Louise, 17, Aspiring Archaeologist and Historianđ, A-Levels, đłïžâđ
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ANCIENT HISTORY STUDENT MOODBOARD
â So obscure are the greatest events, as some take for granted any hearsay, whatever its source, others turn truth into falsehood, and both errors find encouragement with posterity. â | Tacitus, Ann. III. 19. 2.
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An Overview of Note-Taking Styles
Note-taking is one of the most essential skills a student should master. It allows you to record and review information to be used in the future. But whatâs the best way to do so? Hereâs an overview of note-taking styles that can help you maximize your learning!
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your level of education means nothing if you never learned any compassion
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I have restarted my Spanish learning journey. I completely slacked when lockdown began and I am not pretty much where I started again. I am going for a new approach using fluent forever 625 word lists as a starting point and learning a category a day to perfection.
#student#studybuzz#revision#notes#Spanish#language skills#languages#language#language stuff#langblr#langblog#blog#study blog#study#study motivation#study notes#studyblr#study space#studywithme#studyspo
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My Daily Beginner Language Learning Routine
So, I have begun learning Spanish and it has been a few months now. I have decided to create this list of tasks I do to aid my learning progress for Spanish. This is completely personalised to me and everyone learns differently, share your methods with me!
Rosetta Stone
Rosetta Stone is a free app and is perfect for complete beginner users. It focuses on getting you speaking the language, rather than just learning vocabulary. I try to complete just one lesson a day as it really helps with pronunciation and its interface is just so beautiful.Â
Memrise
I prefer to use Memrise to Duolingo when I am just beginning learning a language, as I personally prefer to just focus and learn loads of vocabulary. Memrise also has amazing courses which I feel are really engaging. I do use Duolingo aswell but I prefer it once I'm further in the language.
Squid
Squid is a news app but with a twist. You can choose whatever language you want to read the news in and select the topics you'd like to see! It is great to practice reading and comprehension.
Books
I have an amazing Spanish book made by Collins which I am using to help learn Spanish. But you don't need to buy one, your local library probably has loads and there are thousands of free resources online on blogs. Using a book is a great way to learn grammar and practice exercises.
YouTube
I don't feel like I need to explain this but there are thousands of language learning channels you can watch to learn. However, you can also watch YouTubers who are just speaking your target language and find films or TV shows on YouTube.
Comment any other tips and things you use to learn languages.
#language#language stuff#language skills#languages#German#Spanish#langblr#Japanese#Maderain#korean#english#learn#french
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How to learn a language fast
1. Learn a sizable vocabulary, there is a good list of 625 words you should know in your target language. Spend time building this up and be sure to practice your pronunciation that is vital. To learn vocabulary there are many methods: flashcards, lists, apps, mindmaps etc. I personally use the app Quizlet as it has many learning tools and flashcards so you can practice on the go.
2. Learn basic grammar, for this you can use a book or there are plenty of websites online that will have resources. You just need to have master a section at a time so you have the basic learnt.
3. Listen to the spoken language, if you are in the country awesome but chances you are not so some ways to this are: listening to audio files, using apps (I know Duolingo has a aspect that reads stories), watch YouTube videos in that language, watch films and listen to the radio (there are lots of streams online).
4. Practice speaking, pronunciation is vital plus saying things over and over again can help move it to the long term memory. It will make you feel much more confident in your abilities. To practice speaking it would be ideal to find someone who is fluent in your target language but if not there are speaking exercises online, you could try read a book out loud or even learn a song.
5. Stick to it, this is probably the most important part if you donât keep practicing regularly you will forget it all. Even if it is just something small it is better than nothing and will be worth it when you can speak a whole new language.
Good Websites
BBC Languages
Duolingo
Dictionaries
Quizlet
Memrise
Babbel
Fluent Forever
Feel free to add more helpful tips, tricks etc below.
Iâm going to learn Spanish.
#blog#studyblr#notes#revision#study motivation#study notes#studybuzz#studyspo#student#study#language#langblr#languages#language stuff#language studyblr#language skills#german#french#Spanish#korean#Japanese#mandarin#chinese#Portuguese#russian#Italian#latin#greek
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Redewendung Zwei
Du kannst du Gift drauf nehmen
literally: you can take poison on that
english: you can be your life on that
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Redewendung eins
um den heiĂen Brei herumreden
literally: to talk around the hot porridge
english: to beat around the bush
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Vokabelliste
Schwarzkaffee - Black Coffee
Milchkaffee - Coffee with Milk
Latte Macchiato - Latte Macchiato
Cappuccino  - Cappuccino
Tee - Tea
Heisse Schokolade - Hot Chocolate
Einen Kaffee, bitte. - A Coffee, please.
Was können sie empfehlen? - What can you recommend?
Ich möchte - I would like
Zum Mitnehmen - To take away
Haben sie...? - Do you have?
Wo ist der Zucker? - Where is the sugar?
#100daysoflanguages#german#german langblr#langblr#studyblr#study#deutsch#kaffee#coffee#vokabeln#vokab#cafe
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Vokabelliste
LGBT
nouns
die Lesbe - the lesbian
die LGBT-Community - the LGBT community
der Regenbogen - the rainbow
die Pride/das Pride-Festival - the pride (festival)
die Fahne/die Flagge - the flag
der/die Bi/Pan/A/Homosexuelle - the bi/pan/homosexual (i know h*m*sexual is considered a slur by some in english, but i am not sure about how it is in german. i personally would be uncomfortable with it, so ask people first before you apply it to them)
die Ehe fĂŒr alle - the same-sex/gender marriage (lit. marriage for everyone)
die Polyamorie - the polyamory
die Polygamie - the polygamy
die Beziehung - the relationship
die Hormone - the hormones
die Geschlechtsangleichung - i dont know how to translate this one, but it can be used both for taking hormones and the surgeries transgender people can get, basically it means aligning your social/biological gender/sex to your actual one
das Ăstrogen - the estrogen
das Testosteron  - the testosterone
die Hormontherapie - the hormone replacement therapy
adjectives
schwul - gay (only to be used by men in my experience)
lesbisch - lesbian
bi/pan/a/homosexuell - bi/pan/a/homosexual
transgender - transgender
transgeschlechtlich - transgender
transsexuell - transsexual (also considered outdated and misleading by most germans)
LGBT - LGBT
out - out
stolz - proud
nicht-binÀr/nichtbinÀr - nonbinary (i think its the same as in english, where whether you use the - or not depends on personal preference)
queer - queer (in german this is not really considered as much of a slur as it is in english and often used as an umbrella term, however there are people uncomfortable with it)
verbs
lieben - to love
feiern - to celebrate
sich outen - to come out
jemanden outen - to out someone
NOTE: most aces and aros also call themselves ace or aro in german, there arent any extra terms for that
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German Flirting Phrasesđ
You have a cute smile - Du hast ein sĂŒĂes LĂ€cheln
I like the way you carry yourself - Ich mag deine Art
Do you come here often? - Bist du öfters hier?
That shirt suits you - Das Shirt steht dir
You look good - Du siehst gut aus
Oh really? - Ach wirklich?
Do you want to get coffee sometime? - Hast du Lust mal Kaffee trinken zu gehen?
I enjoy spending time with you - Ich verbringe gerne Zeit mit dir
You always look pretty - Du siehst immer hĂŒbsch aus
Handsome like you? - Gutaussehend wie du?
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German Verbs
A list of useful verbs because my knowledge of verbs in German is very limited
sein - to be haben - to have gehen - to go laufen - to walk rennen - to run fahren - to drive reisen - to travel schwimmen - to swim stehen - to stand sitzen - to sit machen - to make/do erschaffen - to create kochen - to cook essen - to eat trinken - to drink sprechen - to speak sagen - to say fragen - to ask hören - to hear zuhören - to listen mögen - to like wissen - to know (a concept) kennen - to know (a person) denken - to think glauben - to believe wollen - to want können - to be able to brauchen - to need lernen - to learn schreiben - to write lesen - to read lernen - to study verstehen - to understand vergessen - to forget erinnern - to remember ĂŒben - to practice sehen - to see beobachten - to watch tragen - to wear aufwachen - to wake up schlafen - to sleep arbeiten - to work kaufen - to buy spielen - to play benutzen - to use bringen - to bring kommen - to come zurĂŒckkommen - to return (come back) geben - to give bekommen - to receive nehmen - to take schauen - to look finden - to find treffen - to meet anfangen - to start beenden - to finish versuchen - to try entscheiden - to decide geboren werden - to be born sterben - to die leben - to live (a life) wohnen - to live (in an area) helfen - to help schicken - to send verĂ€ndern - to change (alter)
[French]
If there are any mistakes or better translations please let me know!
Edit: I fixed a few mistakes
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Konjunktionen - Conjunctions
Nebenordnende -Â Coordinating aka. normal verb placement
aber -Â but
denn -Â because, for
oder -Â or
sondern -Â but rather, instead
und -Â and
entwederâŠoder - eitherâŠor
wederâŠnoch  - neitherâŠnor
nicht nurâŠsondern auch - not onlyâŠbut also
Unterordnende - Subordinating aka. verb kickers
als - when
bevor - before
bis - until
da - because, since
damit - so that
dass - thatÂ
daher - therefore, thus
darum - therefore, thus
nachdem - after
ob - if, whether
obwohl - although
obgleich - although
seit - since
seitdem - since
sobald - as soon as
solang - as long asÂ
statt dass - instead of
wÀhrend - while
wann - when
weil - because
wenn - if, when, whenever
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Want to maintain or improve your writing skills in your target language this summer? Try this 30-day writing challenge for June: Every day, answer the following prompts in your target language (in a personal journal or in a tumblr post). Good luck!
Write a short letter to someone you havenât talked to in a while.
What are your future career goals?
Whatâs your favorite childhood movie? Why?
If you could learn to cook anything this summer, what would it be and why?
List 5 (or more) things that make you happy.
What is your morning routine?
What is your night routine?
Who is one influential person in your life? Why?
Write a poem about someone (or something) you love :)
List 5 of your pet peeves.
Whatâs something about yourself that you want to improve?
Whatâs one place youâve always wanted to visit? Why?
Whatâs one thing youâre looking forward to this summer?
Whatâs one of your favorite things about yourself? Why?
Write a haiku about summertime.
Describe a memorable dream youâve had.
Whoâs your celebrity crush? What do you like about them (besides how cute Iâm sure they are lol)?
Whatâs your favorite summer memory?
Translate 3 of your favorite quotes into your target language.
Write 3 things that scare you and why.
Write about a challenge youâve overcome!
Who is someone, dead or alive, you would love to meet? Why?
Who is your best friend and why do you love them?
What is your favorite item in your room?
Whatâs one book you had to read in school that you DIDNâT like? Rant about it.
Whatâs one good memory from school?
List an insecurity, then refute it by reminding yourself how great you are :)
How do you think someone would describe you?
How do you relax after a stressful or difficult day?
What was your favorite part of this month?
If you participate in this challenge and post your prompt answers, make sure to tag me with #studyingsenseless or #writingchallengejune ! Iâll be doing it too :)
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What about a Bullet Journal dedicated to language learning?
New post today! YAAAAY, I missed blogging sooooo much but I came back home to visit my parents. You guys know, if you follow me on Instagram too, that I looooove the Bullet Journal method, I use it every day for my studies and right now for work too. So why not creating a new bullet journal only dedicated to language learning? Hereâs what are the possible useful spreads I will create in the near future:
Yearly log: probably a vertical spread and for each month I will list the goals I want to reach in each language
Monthly log: a classic monthly log but with the days in the middle, on the left side I will list what are my daily goals and on the other one I will write what I actually did
Monthly tracker: for each day Iâll track how many hours or minutes Iâll spend for each language (color coding needed)
Level 10 fluency: for each language, I will list how much I feel fluent in each category (reading, writing, speaking, listening) from 1 to 10
Resources log: for each language, I will dedicate one page in order to list all the resources I use or I have in store and Iâll also track for which field itâs useful
Textbooks collection: for each language, I will list the textbooks, both physical and digital, I haveÂ
Lag-podcasts collection: a list dedicated to languages podcasts I listen to and I will discover
Favorite Tumblr masterposts: you know that here on Tumblr there are tons and tons of very useful masterposts, so why not creating a collection for them in order to always remember them?Â
What I learned this month: as the last page for one month, it would be nice to keep track of what you studied and understood
Website/Blog collection: I follow too many interesting blogs and sometimes I canât even remember their names, this collection would be teeeeerribly useful for me
 Fluency tracker: let this Pinterest pic speak for meÂ
So guys what do you think about this idea? Would you like to see the #langbujo in a new article as soon as I will complete some pages and some spreads? Stay tuned!!Â
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For Amy (@chocolates-and-cream) who asked:
Hey! First of all, I freaking love your blog and second, I need some help getting my life organised. Do you by any chance know some apps that are like planners/agendas I can use? Thanks in advance! :))))) -amy xx
Thank you so much! Hereâs a few apps and extensions which Iâve found useful to sort my daily trainwreck of tasksâŠ
APPS TO GET YOUR LIFE SORTED
Google Calendar
If you have a gmail account (who doesnât? rip hotmail you were too good to me) this is the one for you. Â You can sync all your events across all platforms (ty google) including your phone, laptop, basically anything that enables you to log onto your gmail account. Â You can enable alarms and desktop notifications alerting you to important deadlines and events or alternatively, an email will be sent to your inbox. You can colour code/ sort all your events aswell (e.g. âschoolâ, âsubject A, subject B, subject Câ, âhomeâ, âworkâ)
With every event you can include;
+time +location (TY GOOGLE MAPS) and it can estimate your ETA +alerts +communicate to other invitees
Thanks to the juggernaut which is google (+google accounts) you can easily share your calendar with your contacts. This is particularly useful if youâre co-ordinating group projects or managing a team. Its much easier to invite your contacts to your events, given that you have immediate access to your entire email contact list/groups.
One of my favourite things about google calendar is that itâs so easy to import and export your calendar. You wonât have to worry about losing your data or scheduled events if you get a new phone/laptop etc. Its all on you google account. Perks!Â
iCal
If youâve sacrificed your first born to apple (as I have) this is the app for you. Think of it as google calendar, for apple. They share heaps of similar features.
Basically, iCal syncs all your events, deadlines (+ optional public holidays etc) across all platforms. Thereâs a daily, weekly and monthly view and itâs relatively easy to use. You can categorise each event (e.g. I have a sep colour for each subject). I love that you can add notes, attachments and links to every event. I usually attach the event flyer to the event so that I can have easy access to the dress code/ additional info handy. You can also add a google maps location to every event - be lost no more!
THE FEATURE THAT HAS SAVED MY ASS COUNTLESS TIMES IS the alert system which will send an email or a notification on your device prior to the event. If you set an alarm, itâll simultaneously scream at you from all your devices (and your inbox, if you want).
As an added bonus, you can sync a bunch of other events from other apps (e.g. your google calendar).
Note: I find iCal convenient (despite its limitations) as most of my devices run on iOS/ Mac OSX. If youâre smart and havenât outsourced your life to apple, obv a lot of the above will not apply.
Remember the Milk
Remember the Milk basically does what Google Calendar and iCal does with a few added features. You can âtagâ each event with things like âto doâ, âpriorityâ, âtomorrowâ etc. This is incredibly handy esp with the advanced search function. Similarly to the above apps, you can receive notifications alerting you to upcoming deadlines etc across all platforms.
I absolutely love the âcreate listsâ function. If you have a penchant for lists, Remember the Milk lets you create a to do list etc and then break it down into subtasks!
Note: You can import all your tasks from google calendar etc into Remember the Milk. This makes it incredibly easy to set up and to sync tasks.Â
Lanes
The new Lanes update has a handy weekly planner. You can make a daily 'to do listâ or you can customise your own lists. Simply drag and drop to reorganise your tasks! Super handy if you need to reorganise your week.
My favourite feature is the 'Pomodoroâ tab. Lanes will automatically program your to do list into a timed Pomodoro session!
Note: Lanes is a chrome extension, not a stand-alone app.Â
PlannerÂ
Planner covers all the essentials the apps above can - notifications, lists, sub lists, you name it. All with the benefit of colour coding! One of its standout features is the project organisation + notes section. You can sort your to do list by each project (handy if youâve got concurrent projects) and write detailed notes for each task.Â
Note: The free version is extremely limited. Thereâs no week view, search function and doesnât have a project function.
One Note
For daily lists on the go or notes, I highly recommend One Note. The 'list functionâ on the mobile app automatically generates a checklist style list for all your tasks, and thereâs an inbuilt tagging system (important/remember for later/ highlight etc) on the desktop version.
Other TipsÂ
Apps for a better life by @areistotle
App Masterpost by @studiyngÂ
Helpful Apps by @gracelearnsÂ
Helpful Apps by @studypeaksÂ
Time and Task Management by @pensandmachine
Theres an app for that by @studygene
Chrome Extensions by @living-the-ib-life
Apps to help you survive school by @sturdystudy
TimeTune recommended by @shreestudies hereÂ
Flattomato recommended by @study-well here
Hope this helps!!
- fuckstudy
Masterposts are posted every other Sunday (asia pacific)/ Saturday (everywhere else). See previous masterposts here. Feel free to request topics here.
Previous topic:Â studying japanese: resources
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We need to talk about LingoHut
Iâm supposed to be studying some Italian, but instead, I was googling in my computer how to learn a new language (no, googling how to learn will not teach you shit, you have to sit down and learn your target language not how to do it, I know but Iâm lazy.) and I came across LingoHut, and I have to share it.
I donât know if someone ever talked about this page, but if they did is worth mentioning again.
So basically you go to the website and in the Home Page you have to choose what is your first language and what language are you trying to learn.
Once you choose itâll take you to another page in which you have tons of lessons, for ex. In Italian, there are 109 lessons.
I havenât checked every lesson yet but for example, the first one is greetings and such. You click that lesson and you have 16 flashcards that will show you the word in your target language and the translation, at the same time that someone pronounces the words.
Below the flashcards, you have this âŹïž
And basically is a bunch of game, an easy matching words kind of game, some kind of tic tac toe with words, a memory game do you know the one that kids play in which they have to find the matching pictures? Same but with words and lastly a listening and matching game.
Below the bar of the games, we have the vocabulary list of the words we are taught in that lesson, and you can click the word and listen the pronunciation.
In the end, you have a bunch of the next lessons.
The lessons vary from the content it can be greetings, numbers, health stuff, office words, computer terminology, etc.
The website doesnât have every language in the world, but it has a lot of them. choose your target language, in my case Italian, and enjoy, is fun and simple if you want to practice or do something related to your target language but you donât have the willingness that day to study something more consistent like structure.
And the best part is that as far as I went looking around in this page itâs fucking free. Sure, you wonât end the one hundred and something lessons speaking like a native from whatever target language youâre learning, but it can be useful to expand your vocabulary.
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