This Swedish Resource Handbook Below
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What does it take to succeed in this dive?
Like studying any foreign language, to succeed with Swedish, you will need to spend a lot of time reading, writing, speaking, and listening. These four skills together will help you to master Swedish.
You must pay attention to your pronunciation and grammar -- Swedish is a gendered language and people often say that Swedish speakers are ‘singing’ when they speak.
For those who really wish to master the language, they should make the commitment to make the pursuit of Swedish a lifelong hobby.
You will have to find good study materials, good teachers, and good practice partners. More importantly, however, you will have to find the discipline to study and practice and improve regularly. If you don't study regularly, you won't make much progress, or worse, you'll make lots of progress and then forget what you've learned!
The secret to fluency (since we know you want to know) is quite simple: master reading, master writing, master speaking, master listening, improve your pronunciation, and improve your vocabulary. The issue is that most people don't actually do any of these tasks well.
You see, most people only focus on one or two of these skills, or they focus on all six, but at a very cursory level. If you wish to become fluent, however, you need to focus on all six, all the time, and spend enough time with each so that you see regular progress.
Bottom line, if you want to become fluent, do this:
- Read 20 minutes a day in Swedish, and from varying sources
- Listen to Swedish TV and radio every day
- Write a new essay or short story every week and get it corrected
- Speak weekly with others, and ideally those who can correct your mistakes
- Make sure your pronunciation is as spot on as can be
- Improve your vocabulary constantly
Do these things regularly, and within 4 - 7 years, you can almost certainly become fluent in Swedish. The question is: will you actually do these things? Ahh, that is the question. We hope you will!
Why pursue the Swedish dive alone when you can dive in and learn with 1466 new supportive friends in 110 countries pursuing 139 collective dives from 301 world cities? Apply now to join Break Diving!
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