I would start with the basic of pronunciation, making sure you know how to read a word even if you don’t know what it means; something little like that goes a long way in the learning process.
After that some vocabulary to stimulate the brain every time some of those words are used and engage the brain to learn more. That’s when we’ll jump to the nerve of the Spanish lenguage: verbs and sentence...
I would start with the basic of pronunciation, making sure you know how to read a word even if you don’t know what it means; something little like that goes a long way in the learning process.
After that some vocabulary to stimulate the brain every time some of those words are used and engage the brain to learn more. That’s when we’ll jump to the nerve of the Spanish lenguage: verbs and sentence structure. We’ll be keen on the verbs most of all, not only because is one of the reasons Spanish is not so simple to learn, if not because there is a lot of them.
That would be the theory on it, but no theory is good without practice. And the best way to practice is to like it, so I’ll try to practice some of your likes and interests and intertwine them with Spanish so the learning of a new lenguage is not that hard as some may think, because when we like something we, unconditionally, learn everything about it and if Spanish is one of them, that’s a plus!
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