Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How to learn Mongolian systematically?

How to learn Mongolian systematically?

I'm Mongolian, too. I grew up in an ordinary public school. I was not born in a Mongolian school. I didn't know a word of Chinese before primary school and couldn't speak Mongolian in high school. My father was very anxious. He bought me a complete set of Mongolian textbooks for primary schools, forcing me to learn by myself from Mongolian letters. The benefits of learning Mongolian are the same as those of English. After fully learning the alphabet and basic pronunciation methods, you can read those words completely even if you don't know the meaning at all. Language is a big problem, especially for newcomers who have not been exposed to Altaic languages. By the way, Mongolian words and sentence structures are full of changes. For example, a letter is written differently at the beginning, middle and end of a word, which means there are three ways to write a letter (the common problem of Sogdian letters). My father began to show me mongolia film when I finished reciting the textbooks for the fourth and fifth grades in Mongolian schools? On the contrary, I can easily get used to those Slavic letters. My place is a Mongolian autonomous prefecture, and I have many relatives. I can master the basic expressions by listening more and asking more questions.

Any language has its own characteristics, its own cultural characteristics, its own unique pronunciation, its own unique language structure and grammar. If you want to learn any language well, the most important thing is to practice frequently, be familiar with its pronunciation and grammar, and speak every language often, so that you can memorize it properly and not be unfamiliar. Learning every language requires professional practice and your own efforts.