![]() ![]() Regular practice, but no strict schedule. Daily practice, again going for long streaks of daily practice. Complete Memrise Korean 1 and 2, make headway into Korean 3. Aiming for 20 pts/day, and the longest streak possible. Complete Lingodeer Korean level 1, and make headway into level 2 with daily practice and review. I have a certain amount of basic core Spanish vocab & grammar that has stuck with me since minoring in it in college. In addition, I'd like to strengthen my Spanish skills. So I hope to recover all the Korean knowledge I once had, and add to it. However, at this point I had to start a job hunt that lasted 3 months, things were out of rhythm for a while, and language practice was one thing that did not get restored.įast Forwarding to today, I finished my master's degree this month and I'd like to go into the new year practicing better mental discipline. By this point, early-mid 2018, I probably had the Korean skills of a two-year-old. I also made it to 50% of Lingodeer Korean 1. I finished the Memrise Korean Levels 1 and 2, and started on level 3, though by that point I often wasn't remembering as much as guessing or ruling out wrong answers. ![]() I have also benefitted from early TTMIK grammar lesson podcasts (at least the first 22), though it's more helpful with speaking than reading or writing. ![]() Memrise was good for learning hangeul and basic casual vocab, while Lingodeer is good at grammar. About 4 years ago, I began studying Korean using Memrise initially, then later also using Lingodeer (I got a lifetime membership when it was possible with only a $10 donation). ![]()
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