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Möchte Sie Deutsch lernen?
As of now, I only have German - Level 1, because, I, myself, am a beginner. Next year, as I'm learning second year German, I'll put up a German - Level 2. Also, you should probably try to learn, by heart, everything on the current level, before you attempt the next level, anyway. Here are some good ways to study:
∙ Flash Cards - write down a word, or phrase, in English, on one side of an index card, and on the other side, write it, in German. Make a stack and every day read from it, and read aloud, to get it stuck in your head. Have someone work with you.
∙ Record yourself on the computer, saying a phrase, or whatever, that you have a hard time learning or remembering, and play it in your free time, or when you're asleep. It's said that if you have something going, while you sleep, you learn it better.
∙ Write out what you're learning many times over.
∙ Take about a full hour each day to practice. Granted, my German class, in High School, spends about half an hour chatting with the teacher, and half an hour learning German... but we're still doing good... well, the 1/3 of us that actually participate... which is, actually, freshmen... but, anyway, if you spend an hour everyday practicing German, you'll do excellent... unless, maybe, you've got Alzheimer's... okay.
Did you know that if you learn a foreign language, fluently, after 13, primarily, you've got a better chance to fight Alzheimer's disease?
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