The Fastest Way to Learn a New Language
If you see ads "Learn English in 30 days" — that's marketing. But reaching B1 level (fluent everyday conversation) in 6-12 months of intensive study is realistic. Here's how.
Step 1: Find your level
First take a free level test (Cambridge, EF SET, any). It helps choose the right materials. Studying with too-difficult material is a waste of time.
Step 2: 1500 basic words = 80%
According to linguistic research, the 1500 most frequent words of any language cover 80% of spoken speech. Don't learn random words — learn frequency lists. Get them from sites like Oxford 3000.
Step 3: Grammar isn't the main thing
Many spend years on grammar exercises and never start speaking. Basic grammar takes 2-3 months. After that — vocabulary and practice. You'll "pick up" grammar through reading and conversation.
Step 4: Listen every day
Minimum 30 minutes daily — podcasts, videos, series. At A1 — kids' cartoons (Peppa Pig is classic). At A2 — sitcoms with simple language (Friends). At B1 — regular shows with target-language subtitles.
Step 5: Speak out loud from day one
The hardest but most important step. Don't wait to "be ready". Talk to yourself, describe your day, chat with AI. Find a language exchange partner (Tandem, HelloTalk) — they want to learn your language too.
Step 6: Read a lot
At A2 — graphic novels and adapted books. At B1 — children's literature (Harry Potter is great). At B2 — contemporary fiction. Don't translate every word — try to understand from context.
Realistic timelines
- A1 (survival) — 2 months at 1 hour/day
- A2 (basic communication) — 4 months at 1 hour/day
- B1 (everyday conversation) — 8-12 months
- B2 (fluent conversation) — 1.5-2 years
- C1 (near-native) — 3-5 years
The main secret
Consistency beats intensity. 30 minutes daily beats 5 hours once a week. Language is a habit, not a feat.
And use tools
While reading or chatting, met an unknown word? Translate it on our translator, check usage examples via dictionary. Words stick naturally this way.