English, asked by gurpreet5996, 11 months ago

I want to speak in french but this is very difficult language to me what I do ?

Answers

Answered by nency2004
2

Hey dear...

you can definitely learn the language...

try hard...

Answered by MITAN19
0

Answer:

You can learn to speak French fluently faster than you think. In fact, my speak from day one method is the best way to learn French if you want to speak the language (rather than just read it).

You can use this approach whether you’re a beginner or you’ve been learning French for years.

Follow these steps, and you’ll be speaking French before you know it.

Let’s get started!

Step 1: Fall in Love with French

What’s the key to speaking French? Passion.

Your big why for learning French will keep you motivated through the ups and downs of learning a new language. It will be something to hold onto whenever you feel frustrated with learning French and start to wonder “What was I thinking?”

Everyone has their own big why for speaking French.

Why do you want to learn French? Find your own personal, meaningful reason to study French, and use it to keep you on track throughout your language journey.

Once you know your why, it's easier to stick with the following steps in how to learn French.

Step 2: Create a Mini-France in Your Home

It's easier to speak French when you're surrounded by French. But you don’t need to live in France to immerse yourself in the language. In fact, you can surround yourself with French wherever you live

Here’s are some of my favourite tips you can use to immerse yourself in French.

Turn your smartphone into a French speaker. Switch the language settings on your phone to French. You can do the same with your computer.

Look for French speakers in your city. Most cities around the world, big or small, will have a community of French speakers. Chances are, there’s one near you.

Watch French TV and movies. Switch on the subtitles to speed up your learning.

Listen to French radio and podcasts (my favourite is FrenchPod101). You can learn a lot of French by listening to French songs.

Want to learn more about the immersion from home approach? Then check out how I learned Japanese while living in Spain and Egyptian Arabic while living in Brazil.

Step 3: Write Your Own French Phrasebook

You’ll learn French much faster if you focus on words and phrases that are relevant to your life. Plus, when you have real conversations in French (I’ll come to that in a moment), you’ll be able to talk about yourself.

I suggest starting your personal phrasebook with:

“Je viens de [your home country]” (I’m from [your home country])

“Dans mon temps libre, j’aime [your favourite activities]” (In my spare time, I like [your favourite activities])

Any other interesting information about yourself (Have you learned any other languages? Travelled to unusual places?)

Step 3: Accept that You’re Going to Sound Funny at First When You Speak French

If you’ve never spoken out loud in a foreign language, it can feel awkward.

Step 4: Fast-Track Your French with Language Hacks

Language hacks are shortcuts that help you learn a language faster. They're ideal if you want to learn to speak French.

Step 5: Have Real Conversations with Native French Speakers

The most effective way to learn a language is to speak from day one. This is especially true if you have conversations with native French speakers.

Step 6: Use Conversational Connectors for More Natural Conversations

Conversations involve a lot more than simply exchanging bare facts. They would be awfully dull if they did. In a world like that, a conversation with a work colleague might go something like this:

You: “How was your weekend?”

Them: “It was fine.”

You: “Mine wasn’t.”

Them: “Oh.”

Boring, right?

The same conversation, spoken more naturally, might sound more like this:

You: “So, how was your weekend?”

Them: “It wasn’t bad, thanks for asking. How about yours?”

You: “Actually, it wasn’t that great, to be honest.”

Them: “Oh, I’m sorry to hear that. What happened?”

See how much better the conversation flows?

If you learn these and other conversational connectors in French, your conversations will reach new heights. You’ll be able to hold the other person’s interest and make your sentences sound less “raw”. You’ll find you’re chatting longer with French speakers.

Step 7: Focus on the Easy Aspects of French

French really isn’t easier or harder to learn than any other language, but you can quickly forget this if you only focus on the difficult aspects of French.

Whenever you get discouraged, think about all of the ways that French is actually an easy language to learn:

Remember these facts when you’re learning how to speak French, and the tougher aspects of the language suddenly won’t seem so bad!

Explanation:

You Can Do It!

Everyone who has ever learned to speak French (even native speakers, who learned when they were kids) was once a beginner in the language. They all managed to learn to speak French fluently, and so can you.

You just need to use your French as much as you can. Spend as much time immersed in French as you can. And, most importantly, believe in yourself.

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