Most important learning priority:
Syntactical constructions


The grammar of a language consists of two distinct parts:

- the syntax refers to the construction of the sentence, i.e. where the words go in the sentence
- the morphology refers to the different forms that a word can have (e.g. conjugation of verbs).

While using the neuro-linguistic mechanisms, the Balingua® method aims at quickly assimilating all the syntactical constructions of a language. Those syntactical constructions are the prerequisites of learning the language, and the learner can only then study its grammatical specificities (conjugation, declension, etc.).

The Balingua method follows these learning priorities:

First Syntactical constructions
Then Morphology, Vocabulary

 

The Balingua® method is not a complete course in the traditional sense of the word, but it is an initiation that comes BEFORE all the other methods:

- no vocabulary list to study
- no systematic pronunciation exercises on sounds
- no grammatical theory
- no written exercises.

 

But, with the Balingua® method, the user learns within 1 hour to build sentences in the language studied:

- the grammar rules are there to be learnt implicitly;
- the pronunciation is acquired naturally;
- the vocabulary is intentionally restricted so as to free the memory and to smooth the acquisition of the structures.

Because the Balingua® method focuses on syntactical constructions,
- it makes fast and efficient learning possible;
- it complements other methods.


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