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frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Yesterday 07:48 AM
frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Yesterday 07:48 AM

Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It (eBook)

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Various Digital Retailers has Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It (eBook) by Gabriel Wyner on sale for $1.99 listed below.

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    • In Fluent Forever, Wyner shares his foolproof method for learning any language. It starts by hacking the way your brain naturally encodes information. The bestselling guide to learning a new language and remembering what you learned
    • Offer valid while pricing last
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Written by phoinix | Staff
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Community Notes
About the Poster
Various Digital Retailers has Fluent Forever: How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It (eBook) by Gabriel Wyner on sale for $1.99 listed below.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal

Note, must purchase from the available retailers listed

Available Option(s)

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • Price Research
  • About the Deal
    • In Fluent Forever, Wyner shares his foolproof method for learning any language. It starts by hacking the way your brain naturally encodes information. The bestselling guide to learning a new language and remembering what you learned
    • Offer valid while pricing last
  • Additional Details

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Written by phoinix | Staff

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Model: Fluent Forever (Revised Edition): How to Learn Any Language Fast and Never Forget It

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 4/27/2026, 04:27 AM
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whitecrane8
571 Posts
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Super low price. I have both the new and old (paperback) versions of this book. One of the few books that at least provides an honest roadmap to conversational fluency. Here is the summary:
1) There are no shortcuts; you will still need to spend at least, for example, 600 hours of study for minimal Spanish conversations. This is, for example, about 6 months with a private tutor @4 hours/day. More complex languages will require more study
2) Start with pronunciation. If you go sideways at the start, it will be very difficult to correct later
3) Use one of the SRS card systems to enhance memorization, preferably every day. Build your own cards - not decks built by others, however tempting - use imagery wherever possible, and write verb conjugations in complete sentences. Leverage a frequency-of-use dictionary to help select words and verbs. Use an instructor plus several books for grammar
But this is still a big lift. The first 300 nouns will get you to about 80% of super basic conversation; basic fluency starts at between 1000 and 2000 nouns. Verbs are another story. English has about 12 verb tenses; Spanish, for example, has 16-18 verb tenses. To go with the top 300 basic nouns, there are about 75 frequently used verbs. 75 verbs in the 5 top tenses, in the 5 major forms (6 forms if you want European Spanish), is an additional 2,000 words, many of them completely irregular. Triple the verb memorization and their various conjugations for basic fluency
4) Practice with native speakers. Spanish in Mexico is different from Spanish in Colombia, is different from the Spanish in Argentina, and is different from the Spanish in Spain. Also, like English, each region has common simple phrases that defy translation. You will probably never lose your American accent, but with a LOT of practice, your pronunciation will not consistently embarrass you.

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Yesterday 10:44 AM
2 Posts
Joined Jan 2026
MellowSink9472Yesterday 10:44 AM
2 Posts
Be aware even though it says on the kindle cover revised edition this is the old version. If you click on the paperback the publication date will change. Still a great book though either way
1
Yesterday 11:56 AM
571 Posts
Joined Feb 2016
whitecrane8Yesterday 11:56 AM
571 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank whitecrane8

Super low price. I have both the new and old (paperback) versions of this book. One of the few books that at least provides an honest roadmap to conversational fluency. Here is the summary:
1) There are no shortcuts; you will still need to spend at least, for example, 600 hours of study for minimal Spanish conversations. This is, for example, about 6 months with a private tutor @4 hours/day. More complex languages will require more study
2) Start with pronunciation. If you go sideways at the start, it will be very difficult to correct later
3) Use one of the SRS card systems to enhance memorization, preferably every day. Build your own cards - not decks built by others, however tempting - use imagery wherever possible, and write verb conjugations in complete sentences. Leverage a frequency-of-use dictionary to help select words and verbs. Use an instructor plus several books for grammar
But this is still a big lift. The first 300 nouns will get you to about 80% of super basic conversation; basic fluency starts at between 1000 and 2000 nouns. Verbs are another story. English has about 12 verb tenses; Spanish, for example, has 16-18 verb tenses. To go with the top 300 basic nouns, there are about 75 frequently used verbs. 75 verbs in the 5 top tenses, in the 5 major forms (6 forms if you want European Spanish), is an additional 2,000 words, many of them completely irregular. Triple the verb memorization and their various conjugations for basic fluency
4) Practice with native speakers. Spanish in Mexico is different from Spanish in Colombia, is different from the Spanish in Argentina, and is different from the Spanish in Spain. Also, like English, each region has common simple phrases that defy translation. You will probably never lose your American accent, but with a LOT of practice, your pronunciation will not consistently embarrass you.
22
Today 01:49 AM
18,245 Posts
Joined Sep 2006
SuperorbToday 01:49 AM
18,245 Posts
Quote from whitecrane8 :
Super low price. I have both the new and old (paperback) versions of this book. One of the few books that at least provides an honest roadmap to conversational fluency. Here is the summary:
1) There are no shortcuts; you will still need to spend at least, for example, 600 hours of study for minimal Spanish conversations. This is, for example, about 6 months with a private tutor @4 hours/day. More complex languages will require more study
2) Start with pronunciation. If you go sideways at the start, it will be very difficult to correct later
3) Use one of the SRS card systems to enhance memorization, preferably every day. Build your own cards - not decks built by others, however tempting - use imagery wherever possible, and write verb conjugations in complete sentences. Leverage a frequency-of-use dictionary to help select words and verbs. Use an instructor plus several books for grammar
But this is still a big lift. The first 300 nouns will get you to about 80% of super basic conversation; basic fluency starts at between 1000 and 2000 nouns. Verbs are another story. English has about 12 verb tenses; Spanish, for example, has 16-18 verb tenses. To go with the top 300 basic nouns, there are about 75 frequently used verbs. 75 verbs in the 5 top tenses, in the 5 major forms (6 forms if you want European Spanish), is an additional 2,000 words, many of them completely irregular. Triple the verb memorization and their various conjugations for basic fluency
4) Practice with native speakers. Spanish in Mexico is different from Spanish in Colombia, is different from the Spanish in Argentina, and is different from the Spanish in Spain. Also, like English, each region has common simple phrases that defy translation. You will probably never lose your American accent, but with a LOT of practice, your pronunciation will not consistently embarrass you.
Great advice! I'm in Japan and learning Japanese is incredibly difficult. I'm semi-decent at Spanish but it's easier bc English uses nearly the same alphabet and I can actually read it. Japanese has 3 alphabets with Kanji having over 2,000 characters. It's up there with Arabic as the top 2 most difficult languages to learn with #3 far behind.
3
Today 09:38 AM
33 Posts
Joined Apr 2016
sparkysparkyb00mToday 09:38 AM
33 Posts
Quote from Superorb :
Great advice! I'm in Japan and learning Japanese is incredibly difficult. I'm semi-decent at Spanish but it's easier bc English uses nearly the same alphabet and I can actually read it. Japanese has 3 alphabets with Kanji having over 2,000 characters. It's up there with Arabic as the top 2 most difficult languages to learn with #3 far behind.
Coincidentally, I'm learning both Japanese and spanish now. Had 8 years of Spanish from school that focused on grammar, so I could write essays, but not converse well. But that was all about 15 years ago. For Japanese, I'm starting from scratch with flashcards and Genki I.
Today 11:22 AM
571 Posts
Joined Feb 2016
whitecrane8Today 11:22 AM
571 Posts
Quote from Superorb :
Great advice! I'm in Japan and learning Japanese is incredibly difficult. I'm semi-decent at Spanish but it's easier bc English uses nearly the same alphabet and I can actually read it. Japanese has 3 alphabets with Kanji having over 2,000 characters. It's up there with Arabic as the top 2 most difficult languages to learn with #3 far behind.
I worked extensively in Japan, and, like most languages, there is a short list of frequently used words and phrases. This is why the Pimsleur method sort of works, because it is all listening and no reading-writing. Reading and writing are a different story. Between the Chinese pictograph characters, the stylized Japanese characters, and others, written Japanese for English speakers is a real challenge, even for those whose parents speak Japanese. The US Foreign Service ranks Japanese with Arabic, Chinese, and Korean for English speakers as 3-4X more difficult to learn than Spanish and needing additional in-country study for even basic fluency. "Fluent Forever" does not mean fluent fast or fluent easy
Today 11:29 AM
29 Posts
Joined Jun 2018
alecm8292Today 11:29 AM
29 Posts
good deal
Today 12:45 PM
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BlainnToday 12:45 PM
1,207 Posts
What about Italian?
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Today 02:48 PM
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Joined Jun 2007
Ozzie4Today 02:48 PM
1,172 Posts
Quote from whitecrane8 :
4) Practice with native speakers. Spanish in Mexico is different from Spanish in Colombia, is different from the Spanish in Argentina, and is different from the Spanish in Spain. Also, like English, each region has common simple phrases that defy translation. You will probably never lose your American accent, but with a LOT of practice, your pronunciation will not consistently embarrass you.
As someone who has learned a few languages, this is the most important item I feel. Just try to speak it whenever you can. And also, understand you will, regardless of accent, have a dialect. I had a hilarious conversation with someone who felt I didn't speak Spanish because they were from Spain and my Spanish is Mexican. Some of my words didn't land, especially the slang. A friend from Puerto Rico pointed out that I speak Spanish literally all day, so I am completely fluent in it as a few others, but she noted that we had differences even in our dialects. For the US bound people, the classic example is going to another part of the country and asking for a flavored carbonated beverage. Might be a Coke, or a pop, or a soda, or a few other varieties.
Today 03:16 PM
281 Posts
Joined Feb 2022
laniloveeToday 03:16 PM
281 Posts
I need to finish the book, it has some helpful tips

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