David Webb wrote:Rob, I am interested in how your learned 20K words in a year. Can someone learn so many words in a year? Or are a lot of them sentences?
They are ALL sentences.
q: Haju ravisti pois viimeisetkin unenrippeet ja teki hänet uteliaaksi.
a: ripe: a remnant
q: Täällä ei enää ollut kuin vanhuksia ja lauma vajaapäisiä huligaaneja.
a: vajaa: shorthanded
q: Lehdet olivat sateen litistäminä ja ruohot huojuivat.
a: huojua: to sway back and forth
That's it... just from books, movies, online newspapers... whatever I could get my hands on.
Now that I am learning Swedish, the sentences are much easier.
q: Gillar du drumsö.
a: Do you like drumsö?
So in that sentence, there's two new words... gilla, and du. And knowing that gillar is the present tense of gilla, I reinforce the grammar every time I see the sentence.
Now mix this with chatting with people online, watching tv, listening to the radio, basically doing stuff with the language. That's how it's done.
Now for the math: 20,000 / 365 = 54. Assume two new words per sentence: 54 / 2 = 27. 27 sentences per day... easy easy easy. ESPECIALLY because the words are in context. And if you keep the word in a context then you are likely to remember it, so your daily repetition count will stay low. Just putting "vajaa" on a card... you will forget that CONSTANTLY.
And find your own sentences... that will force you to use the language, because you have to actively mine for Finnish material.
On a good day, I would spend about 30 minutes doing review and an hour mining for new sentences. On a bad day, I would spend several hours doing review because I just wasn't into it, and then be too tired to mine for new sentences. But being bored of review made me chat more on MSN with Finnish people, which is also practicing.
Edit: And do NOT go from english to finnish. You will only slow yourself down. Trust me!