7 Actions to Learn Any Language Fast

Principles are good, but you need action.

In my TEDx talk, alongside the 5 principles of accelerated language acquisition, I proposed seven actions that turn those principles into daily progress. These actions aren’t theoretical. They’re what I used when I learned Mandarin Chinese in six months, and they’re what thousands of Kungfu English learners have used since.

Here, I’ll go into each one in detail, adapted specifically to the challenges of mastering a non-Western, non-Latin-based language — though these actions work for any language.

1. Listen a Lot (“Brain Soaking”)

Immerse yourself in listening as much as you can. Podcasts, songs, dialogues, movies, conversations overheard in a café. Even if you don’t understand — especially if you don’t understand — this “soaking” helps your brain attune to the sounds, tones, rhythms, and patterns that were once unfamiliar to you.

The first week can feel like noise. Or “mush”, as I like to call it. It almost feels like you’re listening to words through a wall of water. Then, suddenly, it doesn’t.

You won’t notice the shift happening. But your brain is doing enormous work beneath the surface — identifying patterns, calibrating expectations, building a mental model of the sound system. This is the same process babies go through in their first months of life. It works because it’s how the brain is wired.

Don’t skip this. Don’t rush through it. It’s the foundation.

2. Get Meaning First

Right from the beginning, focus on the connection between the sounds you hear (words) and what they mean. Use visuals, gestures, body language, the context in which you find yourself. Only use translation as a last resort because if you rely on translation you are training your brain to use inefficient pathways. This blocks you in your journey to fluency.

Before drilling characters or pinyin, try to understand what is being said. Always focus n meaning before form. Comprehension before production.

Your understanding grows beneath the surface. You may not notice it day to day — but you will notice it month to month. One morning you’ll realise you understood something without thinking about it. That’s the system working.

The key here is comprehensible input: language experienced in a way where the meaning is clear from context, even when the words themselves are new. Pictures, gestures, actions, and real-world context are your best friends at this stage.

3. Start Mixing

Language is inherently creative. With just a few verbs, nouns, and adjectives, you can start combining them to make real meaning. Don’t wait for perfection. Use what you know to begin expressing yourself.

You will say clumsy things. Good. That’s how “the machine” learns (that’s your brain).

“I want… that… eat” is imperfect grammar but perfectly clear communication. And communication is the goal. Grammar will tidy itself up over time, through exposure and practice, the same way a child’s language gradually becomes more sophisticated.

The mistake people make is waiting until they can speak perfectly without error. And this NEVER happens. Just listen to native speakers in conversation! It’s full of non-perfect language. Remember, you’ll never feel ready. So start mixing as early as you can.

4. Focus on the Core

Not all vocabulary is equal. You learn quickly when you prioritise high-frequency words and phrases native speakers use daily: pronouns, simple verbs, question phrases, common connectors.

Research shows that a core set of vocabulary gives you disproportionate communicative leverage. Just 66 words account for roughly 50% of daily conversation. Around 2,000 words cover 80%. And 3,000 words will carry you through 98% of everyday situations.

In plain English: it’s the best return on investment you’ll ever get.

Don’t let any course convince you that you need to learn 5,000 words before you can have a conversation. Focus on the core, and the rest fills in naturally around it.

5. Use Your Toolbox from Day One

In your first week, you can already say things like:

  • “What does that mean?” (这是什么意思?)
  • “Repeat, please.” (请再说一遍)
  • “I don’t understand.” (我不明白)
  • “How do you say ___?” (____怎么说)

These phrases are your survival kit. They keep conversations going even when your vocabulary is tiny. It’s not about polishing perfection; it’s about using the language as a living tool.

If you only learn one phrase early on, make it the one that keeps the conversation going. For Mandarin, something like “zhè shì shénme yìsi?” (what does this mean?) opens every door.

6. Find a “Language Parent”

This might be the most underestimated action on the list.

A language parent is someone who listens patiently even when you’re less than perfect, doesn’t correct every error, and cares about whether they understand what you mean. This person supports you emotionally and linguistically — like a parent does for a child learning to talk.

Think about how parents interact with toddlers. They don’t say “incorrect verb conjugation, try again.” They say “oh, you want the red ball? Here you go!” They understand the meaning, reflect it back, and model the correct form naturally. The child absorbs it without shame or stress.

The emotional safety this creates is not a “nice-to-have.” It’s a multiplier. It directly affects your psychophysiological state, keeping your brain open, relaxed, and receptive.

At Speech Genie, we are building the language parent concept directly into the AI. The system is being designed to understand your meaning, respond supportively, and model correct language — without punishing you for mistakes.

7. Copy the Face

You have about 43 muscles in your face that shape pronunciation. You absolutely need to train these muscles to get the pronunciation that leads to native-like speech. Watch native speakers closely and let your subconscious mimic lip shapes, facial movements, and — when you can see them — tongue positions. Feel how the words resonate in your face and throat.

This is physical training, not intellectual training. Your mouth needs to learn new shapes, new coordinations, new default positions. No amount of reading about pronunciation will substitute for physically practising it.

This can feel awkward at first. That’s normal. Keep going — it works. Be aware that when you are doing it right your face will actually hurt, just like your body hurts when you start doing unfamiliar exercise!

One More Thing: Direct Connect

Beyond these seven actions, there’s a meta-skill that ties everything together: direct connect.

Build internal pathways that connect what you already know — images, feelings, physical sensations, mental representations — directly to new sounds in your new language, bypassing translation. Don’t go from Chinese → English → meaning. Go from Chinese → meaning.

Over time, this becomes automatic. One day you’ll realise you “just understood” without converting anything into English first. That moment is hard to forget.

Taking Action Today

These seven actions aren’t sequential — you can and should practise several simultaneously. Brain soak while commuting. Mix words while walking around and observing the world. Copy the face while watching a show.

If you want to understand the science behind why these actions work, read about the 5 principles of accelerated language acquisition. And if you’re curious about why traditional methods often fail, I’ve written about that too.

The path to fluency is simpler than most people think. Not easy — simple. These actions are the roadmap.

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