Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Tips don't lie:How to learn Spanish with Shak


Using music and singing is an excellent means to improve your language skills so I’d recommend you analyse lyrics of other songs in your target language similarly! 
One of the best possible ways to learn a foreign language is to use popular media (TV shows, music, movies, etc.) in that language that you actually enjoy (very important) and/or are genuinely interested in, because it does wonders for your focus, concentration, attention to detail, and, consequently, how much you learn and how fast. Plus, those medias will be using actual contemporary spoken language that you would hear and use yourself if you were in-country, as opposed to some dry textbook dialogue about where the biblioteca is or how to tell the waiter that you’re allergic to shellfish, you know?So,You can learn Spanish with Shak.When I say "With Shak"I don’t really mean that Shak come in your house and teach you,but...
You could take Shak’s popular  songs at Spanish. 
There is reasons why you could dicided Shak:

  1. You like her, always have,just little bit,or much. Not only do you like her music but she has this odd of cute, sultry, latina going on that just makes you have a huge crush on her. That, and the belly dancing…you just…oh lord.
  2. She’s extremely popular, and with regards to La Tortura, according to Wikipedia, “La Tortura” is currently the highest-selling only-Spanish language digital track in United States at 804,000 downloads and the biggest-selling Spanish language track of the decade with sales of over 5 million copies worldwide.
  3. She’s Colombian and Sanz is Spanish. Colombian Spanish is known world-wide as being the most neutral and easiest to understand in the world, more so than even, yes, Iberian Spanish (Spanish from Spain) which tends to have some eccentricities you don’t see anywhere else.
Colombian Spanish is the most traditional and neutral Spanish out there–if you don’t have a specific country in mind that you’re learning Spanish for, I would highly advise you to base your accent and pronunciation on Colombian Spanish, there’s no one else better to copy.I should note that I presume you’ve already got some basic understanding and I won’t need to define every single word (such as “ser” or “yo” or “ir”) and explain every bit of grammar, though I will address words I think are a bit outside the basic/low-intermediate level. Let’s get started.
 I’ve found that doing this sort of thing, for me, is fantastic; I love doing this with
music videos, TV shows, movies, etc. (for more information on that check out my post on “The Telenovela Method”), you learn an enormous amount of the language just from a few minutes of one of those. Any suggestions for how to go forth with this? Modifications? Improvements? I’ve just written a similar explanation to Shakira’s “Suerte” (Spanish version of “Whenever, Wherever”) so if you liked this maybe consider coming on over and subscribing. 
Let me know what you think in the comments.

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