Vocab Techniques
Vocab Techniques
Vocab Techniques
Vocabulary Learning Tip One: Read, Read, Read! Most vocabulary words are lea
rned from context. The more words you're exposed to, the better vocabulary you w
ill have. While you read, pay close attention to words you don't know. First, tr
y to figure out their meanings from context. Then look the words up. Read and li
sten to challenging material so that you'll be exposed to many new words.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Two: Improve your context skills. Research shows tha
t the vast majority of words are learned from context. To improve your context s
kills pay close attention to how words are used. Doing a search on a word using
dejanews.com (for searching newsgroups) will give you many examples of how that
word is used in context. Play our Daily Context Vocabulary Quiz.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Three: Practice, practice, practice. Learning a word
won't help very much if you promptly forget it. Research shows that it takes fr
om 10 to 20 repetitions to really make a word part of your vocabulary. It helps
to write the word - both the definition and a sentence you make up using the wor
d - perhaps on an index card that can later be reviewed. As soon as you learn a
new word, start using it. Review your index cards periodically to see if you hav
e forgotten any of your new words. Also, do a search on a word using dejanews.co
m (for searching newsgroups) to get many examples of how the word is actually us
ed.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Four: Make up as many associations and connections a
s possible. Say the word aloud to activate your auditory memory. Relate the word
to words you already know. For example, the word GARGANTUAN (very large) has a
similar meaning to the words gigantic, huge, large, etc. You could make a sequen
ce: small, medium, large, very large, GARGANTUAN. List as many things as you can
that could be considered GARGANTUAN: Godzilla, the circus fat lady, the zit on
your nose, etc. Create pictures of the word's meaning that involve strong emotio
ns. Think "the GARGANTUAN creature was going to rip me apart and then eat me!"
Vocabulary Learning Tip Five: Use mnemonics ( memory tricks). For example, c
onsider the word EGREGIOUS (extremely bad). Think EGG REACH US - imagine we've m
ade a mistake so bad that they are throwing eggs at us and a rotten EGG REACHes
US. Such funny little word pictures will help you remember what words mean, AND
they are fun to make up. Also, find out which learning style suits you best. Eve
ryone learns differently!
Vocabulary Learning Tip Six: Get in the habit of looking up words you don't
know. If you have a dictionary program on your computer, keep it open and handy.
America Online and other internet services have dictionaries and thesauruses on
their tool bars. Find them and look up any word you are not absolutely sure of.
Use a thesaurus when you write to find the word that fits best.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Seven: Play with words. Play Scrabble, Boggle, and d
o crossword puzzles. These and other word games are available for the computer,
so you are not dependent on a partner to play. Also, try out the Franklin Electr
onic Dictionary that features built-in word games.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Eight: Use vocabulary lists. For the serious vocabul
ary student, there are many books that focus on the words most commonly found in
standardized tests, such as the SAT and GRE. There are also many interesting wo
rd sites on the Internet, many of which will send you a word a day by email.
Vocabulary Learning Tip Nine: Take vocabulary tests. Playing games, such as
the ones on this site, that test your knowledge will help you learn new words an
d also let you know how much progress you're making. Offline sources for vocabul
ary tests include SAT prep books (we recommend "10 Real SATs" by ETS), and the R
eader's Digest Wordpower section. For more, check out Amazon.com or your local b
ookseller.
Go Play Our Vocabulary Games
Vocabulary Learning Tip Ten: Get excited about words! Come to appreciate the
sometimes-subtle differences between them. Do you know the difference between s
omething that denotes something else and something that connotes something else?
If not, go look it up. Learn to say what you really mean and discover the joys
of being able to express yourself in writing. Your future can depend on how rich
your vocabulary is. A good vocabulary will make a difference on the standardize
d tests, like the SAT and GRE, that could determine whether or where you go to c
ollege. It will also determine the quality of your communication. So be in it fo
r the long pull. Let building your vocabulary be a lifelong proposition. Remembe
r: "In the beginning was the word." Until you have a word for something, it does
not exist for you. Name it, and you have made your reality richer.
travel together.
For example, instead of memorizing the word flock , memorize the phrase a flock of s
heep . Instead of remembering the verb occur , remember the phrase if any problems occ
ur .
When you remember phrases instead of single words, you ensure that you know how
to actually use the word in at least one sentence.
Albert WolfeAlbert-Wolfe
Albert Wolfe is the author of various books. Among them: Chinese 24/7: Everyday
Strategies for Speaking and Understanding Mandarin. He also teaches English at t
he Peizheng College in Guangzhou, China and runs the blog Laowai Chinese.
It s true that vocabulary is the concept that gets the most attention by language
learners.
My theory is that it s the concept / element we most easily relate to because it s t
he one thing we can remember doing (and indeed are still doing) for our first la
nguage.
But very few people remember much about learning the pronunciation or grammar of
their first language, for example.
So if I had to give one vocabulary learning tip, it would be:
There s just no way around memorizing a bunch of words. So put the words where you l
l see them as often as possible: on a wall, in a notebook you carry around, on y
our computer desktop, etc. That way you can get in more review reps and memorize t
hem more easily.
Andr KleinAndre-Klein
Andre Klein, born in Germany, is the writer behind the great Learn Out Live blog
and several books on how to learn German like: Learning German Through Storytel
ling.
There are many methods for learning vocabulary, and every learner should experim
ent with a variety of approaches to see what comes most naturally. The most impo
rtant part is not fall into a grind, but to find a method one is comfortable wit
h.
For some people, using flashcards will work best, while for others writing down
new words or using a vocabulary trainer app will do the trick.
My personal favorite however is learning languages through creative storytelling
.
By reading engaging stories (aimed at the student s level) language learners can b
egin to build emotional and sensory contexts around new vocabulary.
Instead of just studying isolated words by rote, new vocabulary can be memorized
quicker and deeper because it is linked to characters, places and relationships
, just like in real life.
To find out more about this approach, take a look at my article Your Brain On St
orytelling: Foreign Language Learning Through Stories.
Anne Merrittanne-merritt
Anne Merritt is an EFL lecturer who s currently based in South Korea. She writes a
bout language learning for the Telegraph and her writing has been featured on CN
N.
If there s one tip I have for learning vocabulary, it s to study it in context. We d
on t communicate using individual words, we communicate with phrases and sentences
.
Language students, especially independent learners, will often flick through voc
abulary flashcards or flashcard apps to learn new words.
These cards are a great tool, but they re not enough on their own. A student could
learn hundreds of new vocabulary items, but none of that matters if they don t kn
ow how to apply those words in different contexts.
When you learn a new word, look at its place in the sentence, and look at the wo
rds that typically appear with it. Look for patterns.
Is the context usually formal or casual?
Written or spoken?
Is the word typically used for one topic only?
If it s a word you don t know, look at context clues to try and deduce meaning.
Building your context deduction skills is an invaluable asset in a language lear
ner. Once you ve learned the word, try and use it in a few sentences.
When I was a child learning French, my teachers were strict about never giving o
ne-word answers. It was an exercise in politeness as well as sentence-building.
It was never No , but instead No, I don t like bananas
t.
Back then, it felt rigid and unnecessarily mechanical. Now, I can understand and
appreciate what those teachers were doing. Now, when I speak French, I don t have
to think twice about applying vocabulary, because using it in context is now se
cond nature.
Anthony MetivierAnthony-Metivier
Anthony Metivier is the author of several books about memorizing vocabulary by u
sing his Magnetic Memory Method. He s also the man behind the How to Learn and Mem
orize the Vocabulary of Any Language video course. He holds a BA and MA in Engli
sh Literature, an MA in Media & Communications and a PhD in Humanities.
Imagine the following two scenarios, if you will.
John is using index cards to learn foreign language vocabulary. He sits at his d
ining room table with a dictionary and fills out word after word on card after c
ard.
He carries these cards around with him and occasionally gets around to looking a
t them on the bus as he goes about his life.
Sometimes John uses spaced-repetition software. These feed him the same words ag
ain and again until he guesses them correctly. Sometimes John gets them right beca
use he s learned them, but this is rare.
When John fails, the spaced-repetition software puts the words he hasn t memorized
into a loop and hammers them at him again and again until he either gets them o
r gives up.
It s all rather tedious.
Now let s visit Tracy.
She s a bonnie lass with many of the same experiences as John. She s filled out inde
x cards and spent hours using them when studying her dream foreign language.
She actually likes spaced-repetition programs because they give her greater expo
sure to her dream language and when she takes the time to program the software,
she can study entire phrases.
The difference between Tracy and John is that Tracy also uses her mind in a comp
letely different way, a way that increased her fluency a hundred fold.
Instead of sitting at the kitchen table with a dictionary and index cards all th
e time, Tracy often curls up with her dictionary on the couch. She uses a comple
tely different memorization strategy, a Memory Palace technique based on Ars Mem
orativa or mnemonics.
It allows her to absorb words into her mind by drawing upon her past experiences
, places she s familiar with and by exercising her expansive creativity.
This practice also makes her more creative as a result, not to mention far more
fluent than John will likely ever be.
If there is one recommendation for language learners that I have, it s to learn a
dedicated memorization strategy that uses some form of mnemonics and steers clea
r of rote learning as a stand-alone method.
I recommend Memory Palaces for reasons I detail at length in my books and my vid
eo course.
Ben WhatelyBen-Whately
Ben Whately is the community manager and chief-assistant-to-all-content-creators
of Memrise.
The key when learning a new piece of vocab is to engage with it. To think about
it.
Once you have actually thought about a word, given your mind a way to engage wit
h it and to put it into some sort of context
even an imaginary one
your brain ha
s got something to grip onto and can remember it.
The trouble with learning new words in a foreign language is that you don t have a
ny context to link it to. So you need to find a way to make some context. Findin
g English words that sound a bit like the foreign word can be a huge help
the si
llier, the more ridiculous the better. That is a mnemonic.
As you become more advanced in the language, your store of context within that l
anguage will grow, and you won t need to use such elaborate mnemonics. You may fin
d that sample sentences in the foreign language become more useful to you.
Mnemonics and sample sentences are both examples of mems . Mems are anything that h
elps you to put a new word into a context, and make it more than an abstract pie
ce of vocabulary.
Using Mems is my best recommendation to learning lots of vocab, fast!
Benny LewisBenny Lewis
Benny Lewis runs the biggest language-learning blog on the web: Fluent in 3 Mont
hs. He s also the guy behind the Speak from Day 1 package. He speaks 11 languages
including American Sign language.
Ask a native speaker what the word is, keep talking to them for practice, an opp
ortunity to use the word will come up and you ll have forgotten it, and then when
you get reminded of it, the embarrassment will burn the word into your memory!
While it s true that flashcard studying in the app Anki, very useful mnemonics giv
en on Memrise.com, and lots of reading in more advanced stages can be effective
and how I acquire most of my vocabulary, the first example is the one method tha
t has burned the word into my mind for good every time.
Get out and practice with people!
Camille Chevalier-KarfisCamille-Chevalier-Karfis
Camille (together with her husband Olivier) runs the website French Today where
she blogs and offers a series of products and services to help you learn French.
She has been teaching French for 19 years.
I am a big fan of
smart
flashcards.
On one side, write the English word, just as a backup, and to test yourself. On
the other side, write the word, then the word in a short sentence.
Make the sentence close to home - use real people / facts in your life, it will he
lp your brain remember it better.
Then write everything there is about that word, in singular and plural with arti
r learning and practicing vocabulary because I can do it at any time of the day
and all I need is something to write down new words to look up later.
Donovan Lee McgrathDonovan-Lee-McGrath
A lecturer, writer and researcher, Donovan Lee Mcgrath has taught Swahili since
1993. He s co-author of Colloquial Swahili: The Complete Course for Beginners and
was also included in the Black 100+ Portrait Exhibition of Britain s Most Influent
ial Black People.
I would have to say make the target language relevant (e.g. tag familiar things
around your home using the target language, which should also include such thing
s as shopping lists, etc.).
This should help to raise the language above the level of merely a code (another
way of saying something) to something that has relevance to the way you live.
Of course, you can t beat the old faithful index card system (selected words of th
e first language on one side with the equivalent in the target language on the o
ther ticking them off as you get them right), but you asked me for one example!
Flora Petersenflora-petersen
Flora Petersen is the Communications Manager of Babbel.com where you can learn a
host of languages online. Babbel has 17 million users.
For vocabulary learning there is not one single method. Indeed, there are as man
y ways as there are personalities in this world.
Embed your new language into your life and into your daily routine, not the othe
r way around! Vocabulary varies with the situations in which you find yourself.
This is why Babbel dedicates a special part of its courses to a vocabulary train
er section called words and sentences . You will find 3000 words with example sente
nces for practical application plus a further 1000 useful sentences for specific
everyday situations.
All you need to do is to find a pattern with which you can repeat your newly acq
uired words regularly.
Vary the situations and ways in which you review your vocabulary, write the word
s, listen to them, spell them, sing them, be creative and play with them! And ta
ke them out with you, which is all the easier with our handy apps.
Don t lock yourself in your room, as learning in such a way will be exactly what y
ou don t want it to be: dull and isolating.
Another tip: Be aware of yourself and your goals. Don t limit your studying to pre
conceived notions or set situations given by someone else.
What do you talk about in your native language? Saying something in your new lan
guage will become much easier once you really want to say it.
Your way of learning changes with your mood. Develop a sense of what works best
for you straight away.
And don t be afraid to make mistakes or to forget a word, as this is where interac
tive flashcards and the Babbel review manager will help you.
Idahosa NessIdahosa-Ness
Idahosa Ness is the creator of the Mimic Method and Flow Training. He teaches pe
ople how to sing, rap and mimic foreign languages with a perfect accent.
In my experience as a learner and teacher, the stronger one s mastery of the sound
s and flow of the language, the easier it is to pick up new vocab and expressions
through simple listening and interaction.
You can memorize an entire dictionary of vocab on paper, but that information is
useless if you can t recognize the sounds of those words in real speech or wrap y
our mouth around their articulation when trying to express yourself.
So for me the best method is to avoid the trap of turning language-learning into
a Vocab Easter Egg Hunt and focus on maximizing real life interactions with nat
ive speakers.
James HeisigJames-Heisig
James Heisig is the author of various books on Japanese and Chinese. Among them
the classic: Remembering the Kanji 1: A Complete Course on How Not To Forget the
Meaning and Writing of Japanese Characters. He s also a philosopher in the field
of philosophy of religion.
Not being a language teacher, I can only tell you what I do: read, READ, READ.
And to be more specific: begin by reading children s books, and then pass on to th
e harder stuff.
John FotheringhamJohn Fotheringham
John Fotheringham is the man behind the blog Language Mastery. He s also the autho
r of various guides on how to master a new language.
There are many powerful techniques one can use to acquire vocabulary more effici
ently (e.g. spaced repetition, creative mnemonics, strong emotional connections,
etc.), but no matter the method, the key is to focus on learning vocabulary in
context.
Focus on topics and materials you enjoy, avoiding rote memory, non-contextual vo
cabulary lists, and flashcards with only single words. If you do use flashcards,
make sure they include complete sentences (preferably taken from authentic cont
ent you have heard or read).
Kerstin HammesKerstin-Hammes
Kerstin Hammes, a native German speaker, is a language tutor currently teaching
German, French and English both on and offline. She s also the woman behind the Fl
uent Language Blog.
My best vocabulary building method is to ask, check, find out
whenever you don t k
now a word and it keeps appearing, look it up because it s probably important.
When you re in the country, use everyone you meet as a potential tutor, try out ne
w words on them and make sure you know the local words for how do you say .
It doesn t build the most topical vocab, but it will associate most new words with
specific memories and makes them stickier.
When reading, listening or watching at home, learners should also make an effort
to look up new words.
Most of the time inferring from the context will do a decent job of teaching the
m the gist, but anyone who wants to expand their vocabulary should actively look
up more unfamiliar words, write them down and revisit them.
This doesn t require travel or even a native speaker.
Kevin ChenKevin-Chen
Kevin Chen is co-founder of italki. italki helps connect people learning foreign
languages with online teachers around the world. italki has roughly 1.5 million
users.
My favorite vocabulary building technique is storing new words that I encounter
from chatting with friends into an SRS program (like Anki).
What s hard for me is to learn new words out of context.
I used to download word lists of subjects that I aspired to learn (e.g. Business
Chinese ). However, I found that it s hard for me to keep up my motivation when it i
s pure memorization. SRS works, but only if you re motivated enough to use the SRS
program.
I still can t remember the Chinese words for liabilities . I think what s most importan
t is to learn words that you ll encounter over and over.
Some people like to get new words through reading, which is great. However, peop
le who are studying Chinese know there are non-trivial differences between writt
en Mandarin and spoken Mandarin.
At my Chinese level, reading a normal news article is still hard work
I have to
be constantly checking for abbreviations, dropped characters, proper names, and
unfamiliar sentence structures.
For my language level (intermediate Chinese), I find that chatting with friends
online or through my phone are the most interesting sources of new words. Words
that come up in conversations are generally words that I ll encounter again.
What I do then, is look up the new words in a dictionary (either Pleco on phone,
or MDGB on the web). I copy the definitions into either Anki on my laptop, or a
dd it to a flashcard on my phone. (If I m being studious, I also copy the full sen
tence where I ran into it.)
When I review the words, it s also a nice reminder of the conversations I ve had wit
h my friends.(I don t know if this will work for other people but it s the way I ve bee
n doing it.)
Lizzie FaneLizzie-Fane
Lizzie Fane studied Italian and History of Art at The University of Edinburgh an
d is the founder of ThirdYearAbroad.com, the UK s biggest network of students who
study or work abroad during their degree.
I have two recommendations if that s ok?
1. Language Immersion for Chrome. This neat little Google Chrome browser extensi
on means that you can pick your language and your immersion level, and it transl
ates individual words on the webpage you re reading.
When you mouse-over a word you don t know, it s translated back into English, so you
itten especially for adult learners who want to successfully learn a new languag
e or revive a stalled effort. She also writes about life, living and cooking in
France on her blog: Southern Fried French.
Especially if you re a visual learner, a great way to improve vocabulary is by rea
ding and writing.
For reading, the fastest way to learn is to pick up a bilingual book. As you fin
d words you don t know, you can simply look at the translation on the facing page.
Writing is great because it forces you to use the dictionary and look up words
you re likely to need again.
Try writing a note to a friend, or recounting a story.
Also I keep an Ultralingua dictionary on my mobile devices. If I have a wait som
ewhere, I m happy just poking around in the dictionary or using the flash card app
.
Mark ThomsonMark-Thomson
Mark Thomson is a self-taught, fluent speaker of Russian (currently living in Uk
raine) and the creator of the online course Russian Accelerator, as well as the
chief consultant for the course Japanese Mastery Method.
The Five Steps For Learning Vocabulary
Step 1: Listen and repeat
You shouldn t be aware of the word s meaning. Just practice saying it. This mimics h
ow children learn: They hear words first, and deduce the meanings later. Unfortu
nately, most people s encounter with a new word will be with the meaning already a
ttached, as in: The Spanish word for beach is playa.
Step 2: Determine meaning from context.
The ideal is to learn all new words from the context of sentences in that langua
ge, but if you re a beginner, then you need to learn it from the context of an Eng
lish sentence (or whatever your native tongue is). Take the Russian word pivo . (So
unds like PEE-vuh )
Contextual phrases:
Coors and Heineken are my two favorite types of pivo.
In that bar, the only pivo they have on tap is Budweiser.
As children we figured out the meaning of virtually every word we know in this s
ame way.
Step 3: Create a mnemonic device.
For the word pivo,
The above phrase has the English meaning (beer), and the start of our target wor
d ( pee which leads us to the word pivo. )
Step 4: Write the word onto a flashcard. By hand. On cardstock.
The physical act of writing helps in remembering. Also, put an X on the corner of
the card each time you get it wrong, to keep track of your progress. As you beco
me more advanced, your cards should include phrases featuring the most common co
nstructions of the language.
Step 5: Use the new word right away, even if it s the first word you ve learned in t
hat language.
Returning to our word pivo , imagine you re with a Russian friend in your kitchen. Ge
sture to the six-pack of Coors, then ask, Pivo?
Also, use it in whatever fundamental constructions you ve learned in that language
. For example:
I like pivo.
I don t drink pivo.
and so on.
These five steps are the ideal way to absorb new vocabulary in your target langu
age.
Martin BenjaminMartin-Benjamin
Martin Benjamin is the founder and executive director of the Kamusi Project, an
international effort to produce learning and lexical resources for languages wor
ldwide. He is a senior scientist at EPFL, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technol
ogy Lausanne. He taught Swahili for several years at Yale and Wesleyan Universit
ies.
The DIY is flashcards.
Make your own cards, work through them in batches, shuffle them, retire the ones
you know, once in a while pick up the ones you ve retired. This builds vocabulary
, but doesn t break you out of thinking in your own language first.
My favorite method is language exchange, e.g. a program here in Lausanne called
Tandem. You get together for coffee once a week, for an hour or so, with someone
who wants to learn/ improve in your language, and has the language you want to
learn.
You talk half the time in your language and half the time in theirs. As you spea
k, you are forced to dig deep in your memory for words you know you know.
At the same time, you realize there are words you need that you ve never encounter
ed so you can check with your partner, with the bonus exercise of trying to expl
ain the missing concept in the language you are learning, or look it up in a dic
tionary if neither knows.
When it is their turn, they will also have vocabulary issues, and you ll learn mor
e words by having to help them. It s a lot more effort to arrange tandems and bloc
k out the time, but conversation goes to the core of why you are learning a lang
uage in the first place.
Olle LingeOlle-Ligne
Olle Linge, a Swede living in Taiwan, runs Hacking Chinese, a website dedicated
to unveiling the mysteries of learning a language in general and about learning
Chinese in particular. He speaks three languages.
The ideal way of acquiring vocabulary at a rapid pace is to see the vocabulary i
This method allows you to follow the language being learned and easily understan
d the words being used and how the sentences are structured.
The animations are always scripted in a conversational manner around specific to
pics. This allows you to not only learn the core vocabulary around a topic (e.g.
restaurants), but also supporting vocabulary that you would often experience in
those situations.
Aires: and I was immersed in Spanish. French and English were the problem.
I now think that the way I really picked up vocabulary in these two languages wa
s by constantly reading, very rarely going to a dictionary (in dead-end streets,
so to speak) and listening to others talk, in films, on the streets, when I was
able to travel and much later on TV.
I now live in a place where I have no chance to hear or speak Hungarian. I try t
o talk to myself in this language each night before I fall asleep. It is soothin
g and surprisingly, words that I couldn t remember suddenly appear.
I also read in Hungarian, buy books that interest me in that language, and that
amplifies my vocabulary too.
One exercise that I have created for myself from very early on is NOT to worry a
bout vocabulary, imagine situations in the language I wanted to practice and ins
ert the word I couldn t remember from another of the languages I knew.
When learning English, I simply inserted words in Hungarian.
Somehow, quite quickly, the sentences that in the beginning had many Hungarian w
ords in them began to change and were more and more often filled in by English o
nes, up to the point where I had the feeling that I was forgetting Hungarian.
Susanna ZarayskySusanna-Zaraysky
Susanna Zaraysky is the author of Language is Music and Travel Happy, Budget Low
. She has studied 11 languages and traveled to over 50 countries.
Music activates more parts of the brain than language does. So when you listen t
o a song or advertising jingle, you are more likely to recall the words from the
song or jingle than if you just read them or heard them spoken.
Find songs where the words are not sung very fast so that you can hear each word
distinctly. Mana for Spanish learners, is a good choice.
Find music that you like and that you can easily decipher and learn the lyrics o
f the songs. You can find song lyrics easily online at www.lyrics.com and other
websites.
Tim BewerTim-Bewer
Tim Bewer has written or co-written over two dozen guidebooks for Lonely Planet,
Moon Handbooks, and other publishers. He lives in Khon Kaen, Thailand where he
runs a tour company called: Isan Explorer.
Here is my vocabulary building tip, which I used to learn Thai, and am still usi
ng today to continue to improve.
I write all my new vocabulary words on a piece of paper that I always keep in my
pocket. I pull it out when I have any free time waiting in line at the store, r
iding a bus, standing in an elevator, etc. and use it to practice.
When I feel I am remembering the word well enough I write it in a notebook. I th
en use this notebook to review words, going through, usually, two or three pages
each day.
When I come upon a word that I have forgotten, I put it on the list in my pocket
again.
Tomasz P. Szynalskitomasz-szynalski
Tomasz Szynalski is one of the (two) creators of Antimoon, a website for learner
s of English as a second language. He also writes for the Antimoon blog.
Natural input
SRS (if you re an introvert)
Wiktor KostrzewskiWiktor-Kostrzewski
Wiktor Kostrzewski is the writer behind 16Kinds.com, a website on teaching yours
elf a language and guerilla language learning.
The only system worth recommending is one that works ahead of you, not against y
ou easy to set up, painless to access, flexible and intuitive.
That s true for all systems you re using.
In learning, another key thing is important: building on what you know already,
and reaching out for the next thing you need to learn
always being challenged, b
ut never too baffled by the challenge.
Finally, language learning and vocabulary: it helps to create a rich context for
the items you re learning audio, visuals, example sentences all help here, and sh
ould be available the moment you encounter, memorize and re-visit your item.
If I had to choose one thing that s out there today, it would have to be based aro
und Memrise
it ticks many of the boxes listed above, and despite its limitations
, it s good enough for vocabulary learning.
But I m always looking out for new and better things
and I know there are amazing
solutions out there that are just waiting to be unleashed!
William E. LinneyWilliam-E-Linney
William E. Linney is the author of the popular book Getting Started with Latin.
He offers additional Latin learning material for free on the accompanying websit
e and on Linney s Latin Class.
For me, the answer to that question has changed over the years.
At first, I thought it was rote memorization. Flash cards and such. Later, being
a student of Latin and ancient Greek (which are mostly learned in order to read
texts) I thought the answer was to read lots of texts and see the words over an
d over in texts.
Nowadays, however, I feel that the best way to memorize new vocabulary is to use
the word in spoken conversations.
Of course, it s good to study the word separately, away from the conversation, usi
ng a dictionary, or seeing it written in a text
those methods are indeed helpful
.
But ultimately, one should use the word in conversation, and hear others use it
in conversation.
That s my two cents worth.
YangyangYangyang
Yangyang is the CEO of Lang-8, a language exchange social network that has over
250,000 registered members.
Personally, I think remembering words with sentences or paragraphs is good way t
o learn vocabulary.
What a mammoth of a post!
A HUGE thanks to all contributors! Without you this wouldn t have been possible, o
f course.
Thanks to you, my readers, as well. If you consider this post as helpful as I do
, please share it with your friends.
That s it! You ve reached the end of the post. There s just one little thing left to a
sk:
stick in my
has ask
new w
would
but l
You might remember my 12 tips on how to improve your memory that I wrote a few m
onths ago. In these posts I basically gave a bunch of useful tips to help dramat
ically improve your memory in the more general sense. I gave tips, among others,
on how to focus better, use mnemonics, use visualization techniques, eat health
ily, and so on. I would strongly encourage you to go through the 12 tips (even i
f you ve gone through them in the past, re-reading them is a good idea!), but toda
y I d like to provide you with some easy ready-made techniques used by many experi
enced language learners to remember words.
So today I ll provide you with four techniques that you can use right from today t
o jumpstart your vocabulary acquisition ability. The four techniques are as foll
ow: Using a Spaced Repetition Software (SRS), the Goldlist Method, the Luca Lamp
ariello Method, and the GoBillyKorean Method. Ready to dive in?
A Quick Word on Context
Before introducing the techniques I ve just mentioned, though, I need to make an i
mportant point that I believe is central to the acquisition of new vocabulary an
d the understanding of word meanings; that is, the importance of context. It is
my belief that context is at the very foundation of vocabulary acquisition, and
without it you will really make your life harder and things will be a pain in th
e neck to remember. Context, by the way, simply refers to the parts of a written
or spoken statement that precede or follow a specific word or passage. So, in o
ther words, what comes before and after a word.
Why is context so important when memorizing new words? Well, first of all, the m
eaning of words can change dramatically depending on context. Let s pretend for a
moment that you are learning English these days. How could you possibly memorize
the meanings of the verb get out of a word list? Get is one of those words in Engli
sh that has literally hundreds of definitions, and learning one out of those hun
dreds won t get you very far, and won t necessarily be that useful when you actually
come across that word in real life, but find out it is used to convey a very di
fferent meaning from what you learned. Here s an example sentence I borrowed from
of bed, got the paper, got myself some breakfast, got some coffee,
get dressed and to get ready for work. I got in the car, got to th
got to work. I got a lot done, and still had time to get some mone
and get a sandwich at the deli for lunch.
Do you get it? Now, if you were to try and memorize every single definition of t
he word get from the dictionary, you d still be working on it next year. Of course,
nobody tries to remember every meaning of that word. Instead, people learning En
glish usually come across the word in a text and first try to understand what it
means, and then they are usually made to memorize the two or three most common
definitions of the word. The remaining meanings will all be learned inductively
through context, without any deliberate effort on the learner s part to memorize a
nything.
Now, of course here I ve taken a somewhat extreme example, but the point is that w
ords rarely have only one strict meaning. This is Brain scanreally important to
understand. So learning a bunch of words from a list without having seen them us
ed in context before is, in essence, a bad idea. It s a bad idea not only because
countless studies on the human brain have shown that we remember things in conte
xt and not isolated facts, but also because given that words can have many meani
ngs, it s important to see them used in sentences to get a feel for how they are u
sed and how to plug these words ourselves in the sentences we make.
So with the techniques I m introducing here today, I would strongly encourage you
to make a conscious effort to remember words only after actually having come acr
oss them in a textbook/text/conversation/etc. If that is not possible, I encoura
ge you to use example sentences in the target language along with the translatio
ns, so as to provide some context to the words you are learning.
Alright, enough talking for now, let s take a look at the four methods right away!
Method #1: Using a Spaced Repetition SoftwareAnki logo
Spaced repetition is a learning technique that incorporates increasing intervals
of time between subsequent reviews of previously learned material in order to e
xploit the psychological spacing effect. That s a fancy way of saying that you rev
iew flashcards in progressively increasing intervals of time. So if you d try to r
emember the Chinese word for friend, pngyou (??), with a Spaced Repetition Software
(SRS), you would first review that word and have the options of re-reviewing it
right now, in 10 minutes, or four days later (this can be customized to your pr
eferences). Anki 1m 10m 4d intervals
The next time you d review it, you would have the option to review it a third time
thereafter with longer time intervals (for example, 10m, 5d, 9d, or 12d), and s
o on. So over a time period of a few months, you ll end up reviewing the same word
at least 4 to 5 times, which will ensure that the information will stick in you
r long-term memory. Repeating and reviewing are essential to memorization, and I
encourage you to go through the short blog post I ve written for more on the subj
ect.
Anki 10m 5d 9d 12d intervalAnki 10m 5.9m 1.0y 1.5y intervals
Anki Korean flashcardThe most well-known SRS is Anki, and it s the software I ve per
sonally been using for over a year to learn thousands of
new words and sentences with. It s free for your computer and for phones that run
on Android, but the Smartphone app costs $25 for Apple phones if I m correct. Anki
also has a web version, AnkiWeb, which is awesome because it lets you use your
flashcards on any device from anywhere around the world, and after every study s
ession it synchronizes all of your decks that you have installed on other comput
ers/devices, so as to keep them updated.
The way I d suggest using Anki would be to take words that you come across in your
studies, and write on one side the word in the target language, and on the othe
r side the definition (if you re an intermediate learner, try writing the definiti
on also in the target language), along with three to four example sentences. Dic
tionaries often provide good and relevant example sentences along with definitio
ns, but you can get them from anywhere, such as a blog, a movie, or a textbook.
Method #2: David James
Goldlist Method
Viktor D. HuliganovThe second method I will introduce today was developed by Dav
id J. James, an English accountant and polyglot better known under the pseudonym
of Viktor D. Huliganov. David named his method Goldlist, and the method is, to qu
ote him, all about putting back the long-term, unconscious memory into the learni
ng process. It does so by focusing on the pure enjoyment of writing out new words
and just liking the experience of touching those words with your minds in a rel
axed way, without pushing them on your memory. There is no need to rote learn or
memorize on demand.
If you re interested to read how the method works in full details, feel free to cl
ick here to read David s article in full. Otherwise, here s a summary of how the Gol
dlist method works:
You have to write words that you want to remember in a neat textbook along with
the translations in your native tongue (make two initial columns). Do not use a
computer, since handwriting is linked to tactile memory, which helps to solidify
newly-acquired information into your long-term memory. You have to write the wo
rds on the right hand side of the page in your own language or the language from
which you are learning the target language, and do 25 words at a time. You alwa
ys note the date you added the words to the list.
You always have to write in 20-minute chunks. After writing out the vocabulary s
et of 25, and reading it through aloud (a process which should take 20 minutes),
you should take a 10-minute break. Do not try to memorize the words you just wr
ote down. It s all about enjoying writing them down in a nice book with a nice pen
slowly and in pleasant comfortable surroundings. You can write a 25-word list o
nce a day/week or anytime you want, really, but David recommends not to do more
than about 10 such sessions a day (i.e. 250 words in a single day). If you get a
nywhere near that, make sure they are spaced out with other things going on betw
een them.
After no less than 2 weeks and no more than 2 months, go back to the list you wr
ote and read it through. Be honest with yourself and simply look for the words y
ou don t remember. The prediction, based on memory research and experiments done b
y German psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus, is that up to 30% of the words will be
retained. You can then discard the words you remember (approximately 8) and wri
te the remaining 17 words you have trouble remembering on the right-hand side of
the same sheet you initially wrote your 25-word list on.
An actual gold list mature bronze book for Spanish
An actual gold list mature bronze book for Spanish.
Image attribution: http://huliganov.tv
You are looking to distil out the hard to learn expressions and obtain a concentrate
d list of distilled words that are the hardest for you to learn. After having re
peated this distillation process ten times with two weeks break in between each t
ime, you will have effectively memorized every single word in the list and they
will now be stored in your long-term memory. This sounds like a lot of time and
effort just to learn 25 words, but really it s simply a matter of re-reading the l
ist you initially wrote and finding out every time the 70% that you don t remember
, and re-writing them on the sheet.
Method #3: Luca Lampariello s Natural Approach to Remembering Words
Luca LamparielloLuca Lampariello is a highly successful language learner who spe
aks around 12 languages, and he approaches vocabulary acquisition in a different
way from many other language learners (see his article for more on that; his bo
ok will be released around late 2013). In fact, his approach is quite interestin
g because he actually does not try to remember words by making lists or any such
thing; memory, he says, does not work by using deliberate effort (something Dav
id James also talks about). If you constantly try to remember new words, you will
spend considerable amounts of mental energy just cramming information into your
short-term memory, information which will not be stored for a long period of tim
e. Usually, information stored in your short-term memory will not stick for more
than 2 weeks, on average.
As David James says, the reason many linguists believe that children under the a
ge of 5 or 6 learn languages so well is that they learn unconsciously. What happ
ens past that age is that an extra layer comes in as the child learns by then to b
e self-consciously learning. The child, by school age, is aware that it is now le
arning something and is making an effort to remember, not just being put through
life s algorithms passively, David explains. And so the short-term memory starts t
o come more and more into play, blocking the long-term memory function essential
to the easy learning of languages.
Besides not actively trying to memorize anything, Luca s method is also about lear
ning through context and using back-and-forth translation exercises. First and f
oremost, he strongly encourages people to learn through context (what he calls ki
ng in language learning) by reading as much as you can, and by being emotionally
engaged with what you are learning (i.e. something that you find really interest
ing and that you are passionate about). Finding a word in different contexts wil
l boost your capacity to remember words, he says, so reading as much as you can
is an excellent way to acquire vocabulary effortlessly in his opinion.
Additionally, in the second part of our interview on his way of learning languag
es, he talks about what he calls a back-and-forth translation method, in which he
reads a bilingual text (usually a dialogue) and tries to translate the sentences
back and forth into his native tongue. So after having initially read a text, h
e goes through it one more time in the target language, and this time, without l
ooking at the translation, he tries to translate the text back to his native ton
gue and then checks for mistakes. A few days later, he goes through his translat
ions and tries to translate them back to the target language. By doing so, he fo
rces himself to convey a message. His desire to say again what he read/heard in
a sentence helps him enormously to remember words. In fact, he says, the words st
ick as a consequence of wanting to say something, to convey a message.
So Luca s method emphasizes that memorizing new vocabulary will come naturally as
a consequence of being exposed to material in the native language, by being inte
rested and passionate by the content (and by learning a new language in itself),
and by wanting to convey a message and to express yourself in the target langua
ge. He will discuss his methods for learning languages much more in detail in hi
s book, which will probably be published by late 2013, so stay put!
Method #4: The GoBillyKorean Method
Go Billy Korean portraitBilly recently wrote a guest post on the blog in which h
e talked about his experience studying 5 languages. He made a YouTube video enti
tled How to Learn 50 Vocab a Day, and I thought I d share it with you since it s short
, concise, and funny, and it can be of help for those out there who are short on
time and need to learn a lot of words quickly. If you do choose to use this met
hod, I strongly encourage you to use vocabulary you have come across in context
and then write them down, rater than using just random word lists taken from a t
extbook. Once again, learning words removed from any context is, generally speak
ing, best avoided.
So here s Billy s video in which he explains his method:
Alright so that s it for today s post. I hope you will have found this useful for yo
ur own studies. I d really love to know how you go about memorizing new words. Are
you one of those who simply don t really pay that much attention to memorization?
Or are you actively trying to memorize a set number of words every day? Share y
our experiences with the community, I m sure your successes and failures can be of
huge help to many people!
By Sam Gendreau
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Simple Techniques For Helping Memorize Vocabulary
There are literally an innumerable amount of techniques you can apply when build
ing vocabulary. Flip through a couple of websites or forums about memory buildin
g and you re likely to find plenty of them. Some will work better for you than oth
ers, but you ll have to try them out and see how they work in practice. The follow
ing techniques, or some combination of them, are among the most effective I ve see
n.
1. Flash cards. Having been around for the longest time, almost everyone is fami
liar with flash cards. Surviving the test of time isn t an easy feat and they ve don
e it for good reason they re simply one of the best tools ever devised for memoriz
ing anything. With the advent of smartphones, flash cards (or the idea behind th
em) have become more useful than ever, allowing students to carry thousands of e
lectronic flashcards in their phone for use anytime they get a free moment. Flas
h cards are simple, inexpensive and proven effective, so make sure to take advan
tage of them when searching for tools to help your vocabulary building efforts.
2. Hear, echo and associate. When you first encounter a word, the first thing to
do is to listen intently at the right way of pronouncing it. Then, repeat it to
yourself loudly (you can whisper if you re in public and feel self-conscious). Mo
st people stop there and that s wrong
it s very easy to forget a vocabulary item if
you simply parrot it. You need to associate it to something that is meaningful t
o you. That way, the word has a personal meaning that makes it memorable, rather
than just being a bunch of syllables and sounds strung together.
3. Read more. Try to spend a lot of time reading in the target language. Start w
ith easy reading materials like product descriptions on e-commerce websites, sho
rt blog posts or Twitter timelines of native speakers. Once you get comfortable
with that, start reading longer materials, like magazine articles, newspapers an
d books. Doing so allows you to encounter words in different contexts, giving yo
u a better idea of how to use specific vocabulary elements in the language. Read
ing will also expose you to a lot of new language elements that you may not have
even encountered in your regular lessons. Try understanding their meaning from
context first before pulling out the dictionary and thesaurus.
4. Brute repetition. This isn t the most elegant technique, but you can t deny that
In life, we do not usually set out to remember things but we do. When we walk d
own the street and see a butcher in a shopping area close to where we are now st
aying, if we are interested in cooking or we have been asked to buy some meat, w
e will put that into our memory. We make no real effort to memorise, but we do
put it into our memory. How? By linking it to our needs, what is important to u
s now, or what think might be important to us later. I am sure that there are m
any people who would walk past the same butcher and not even notice it. Why? Be
cause it has no value or interest to them at that point in time.
Here is a very important key, that is overlooked. Memory works best when we are
dealing with things that are important to us, there and then. The second thing
to note is that there were links made to our life, to what was already in our b
rain. From all the research we know that memory works best when the new item is
hooked in to what we already know. So the more the hooks, or the links, the mo
re likely that we are going to recall the item and the more personal and immedia
te are the links, the more chance we are going to remember it.
So let s give you an example. For argument s sake, say you want to learn the meaning
of bottle . Note, I didn t say memorise. Well, lets say you came across it in a pi
cture dictionary, or an article and you looked it up in your dictionary
for now
, let s say a bilingual one.
You see the word or the picture of bottle and you will immediately know the mean
ing, but how will you retain the meaning of that word or how will you avoid forget
ting it or how will you put it into your working memory.
The trick is to put it into your life, into sentences in the language you are le
arning. If you use your mother tongue, you will be asking your brain to do gymn
astics of the kind that are difficult. Remembering words in two languages at th
e time you are speaking one is difficult, and this is because different language
s occupy different parts of the brain. So when you speak one, stay in the one yo
u are speaking.
Ideally write 3 sentences, each of which are personal, the more feeling, or memo
ries they evoke in themselves the better they will be.
# My new shampoo comes in a lovely blue bottle.
# I dropped a bottle of milk yesterday and my sister got angry with me.
# That bottle of perfume that my wife just bought has a gorgeous scent .
Compare these sentence to The bottle is on the table. There is no personal eleme
nt, does not appear to evoke anything and in fact is a dreadfully dull sentence.
So this is the kind of sentence you need to avoid creating or using.
This process might seem cumbersome at first ( and it is for a time! ) but once y
ou get the hang of it, you will learn to do it so fast that you will be hardly a
ware that you are doing it.
Another reason why this works well, is that you have mobilized your brain to get
the new language involved in your life. AND you have been forced to make sente
nces, hence you have made linguistic contexts for the new words. Can you see no
w why it is much much more likely that once you have done this, you will never f
orget the word in question, or if you do, it will only be a temporary lapse. And
because you have placed it into a linguistic context, you have also strengthene
d the language you are learning at the same time. Now isn t that a bonus.
There are clearly other issues in how to remember vocabulary in an effective way
but this technique I have just shown you will transform your mnemonic skills.
That is of course if you utilize the technique and persist with it! For a more i
n depth look at how this can work and fit into your overall strategies in learni
ng a language, do check out my recently released book, Language Learning Unlocke
d.