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5 habits that are secretly ruining your Portuguese listening skills: 1. Listening to the same audio multiple times. If you just listen and do nothing with what you are hearing, it's just passive repetition. Your brain doesn't learn anything new. 2. Turning on the captions. This trains your brain to read instead of listen. While it's great for Portuguese pronunciation and language maintenance, it is NOT an efficient Portuguese listening practice for fast improvement. 3. Trying to understand everything at once. This causes anxiety and frustration when listening to native speakers. Normalise having a clear goal every time you try to understand spoken Portuguese. 4. Ignoring the short sounds. In conversational Brazilian Portuguese, prepositions mix with other words and make you misunderstand what was said. You need to focus on how sounds connect in real life. 5. Relying on luck. Listening doesn't improve just with quantity. If you just "listen again" without a mission, you're not training, you're waiting for a miracle. ​(📌 SAVE this reel to stop letting these habits kill your potential) ​THE FIX: You need "Active Listening". Every listen should have a mission: understand the big picture, identify new Portuguese vocabulary, and notice sounds. If you don't know how to put this into practice, send me a message with the word "APP" and I'll share a simple tool I created that you can start using right now.
2026年4月16日 11:25
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Why you still struggle to understand Brazilians speaking and HOW TO SOLVE IT? Most students think that improving their listening skills is just about “listening more”. So they: – listen to the same audio multiple times – turn on the captions – try to understand everything at once And even so... they progress very slowly. Because listening without a clear goal is passive repetition. If every time you hit play you do the exact same thing, your brain doesn’t learn anything new. Listening doesn't improve just with quantity. It also needs focus. So if you want to get better, every listen should have a mission: – understand the big picture – identify words or meanings – notice sounds – connect everything If you just “listen again”, you’re not training. You’re just relying on luck. If you want to know exactly how to put this into practice, just send me a message! I'll share a tool I built to systematize all of this for you using music that you can start using for free. 🎧
2026年4月12日 15:23
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1. If it's been 2 years and you still can't hold a conversation, your method isn't working. Stop blaming your memory or saying you're "bad at languages." If you’ve been doing the apps, textbooks, or weekly classes for two years without real speaking progress, you're stuck in a loop. Your teacher might be wonderful, but if you're putting in consistent work and still can't converse, the method is failing you. You don't need more time; you need a method that actually works. ​2. Not being consistent is expensive. Life happens, and if you need to pause your learning for work or family, do it without guilt! But the practical reality remains: learning for a month, stopping for three, and restarting means you are constantly paying to relearn the basics. You end up buying another course or app just to review what you forgot. When you are ready to commit, remember that consistency is what will ultimately save you time and money. ​3. Your Brazilian partner say “It’s fine” if you don’t speak Portuguese. They’re lying (Kindly) If you don't speak your partner's native language, they probably tell you not to worry about it. They love you, so they accommodate you. But the ugly truth is: without their mother tongue, there is a huge part of their world you simply don't have access to. You miss out on their unfiltered personality, how they joke with family, and their deepest cultural roots. Learning their language isn't just about vocabulary; it's about fully seeing who they are. ​You can ignore these truths, or you can do something about them when you're ready.
2026年4月12日 14:57
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A maioria dos estudantes acha que melhorar o listening é só “ouvir mais”. Então eles: – escutam o mesmo áudio várias vezes – colocam legenda – tentam entender tudo de uma vez E mesmo assim… evoluem muito lentamente. Por quê? Porque ouvir sem um objetivo claro não pode ser seu principal recurso pra melhorar. É repetição passiva. Se toda vez que você aperta play você faz exatamente a mesma coisa, seu cérebro não aprende nada novo. Listening não melhora só com quantidade. Melhora com foco. Cada escuta deveria ter uma missão: – uma vez pra entender o geral – outra pra identificar palavras – outra pra perceber sons – outra pra conectar tudo É assim que o ouvido é treinado para se acostumar com as pessoas falando o idioma que você tá tentando aprender. Se você só "ouve de novo" então você não tá treinando. Você tá apenas esperando pela sorte.
2026年4月8日 16:05
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