ديالوج وحوار باللغة الإنجليزية يتحدث عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها بالصوت والصورة


تعلم مع هذا الديالوج كيفية التحدث باللغة الإنجليزية عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها , تعلم مصطلحات الإنجليزية مع الصوت لتتحدث عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها , تعلم كيفية مناقشة مواضيع ومقالات بالإنجليزية, فيديو تعليم كيفية نطق كلمات الإنجليزية تستعمل عن مناقشة موضوع إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها, أهم الكلمات والمفردات التي تستعمل في ديالوج بالإنجليزية عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها , الكلمات والعبارات الشائعة في اللغة الإنجليزية التي تتعلق ب إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها , أشخاص من يوتوب يتحدثون عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها باللغة الإنجليزية في حوار سهل, تعلم كيفية التحدث ببطء في حوار مسموع باللغة الإنجليزية عن إتقان اللغة مثل أهلها . تعلم اللغة الإنجليزية في وقت قصير وبسرعة, منهجية إتقان الإنجليزية بسرعة. أهم مصطلحات وكلمات شائعة في الإنجليزية بالصوت.


Can we learn to sound like a native speaker in the language we are learning, in other words to be taken for a native by a native speaker? The answer in my view is unlikely, extremely unlikely. Is it a worthwhile goal? Only in the sense of something we strive for but know we will not achieve. Language learning is about discovering a new language and culture, and communicating with people. It is not a performance sport.

Besides, among my friends who study Korean for example, ones who surprise me when I talk to them, it's not only for their pronunciation but more for words or expressions that they use. In that sense, as long as someone's pronunciation is not disturbing, it's worth making efforts but it's not the priority.

jurilee89 21 hours ago

That has been my experience. I am far more impressed with someone who uses words and phrases well, than with someone who is trying hard to imitate native pronunciation. I think we end up with an accent that corresponds to our personality, to who we are.

lingosteve in reply to jurilee89 21 hours ago

Interesting and informative video! I personally would like to sound like a native in Russian, but I accept that it will probably never happen. I am posting a video about this later today.

On a completely separate note, I'm really sad that the Canucks lost last night. However, as possibly the most displaced Canucks fan in North America (I live in Florida), it was nice to see a Canucks OT game before midnight! :)

themafia306 1 day ago

The Canucks did not deserve more. I am also a fan!

lingosteve in reply to themafia306 1 day ago

Top Comments

This is really a very interesting topic to me. I think it's possible to get a native-like accent, BUT only a few will achieve it. My native language is Spanish (Argentina), and the only people I can take for a native speaker of Spanish are Luca (poliglotta80) and this American drummer called Randy Ebright. I find Randy's Spanish native-like, you can't tell he's American, and what makes me think a lot is the fact he's not into language learning, he's a drummer. Maybe being a musician helps.

br1flores 2 days ago 3

You get better at listening by listening and better at reading by reading. So you just have to keep going. I've been there, it just takes time. There's no other philosophy to it.

pesahson in reply to Montana Naoufal (Show the comment) 2 days ago 2
Hi Steve. Perhaps as a follow up to this video, you could discuss your view of "mastery". Perhaps you could discuss individuals that achieved tremendous success in a foreign language, while continuing to sound "foreign". Examples that come to mind are Ayn Rand, Joseph Conrad, Bruce Lee, Arnold Scharzenegger, and the comic book creators that made "Blade of the Phantom Master". The last of that list are Koreans that learned Japanese and moved to Japan publish comic books.

JuliusJacobson1 5 hours ago

the accent like a native is good, but, again, what kind of native?

in one language they are hundreds of accent.

like in china, many of their accents also couldn't understand to the others. unless they also have to try to imitated the official one,"mandarin" even some of them have horrible and also hard to understand them though they are the native of their own accent.

beensolongg 11 hours ago

Actress Femke Jenssen who plays Jean Grey on the X-men saga, can count as foreigner who speaks english in a native-like fashion...

Luiseut59 in reply to lingosteve (Show the comment) 13 hours ago

I think you should interview Khatzumoto from AJATT. Based on his articles, he seems like he has very interesting point of views.

jomboeric386 14 hours ago

Asi es.

Iceland1944 in reply to pon00050 (Show the comment) 15 hours ago

I second you.

DrWarbri in reply to PathogenProductions (Show the comment) 15 hours ago

What I meant is someone who could be mistaken for a native speaker.

lingosteve in reply to pon00050 (Show the comment) 16 hours ago

For foreigners who speak English as non-native language, what is your standard that is used to say that they speak "perfect" English?

pon00050 in reply to lingosteve (Show the comment) 16 hours ago

o sea accento gringo como se dice en espanol :)

pon00050 in reply to Iceland1944 (Show the comment) 16 hours ago

Don't try be perfect in the language. Just try to suck less everyday.

jugglingotaku 17 hours ago
Well, I have a question but it doesn't have much to do with this video. I was wondering... for an English native speaker like you, which of these two languages is more difficult to learn, Portuguese or Chinese?

WillianBorderes 18 hours ago

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WillianBorderes 18 hours ago

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Author withheld

Worst accent = Americans speaking foreign languages.

Iceland1944 19 hours ago

That has been my experience. I am far more impressed with someone who uses words and phrases well, than with someone who is trying hard to imitate native pronunciation. I think we end up with an accent that corresponds to our personality, to who we are.

lingosteve in reply to jurilee89 (Show the comment) 21 hours ago

Besides, among my friends who study Korean for example, ones who surprise me when I talk to them, it's not only for their pronunciation but more for words or expressions that they use. In that sense, as long as someone's pronunciation is not disturbing, it's worth making efforts but it's not the priority.

jurilee89 21 hours ago

I am from South Korea and I really enjoy watching your videos!! I totally agree with you. Before, I was obsessed about the pronunciation when it comes to language learning. It definitely helped me pay more attention to sounds and eventually helped my pronunciation but I became to speak fast and sometimes I don't articulate properly and eat sounds.

jurilee89 21 hours ago

The Canucks did not deserve more. I am also a fan!

lingosteve in reply to themafia306 (Show the comment) 1 day ago

very few

lingosteve in reply to paris0000up (Show the comment) 1 day ago

Near native is the goal. Just like native is not achievable for most people.

lingosteve in reply to LearningFrenchNow (Show the comment) 1 day ago
Something interesting that occurred to me is that, I'm a native speaker of Mandarin, my mom isn't, and I can't tell if she's a native. My mom's Chinese, she grew up abroad speaking Southern Min and the local language. And It's not because she speaks Mandarin like a native, because people told me that she had an accent, which I wasn't aware of, since I grew up listening to her. Well, I guess my point is, when you grew up listening to someone, you just don't know how to tell if he/she is a native.

polyglot2BE 1 day ago

"GetRealLanguage", who has a Youtube channel, and is not a native English speaker, is quite close to obtaining a native accent in English. I have to listen very closely to notice he's not American. What separates his ability to nearly approximate a native, but others cannot?

LearningFrenchNow 1 day ago

Steve, I'm not sure that striving for a native accent is necessarily vanity-motivated. The listener, not the speaker, is affected most by hearing the accent. A heavy accent can place strain on the listener. Consider the analogy of a guest over for dinner. You offer them a spam sandwich (heavy accent), or a filet mignon (near-native accent). One offers the listener more by striving for something closer to a near-native accent. Not everyone can cook perfectly, but they make the effort.

LearningFrenchNow 1 day ago

Siempre me han encantado tus videos porque los explicas inteligentemente y pra mi el tema de sonar como un nativo es fascinante en muchas maneras y yo disfruto mucho tratando de perfeccionar mi pronunciación en Inglés =)

paris0000up 1 day ago

Have you ever met a foreigner who speaks perfect English?

paris0000up 1 day ago

I'll write professor Arguelles an email about doing an interview, Saturday evening's (Sunday mornings his time) are usually best.

9244Matt 1 day ago

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MrScotchpie 1 day ago

Interesting and informative video! I personally would like to sound like a native in Russian, but I accept that it will probably never happen. I am posting a video about this later today.

On a completely separate note, I'm really sad that the Canucks lost last night. However, as possibly the most displaced Canucks fan in North America (I live in Florida), it was nice to see a Canucks OT game before midnight! :)

themafia306 1 day ago

Steve,can you make a video about the English accents? because I met a few people from England who think that there is only one "true" English - British.What's your opinion?

MrGGska 1 day ago

I cannot comment on his system, just his Spanish.

lingosteve in reply to lorca512 (Show the comment) 1 day ago
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