorry
Lesson 9: Please, More, A Little
Lesson 10: It Is, What Is It?
Lesson 11: Where Are You From? I’m From
Lesson 12: This Is, What Is This?
Lesson 13: This, That, It, Thing
Lesson 14: Native Korean Numbers and Uses
Lesson 15: Introductory Phrases
Lesson 16: Sino-Korean Numbers and Uses
Lesson 17: How Korean Age Works
Lesson 18: Levels of Politeness in Korean
Lesson 19: Days of the Week
Lesson 20: The Months
Lesson 21: Body Parts
Lesson 22: Batchim Pt 2
Lesson 23: School Subjects
Lesson 24: School Vocabulary
Lesson 25: Family
Lesson 26: Have/Don’t Have
Lesson 27: 15 Useful Verbs
Lesson 27: Present Tense Conjugation
Lesson 28: Past Tense Conjugation
20 Present Tense Verbs
20 Past Tense Verbs
Lesson 29: Future Tense 1
Lesson 30: Future Tense 2
Lesson 31: Future Tense 3
Lesson 32: Future Tense 4
Future Tense 1 Example Sentences and Meanings
Future Tense 2 Example Sentences and Meanings
Future Tense 3 Example Sentences and Meanings
Future Tense 4 Example Sentences and Meanings
Lesson 33: How to Form Korean Sentences
Lesson 34: Don’t + Verb
Lesson 35: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가
Lesson 36: Topic/Subject Marking Particles ~은/는 + ~이/가 Pt 2
Lesson 37: Object Marking Particle ~을/를
Lesson 38: Want To -고 싶어요:
Lesson 39: Location Marking Particles ~어디, ~에, ~에서
Lesson 40: Negative Sentences
Lesson 41: Negative Sentences with 하다
Lesson 42: Today, Tomorrow, Now, Etc.
Lesson 43: Who?
Lesson 44: Why, How, How much?
Lesson 45: From - To - , From - Until - 
Lesson 46: Therefore, So
Lesson 47:  And, With ~하고, ~(이)랑
Lesson 48:  But, However, ~그렇지만, ~그런데
Lesson 49:  To/From Someone
Lesson 50: Plural Nouns
Lesson 51: Telling Time
Lesson 52: Self Introduction
Lesson 53: -지 마세요 (지마)
Lesson 54: -(으)세요 Imperative
Lesson 55: -아/어/여 주세요
Lesson 56: -도 Too, Also, As Well
Lesson 57: -만 Only
Lesson 58: 야채 Vegetables 
Lesson 59: 과일 Fruits
Lesson 60: Emotions 
Lesson 61: Food and Drink
Lesson 62: Can, Cannot - (으)ㄹ 수 있다/없다
Lesson 63: Present/Past/Future Progressive
Lesson 64: A bit, Really, Very, Not really, Not at all
Lesson 65: Changing Nouns into Verbs -는 것
Lesson 66: Counters 개 + 명
Lesson 67: To Be Good/Bad At
Lesson 68: Sports
Lesson 69: Places in the Town/City
Lesson 70: Have to, Should, Must
Lesson 71: Still, Not Yet
Lesson 72: Already
Lesson 73: (으)로
Lesson 74: If, In Case
Lesson 75: Let’s
Lesson 76: Pronouns + Possessive Pronouns
Lesson 77:ㄹ/을 것:
Lesson 78: Doable/Worth Doing
Lesson 79: Animals
Lesson 80: Clothes
Lesson 81: (으)ㅂ시다
Lesson 82: 처럼 Like
Lesson 83: More….Than
Lesson 84: Pain/Sickness Pt.1
Lesson 85: Pain/Sickness Pt.2
Lesson 86: Pain/Sickness Pt.3
Lesson 87: 좋다 vs 좋아하다
Lesson 88: -ㄴ가
Lesson 89: 다, 더 - All, More
Lesson 90: Behind, In Front of, Beside
Lesson 91: Written Descriptive Form Adjectives
Lesson 92: Before -ing
Lesson 93: Transportation
Lesson 94: Halloween Vocabulary
Lesson 95: To be Similar to/The Same as -같다
Lesson 96: To Care/Not Care Pt.1
Lesson 97: To Care/Not Care Pt.2
Lesson 98: Connecting Verbs 
Lesson 99: Might, Perhaps, It’s Possible
Lesson 100: To Want 원하다
Other Posts:
13 Tips To Start Learning Languages
Steps to Take for Beginner Language Learners
My 10040 Challenge Intro
Why I’m Learning Korean
Korean Learning Tips + Reccomendations
Top Ten KPOP Songs To Help You Pronounce Korean
problematic-korean-faves Inspired Vocabulary
Ten Reasons You Should Watch: Boys Over Flowers
The Truth About Learning Korean
20 Facts About Me
My Studying Essentials
My Face   2  3  4  5
What My Hand-writing Looks Like In Hangeul
POST DISCLAIMER (again)
My Own Call Out Post
Should I Do a French Blog?
Motivation for Language Learners!!!!
Photos of Dublin City    Dublin Compared to Seoul
Real Talk: My Language Learning
My Social Media Accounts
School Rush: Why I Haven’t Been Up to Date
My Sentence Practice
Autumn Summary 2016
Sassy Go Go
Romanization Notice
Dear Fellow Language Learners and Langblr’s
Resources:
Margarita’s Weekly Korean
sweetandtastytv 
Talk To Me In Korean YouTube
Talk To Me In Korean Website
Talk To Me In Korean Bookshop
Korean From Zero
GO! Billy Korean YouTube
GO! Billy Korean Korean Made Simple Book
Korean Grammar in Use: Beginner
이화한국어 Ewha Korean Textbooks
Yonsei Korean Textbooks
TOPIK Guide Books
Other Books
Bilingual ENG/KOR Books
Sogang Books
First Step Korean
How To Study Korean
Learn To Speak Korean 1
Pathway to Spoken Korean
Intermediate Korean
Kpop Merch/Snacks/Etc:
heyeonni
InspireMeKorea subscribtion box
MishiBox Korean Beauty Box
MishiBox Shop (all there stuff looks pretty cool)
SnackFever Subscription Snack Box
Korea-Box Kpop Merch, Snacks Subscription Boxes
KpopMerchandiseWorld
AllKpopper Merch Shop
KpopTown Merch Shop
Korean Food Recipes:
Maangchi Website (I use her recipes they are so good)
Maangchi YouTube
Maangchi Cookbook
Seonkyoung Longest YouTube
Seonkyoung Longest Website
Helpful Post for Studying/Learning Languages: (not mine)
How to Develop Discipline in Studying
Language Learning Tips and Resources
Study Printables
How to Immerse Yourself in A Foreign Language
How to Stay Motivated Learning a Language
Mistakes to Avoid Making/Advice 
Your Decision to Learn a Language? 
It’s Impossible to “Teach” a Language (I love this post)
How to Incorporate Language Learning into Daily Life
How to Learn a Language Naturally: Back to Basics
7 Tips for Self Studying a Language
Language Tips
Tips for Being a Morning Person
What Fluency Is
Job Application Tips
How to Stay Motivated: Reaching a Goal
*The non-linked posts are posts I still have to make
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fromirelandtokorea · 10 months
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Wellllll...
So nobody will probably see this or read this since I’ve been gone so long, but I’m back.
Many things have happened and changed since I last logged in. I studied music for a year, got into my dream college course...dropped out of said course and mourned that (a lot). A whole pandemic happened, I found myself in a new college, and I am now entering the final year of my degree in English and History (unexpected choice I know).
Besides that, I lost a lot of my knowledge regarding Korean and felt defeated as I hadn’t made any decent headway into fluency, so I gave up for a while. But I’m hoping to return, and instead of trying to teach, learn alongside anyone who is willing to read this and talk about my learning journey(s) in languages, history, culture and more!
I’ve been gone from this corner of the internet for so long I kinda forget how it works, so if nobody sees this, that’s okay, but if anyone does see it, hello again!
-Caitlín
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Yeah, so the tier-ranking of language skills (for me) goes like this:
Reading - the easiest
Understanding speech
Writing - now you have to actually construct sentences on your own, but you still have enough buffer time to think it trough
Speech
Text translation - okay, you don’t have to do it on the spot, but you have to switch between thinking in two languages
Live interpretation - on the spot AND thinking in two languages 
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Korean Vocabulary 6
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결혼식: wedding ceremony
미술관: art museum, art gallery
대학: college, university (abbr.)
깜짝: with surprise, with a start, all of a sudden
그리고: And; Also
습관: a habit
못: a nail
빼다: to pick out, exclude
김치: kimchi (a traditional Korean spicy pickled or fermented side dish)
빵집: a bakery
경주: a race, run, sprint
감사: gratitude, thanks
별로: not particularly (for negative sentences)
샤워하다: to take a shower
거의: nearly, almost
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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1. 오다: to come 2. 마시다: to drink 3. 먹다: to eat 4. 주다: to give 5. 가다: to go 6. 듣다: to hear 7. 배우다: to learn 8. 만들다: to make 9. 앉다: to sit 10. 자다: to sleep 11. 씻다: to wash 12. 쓰다: to write 13. 울다: to cry 14. 갖다: to have 15. 웃다: to laugh 16. 보다: to see 17. 일어나다: to get up 18. 걷다: to walk 19. 춤추다: to dance 20. 만나다: to meet 21. 공부하다: to study 22. 운전하다: to drive 23. 사다: to buy 24. 읽다: to read 25. 주문하다: to order 26. 입다: to wear 27. 찍다: to take (picture) 28. 쓰다: to wear (hat, eyewear) 29. 신다: to wear (shoes, socks) 30. 빌리다: to borrow, lend 31. 전화하다: to telephone 32. 말하다: to talk, speak 33. 가르치다: to teach 34. 기다리다: to wait 35. 걸다: to call, dial 36. 청소하다: to clean 37. 타다: to ride 38. 나가다: to exit 39. 들어오다: to enter 40. 물어보다: to ask 41. 필요하다: to need 42. 도와주다: to help 43. 열다: to open 44. 닫다: to close 45. 일하다: to work 46. 쉬다: to rest 47. 운동하다: to exercise 48. 생각하다: to think 49. 알다: to know 50. 모르다: to not know 51. 요리하다: to cook 52. 끓이다: to boil 53. 썰다: to chop, slice 54. 튀기다: to deep fry 55. 재다: to measure, weigh 56. 섞다: to mix, blend 57. 굽다: to roast, grill, bake 58. 볶다: to fry 59. 급다: to grill 60. 휘젓다: to stir 61. 하다: to do 62. 있다: to have 63. 없다: to not have 64. 이야기하다: to talk, chat 65. 연습하다: to practice 66. 묻다: to ask 67. 내다: to pay 68. 살다: to live 69. 죽다: to die 70. 태어나다: to be born 71. 사랑하다: to love 72. 좋아하다: to like 73. 싫어하다: to hate, dislike 74. 결혼하다: to marry 75. 축하하다: to congratulate 76. 걱정하다: to worry 77. 약속하다: to promise 78. 거짓말하다: to lie 79. 고백하다: to confess 80. 찾다: to find, to look for 81. 준비하다; to prepare 82. 가지다: to have 83. 기억하다: to remember 84. 꿈꾸다: to dream 85. 시작하다: to start 86. 끝나다: to finish 87. 보내다: to send 88. 사용하다: to use 89. 팔다: to sell 90. 싸우다: to fight 91. 대답하다: to answer 92. 소개하다: to introduce 93. 출발하다: to depart 94. 도착하다: to arrive 95. 벗다: to undress, take off clothes 96. 이기다: to win, defeat 97. 지다: to lose, be defeated 98. 서두르다: to hurry, rush 99. 사랑에 빠지다: to fall in love 100.죄송하다: to be sorry.
(Instead of the 30 Korean verbs/adjectives I said to post, I prefer this “100 most useful korean verbs” by SydneytoSeoul)
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Relax
• Release the tension in your shoulders and jaw. • Do some neck stretches. • Take a few deep breaths. • Breathe and stretch if you are wearing a binder. • Take a break from the screen every so often. • Move around if you need to.
Happy scrolling!
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Korean Grammar: "rather than~" (~느니 and ~ㄹ 바에야)
Both of these expressions are pretty much interchangeable and often used with 차라리 or 아예. They express the belief that one option is better compared to another option.
These examples are all from the Korean Grammar In Used Advanced book.
~느니
연습도 제대로 못 하고 대회에 참가하느니 아예 다음 기회에 도전하겠다. Rather than attending the competition without practicing, I'll try my luck at the next competition.
마음이 맞지 않는 사람과 일을 하느니 ���라리 밤을 새워도 혼자 하는 게 낫지. Rather than working together with someone you don't get along with, it's better to do it yourself even if it takes all night.
멀리서 출퇴근하느라 시간을 낭비하느니 집값이 비싸더라도 이 근처로 이사 오는 게 어때요? Rather than wasting time commuting from far away, how about moving to somewhere nearby even if house prices are expensive?
~ㄹ 바에야
적성에 맞지 않는 일을 하면서 마음고생을 할 바에야 차라리 몸이 함든 일을 하는 게 낫겠어요. I'd rather do a physically stressful job than struggle doing a job that doesn't fit my skill set.
뭐든지 꾸준히 해야지. 중간에 하다가 그만둘 바에야 아예 처음부터 안 하는 게 나아. Whatever the task, you must be consistent. It's better not to even start the task rather than to stop midway through it.
사랑만 해도 시간이 모자랄 판에 그렇게 매일 싸울 바에야 차라리 헤어지는 게 어때? With so little time to even love each other, don't you think it's better to break up rather than to fight like that everyday?
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Charts: Giving Commands
안녕! Hi everyone! I’m back with some more charts! These are going to show you how to give commands in Korean! I have some full-length lessons about this below, so you should check those out if you want to see some more examples and stuff!:
Level 1 / Lesson 6: -(으)세요 (Giving Commands / Asking Questions)
Level 2 / Lesson 5: Negative Commands
Here are the charts!
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I hope these help y’all out! Let me know if you have any questions as always :)
If you want to practice writing and reading Korean with others, join my Discord chat here and my Tumblr chat here!
Want to expand your Korean vocabulary and get closer to fluency? Get Drops Premium using my affiliate link!
If you would like to donate and support my studies, check out my Ko-Fi! Thank you for your generosity! See you next time! 다음에 봐요!
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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me making what is unmistakably a bad choice: lol 
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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Reblog or like if you’re a Spanish, Italian, Korean, Japanese, Norwegian, and/or French langblr!!! 🌻
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fromirelandtokorea · 3 years
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[Question] HSK 4 resources
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Question I got on Instagram
Could you please tell me which books do you recommend for studying HSK4?
✨💫 Answer 💫✨
I haven’t participated in any HSK before, so I am not sure if these books are enough, but I’ve studied with:
📖 HSK 4 Standard Course (上,下) 📖 HSK 词汇宝典 1-4级 [1st pic] 📖 HSK mock tests (it’s good to be familiar with the structure of the exam, so totally recommend to check all mock tests you can find online or there are even special preparation books) [2nd pic]
and…
🕸 Beijing University online course on Coursera (free, if you don’t want a certificate) 📱 APP HSK Online (I used Premium Account - price-worthy!) 🎞 Mandarin Corner (youtube; listenings!) ✨💫 My Chinese studygram 💫✨
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fromirelandtokorea · 4 years
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Me, before studying languages: *sees foreign language* What is this jibberish??
Me, after studying languages: *sees foreign language* haha cool, guess I'm learning this language now too
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fromirelandtokorea · 4 years
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Before I start I want to mention a few things about this post.
The easiest language will always be the one you like learning, because if you have fun, it’s not really hard. Also, if you are motivated you will learn much faster.
This post will show you how long it will take to learn a language based on their difficulty. That just means, how DIFFERENT it is to the English language. More different = “harder”. It does NOT take into account if you are interested in a language or not. The condition of these groups are that your interest in these languages are ALL THE SAME!
The numbers I will give you are “just around this” numbers.
Based on which other languages you already speak, some languages will be easier (means faster) for you.
There are many factors that can change the pace of your language learning journey. (I will also make a post about this topic soon)
So first we will take a look at the groups. Which language are the easiest and hardest for English speakers?
_________________________
Group 1 (575-600 hours): the easiest languages because they are very similar to English. This are languages like Italian, Spanish, French, etc.
Group 2 (750 hours): still similar to English. In this group is just one language. German. (I guess because our articles are a pain in the ass. Seriously, I have friends that came here 10 years ago, don’t even have an accent anymore but still switch up some articles.)
Group 3 (900 hours): different to English. In this group are languages like Indonesian or Swahili. 
Group 4 (1100 hours):  significant differences to English. In this group are languages like Bulgarian, Croatian, Finnish, Hungarian, Polish, Russian and many more.
Group 5 (2200 hours): very different to English. In this group are languages like Chinese, Japanese and Korean.
I made a post about many more languages, so if your target languages is not mentioned here, you can look it up on my other post here.
_________________________
And why did I tell you about these groups? Because the thing we care about are the hours it takes to learn a language from one of these groups! 
But that’s not all, we also care about the amount of words you have to learn to be fluent in a language. I also made a post about this, so if you want to know more about how many words you need to be conversational, fluent, etc. or if you are A1, A2, B1, etc. then you can check it out here.
So based on this post we want a vocabulary of 5.000 words. You also have to keep in mind to study listening, speaking, reading and writing to cover everything up. If you just learn a language from a textbook you probably won’t understand native speakers at all and you will also won’t find words when it comes to speaking it. The following numbers are for people who want to be fluent. Like REAL fluent like a (low educated) native speaker.
_________________________
How long will it take to learn a language from…
Group 1 (600 hours):
studying 1 hour per day: one year and 235 days.
studying 2 hours per day: 300 days.
studying 3 hours per day: 200 days.
studying 4 hours per day: 150 days.
studying 5 hours per day: 120 days.
Group 2 (750 hours):
studying 1 hour per day: 2 years and 20 days.
studying 2 hours per day: 1 year and 10 days.
studying 3 hours per day: 250 days.
studying 4 hours per day: 188 days.
studying 5 hours per day: 150 days.
Group 3 (900 hours):
studying 1 hour per day: 2 years and 170 days.
studying 2 hours per day: 1 year and 85 days.
studying 3 hours per day: 300 days.
studying 4 hours per day: 225 days.
studying 5 hours per day: 180 days.
Group 4 (1100 hours):
studying 1 hour per day: 3 years and 5 days.
studying 2 hours per day: 1 year and 185 days.
studying 3 hours per day: 1 year and 2 days.
studying 4 hours per day: 275 days.
studying 5 hours per day: 220 days.
Group 5 (2200 hours):
studying 1 hour per day: 6 years and 10 days.
studying 2 hours per day: 3 years and 5 days.
studying 3 hours per day: 2 years and 4 days.
studying 4 hours per day: 1 year and 185 days.
studying 5 hours per day: 1 year and 75 days.
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fromirelandtokorea · 4 years
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Greek workers, after months without pay, apply austerity cuts on their bosses car
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fromirelandtokorea · 4 years
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fromirelandtokorea · 4 years
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