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How do you study?

od Kuniklo_Blua, 22 listopada 2014

Wpisy: 7

Język: English

Kuniklo_Blua (Pokaż profil) 22 listopada 2014, 14:53:15

I'm sorry but I don't know the perfect way to ask this but, how do you make time to study?
I enjoy learning E.O but I can rarely make time to study it.
What are some good ways to learn it with a busy schedule?

Leke (Pokaż profil) 22 listopada 2014, 15:08:35

I personally like the nag approach -- getting a few things sent to my inbox each day. I've subscribed to Transparent language's Word of the Day which also provides an example sentence. Lernu also have something similar. I also do a Memrise course to keep up with the vocab -- they send reminders all the time.

If I was into twitter, I would follow a few speakers there. When the DuoLingo course is ready, you bet I'll be doing that everyday too.

Alkanadi (Pokaż profil) 23 listopada 2014, 07:42:31

My startup page is Transparent language's Word of the Day. Every time, I start my browser, I see it.

I also, use Memrise on my phone.

From time to time, I read the Lernu forums.

I send messages to a friend in Esperanto.

jdawdy (Pokaż profil) 23 listopada 2014, 11:52:37

Memrise.com, either on the computer or on my phone/tablet.

I have numerous textbooks on my Kindle, mainly that I have uploaded to it as PDFs.

Various audio courses loaded into my phone to listen to when driving/traveling. But really, anytime you have a few free minutes in your day, you can run through Memrise.com words for 5-10 minutes, or read some textbook lessons, etc.

Hound_of_God (Pokaż profil) 23 listopada 2014, 19:56:49

I enjoy using the Esperanto Wikipedia (Vikipedio). You can satisfy curiosity and practice all at the same time, and their articles concerning Esperanto itself tend to be more detailed than the English counterparts.

DrAsko (Pokaż profil) 29 listopada 2014, 12:00:31

I am using Kurso de Esperanto 4 computer program. It is awailable for Windows, Mac & Linux

marbuljon (Pokaż profil) 5 grudnia 2014, 05:18:47

Hound_of_God:I enjoy using the Esperanto Wikipedia (Vikipedio). You can satisfy curiosity and practice all at the same time, and their articles concerning Esperanto itself tend to be more detailed than the English counterparts.
Be careful with this, in a lot of articles I have seen REALLY wrong Esperanto (maybe I also just have bad luck). Like completely wrong word-choice for example. Also I tend to find articles with tons of unnecessary loanwords in them...

Personally I also think it's good to get some kind of Emails reminding you to look at Esperanto. But I also have Esperanto ebooks on my 3DS so I can read them wherever I want. And I'm starting a bunch of projects for myself, like translating things I think are really interesting, so my own interest pushes me to study more.

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