![]() It's been the best for me so far, but I'm just baffled how it is missing some of the most basic features. We are lucky to have so many resources out there to learn from. TTMIK has good explanations and good audio, but doesn't really have a way to practice. ![]() Duolingo gives me a good way to practice and drill things. There are explanations on the website, not in the app (you didn't mention this, but it comes up every time someone mentions Duolingo). I'll never say "The cat drives the car" but I can sub in other words into the same grammar pattern. Yeah.some of those are confusing because I'm not sure if I translated it right or not. Drops has a neat way of phasing out the romanization as you learn words (or you can turn it off entirely). TTMIK still shows romanization even for words it introduced ages ago (I'm partway through level 3). I actually like Duolingo, but it's not for everyone.ĭuolingo has no romanization once you're past the Hangul. HOWEVER Duolingo is good for if you want to review what you have learned from other lessons. I didn't notice it at the time, but now I look back at the website and notice it. As a beginner who didn't know ANYTHING about Korean, the audios all sounded the same to me. It uses phrases that are NOT used in everyday sentences, such as "the bus climbed up the chair" as a way to catch the readers attention but in reality it just holds you back because you don't learn ways to use it in real life. This can affect the way you speak in the future. This is bad because once the reader actually learns 한글, they still depend too much on the romanization. ![]() It relies WAY too much on romanization to teach 한글 (Hangul) from the beginning. I would much rather you learn from Korean Unnie or TTMIK on YouTube. Take it from someone whose been studying for over half a year now that while Duolingo may be great for reviewing it, not as a beginning source. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |