![]() With that in mind, there are two courses I recommend: At the same time, it helps to have a recommended path to follow if you need it. It's good to have the freedom to hop around a course, depending on your interests. It allows you to choose your learning path: We don't all have the same needs and goals.It's best if your grammar course includes tools or exercises to drill you on this material. ![]() There's a bit of "understanding how it all works", but a lot of time time it's just about committing a whole bunch of patterns to memory, and testing yourself until it sticks. It includes reinforcement tools: This stuff requires memorization and repetition.It's also good to have a course that you can also use as a reference, to come back to when you need a refresher on a particular grammar point (and you will). It's structured around linguistic principles rather than situations (e.g., "Understanding nouns" vs " Booking a doctor's appointment") It might not seem quite as interesting, but it'll provide a shorter route to understanding the language and organizing it in your memory.
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