Me sinto mais seguro.
A very special anti-theft device....
Diva
Piuiii
Que bela paisagem.
between seasons (by doraartem)
Impressionante.
Sigu Ling Yun
Minha infância.
He-Man by Stjepan Sejic
É verdade.
Tão lindos.
ふたりはなかよし。
2021年3月撮影。
They are good friends.
Taken in March 2021.
Boa. Essa realmente foi inteligente.
Linux and open-source rules: 2019’s five biggest stories show why https://ift.tt/36bFnYr
Mais idéias.
Hello polyglots! I apologize for the lateness of this post! As you know I posted about how to create a study schedule if you are studying a language(s) intensively. Now I’m going to talk about how to study one language or multiple languages casually.
First, I need to define what casual studying even means. Studying casually means that you are foregoing certain aspects of language study in order to maintain a slow and low commitment pace. For example, say you’re learning French casually. Instead of psycho crazy grammar schedules filled with practicing grammar and vocab over and over, and quizzing yourself every day until your brain turns to pulp, you opt for a simple audio lesson every day for 15 minutes after you come home from work or school. Easy right? Yes! That’s the goal. With casual studying your schedule is freed up for other things. In addition, casual studying gives you the leisure to take your time to learn things deeply and thoroughly. Casual studying, however, implies that you are not studying so much for full fluency but for practical, everyday usage. So casual learners care a little less about learning the specifics about complicated grammar but instead want to learn how to use it in conversation by learning dialogues and repeating phrases. So how do you create a casual study schedule? Here’s what you’ll need to get started.
Keep reading