Podcast FAQ

duolingo spanish podcast

by Prof. Vita Bosco Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
image

Can you learn a language with Duolingo?

Duolingo can aid in your journey to become fluent, but if you aren’t actively practicing the language with a native speaker or practicing your comprehension skills by listening to native conversations, then you will not become fluent.

Is Duolingo good for learning languages?

What language apps make you fluent?

  • Best Language Learning App Overall: Babbel.
  • Best App for Learning a Language From Real Native Speakers: Memrise.
  • Best Free Language Lessons: Duolingo.
  • Best App Learning Accurate Pronunciation: Mondly.

What languages does Duolingo speak?

While they’re similar in concept, they differ a lot in the specifics:

  • Duolingo offers a skill tree of lessons that use listening exercises, flashcards, and multiple choice questions to drill you on new words, phrases, and sentences. ...
  • Memrise offers similar lessons to Duolingo, introducing new words and phrases with flashcards, listening exercises, and more. ...
  • Babbel is different from the other two. ...

What are the best Duolingo courses?

What are the best and the worst courses on Duolingo? Duolingo is a great tool to learn/practice/play with languages. Unfortunately, all courses are not the same, and some are better than others. "Vietnamese for English speakers" is for me a very bad course. There is no lesson for the tones (which are really important in this language), often no ...

image

Are Duolingo Spanish podcasts free?

Yes, Duolingo Podcasts are 100% free!

Is Duolingo good for Spanish?

Duolingo is one of the most popular apps in the world for learning Spanish, and for good reason. With a totally free base version and a cool course design that gamifies learning Spanish, people rave about this product.

What kind of Spanish does Duolingo teach?

European SpanishThe first major downside to the Duolingo Spanish program is that there is no distinction between the Spanish from Latin American and from Spain. Lingodeer and Rosetta Stone allow you to choose between the two accents and vocabularies, whereas Duolingo only teaches European Spanish.

What does podcast mean in Spanish?

podcast n. (internet broadcast) (voz inglesa) podcast nm. redifusión multimedia nf + adj.

Has anyone become fluent from Duolingo?

You can learn as many words or sentences as you want, but until you're able to have a conversation with another person, you'll never be fluent. Or, according to the CEFR model, you won't even be halfway there.

Is Babbel better than Duolingo?

After thoroughly testing out and reviewing each language learning program, we feel that Babbel is better than Duolingo for multiple reasons. Based on the strength of their curriculum, teaching style and delivery, we rate Babbel as the superior app over Duolingo.

Is Duolingo a waste of time?

It's a waste of time. In fact, it's just as bad as the education system Von Ahn criticizes. Duolingo outsources its translation services, allowing for awkward sentences to slip in undetected. And translation (the core of its platform) is already widely known to be an ineffective way to learn a language.

Is Rosetta Stone better than Duolingo?

Yes. After thoroughly testing out and reviewing each language learning app, we found Rosetta Stone to be a superior program to Duolingo. While we like Duolingo's gamification of learning, Rosetta Stone is simply more comprehensive and effective.

How long does it take to finish Duolingo Spanish?

EDIT: According to the answers it takes between 4 and 6 months to finish a Duolingo course, although if you work hard you may finish it in 3 months.

Episode 95: Un viaje en ruedas (A Wheeled Journey)

In 2011, Mónica Mera survived an accident that left her paraplegic and emotionally devastated. She thought her days of adventure were over, until she received an invitation to join a special journey on the famous Camino de Santiago trail in Spain.

Episode 94: The Rodin Thief - Art Mysteries, Episode 6

After a famous sculpture by Auguste Rodin goes missing, and then dramatically reappears, a Chilean filmmaker sets out to uncover the motives of the mysterious art student responsible for the theft.

Episode 93: The Secret Life of María Lejárraga - Art Mysteries, Episode 5

When two literature professors discover that a woman named María Lejárraga was behind some of the greatest Spanish literary works of the 20th century, they set out to learn why her name was omitted from history, and do everything in their power to restore her work to her name.

Episode 91: The Fake Matisse - Art Mysteries, Episode 3

After a famous Matisse painting from a Venezuelan museum mysteriously shows up in a Miami art gallery, a journalist investigates and discovers the unthinkable: for years, the so-called masterpiece on display at the museum was a fake.

What is the most famous cultural tradition in Argentina?

Tango is Argentina’s most iconic cultural tradition. But for a hundred years, tangos have only been written from the perspective of men. The conductor of “La empoderada” or “The Empowered,…

What is Pablo Picasso's most famous work?

Pablo Picasso’s most famous work, the anti-war mural called Guernica, is returned to Spain under a veil of secrecy after 44 years outside the country during the Franco dictatorship.A transc…. 23 min. AUG 5, 2021.

Did Marisa Rosales like cars?

Marisa Rosales loved cars as a kid. But it wasn’t until she discovered lowriders as a young woman that she found a car community connected to her Mexican-American identity.A transcr…

Who is the host of Duolingo?

These are not language lessons; they’re life lessons through language. Hosted by Martina Castro, co-founder of NPR’s Radio Ambulante.

Did Marisa Rosales like cars?

Marisa Rosales loved cars as a kid. But it wasn’t until she discovered lowriders as a young woman that she found a car community connected to her Mexican-American identity. A transcript of this episode is available at podcast.duolingo.com.

Episode 13: Refugiados

Stella Forner will never forget her first wedding anniversary. It was March of 1976 and she spent the day at the Mexican consulate in Montevideo, Uruguay, which was in the midst of a military dictatorship. She, her husband and their baby weren’t there for a romantic celebration but to ask for political asylum.

Episode 12: Sin vergüenza

Maria Murriel used to struggle with living between languages and cultures, and for many years tried to hide the accent that marked her as an immigrant in the United States. Eventually, she realized that what she had been treating as a challenge was actually a key part of her identity.

Episode 11: La voz de la calle

Fabio Manuppella used to walk by homeless people on the streets of Buenos Aires thinking they must have done something to deserve their fate. Until he had to learn first-hand what it means to lose everything you have.

Episode 10: Los guerrilleros

María Clara Calle grew up hearing about the atrocities committed by the FARC rebels in Colombia. She never imagined that one day she would not only meet them, but eat and sleep among them, deep in their territory, as they thought about their role in the future of peace in their country.

Episode 9: La maleta azul

A mother and her young daughter leave Mexico, escaping violence in search of a better life. It’s a trip with a few unexpected turns that ends up taking longer than planned. But their constant companion was there for them whenever they needed to escape: an old blue suitcase.

Episode 23: El regalo (The Gift)

When David Martínez was four years old, he and his parents took a bus to the north of Colombia to visit extended family for Christmas. They had many gifts with them, including a ham for the family dinner. But what should have been an uneventful trip turned into a dangerous journey that David would never forget.

Episode 22: Autostop en Afganistán (Hitchhiking in Afghanistan)

After the September 11th attacks in 2001, Juan Pablo Villarino was dismayed to see how people were starting to lose trust in the ultimate good of humanity. So he figured the best way to prove he was still right to trust total strangers was to hitchhike through the epicenter of the war on terror.

Episode 21: La nana (The Nanny)

When she was growing up in Santiago, Chile, Yasna Mussa says it was common for her friend’s families to employ nannies. Even though these workers, mostly women, spent most of their days caring for these families, Yasna remembers them being somewhat invisible. She didn’t take notice of this until she became a nanny herself in a foreign country.

Episode 20: Antártida (Antarctica)

Federico Bianchini had always dreamt of traveling to Antarctica from his native Argentina. But little did he know that the great white continent had a plan of its own for him once he got there.

Episode 19: Flamenco

Flamenco is famous for the emotional intensity of its songs and dances. Argentinian Samanta Gamarra discovered that this ancient art from southern Spain has another quality that is less known for, the ability to heal wounds, the deepest ones.

Episode 2: Sin miedo

When Belén Fernández Llanos turned 28, she decided to move from Chile to Argentina with her boyfriend of ten years to start a new life together. Belén was ready for an adventure… But the one that awaited her in Buenos Aires would turn out very differently than what she had imagined.

Episode 1: Mi héroe, mi amigo

Welcome to the Duolingo Spanish Podcast. From the makers of Duolingo, the most popular language-learning app, comes a new podcast that delivers fascinating real-life stories in easy-to-understand Spanish with English narration.

Episode 18: La testigo (The witness)

When Andrea Krichmar was a girl, she spent an afternoon at her friend’s dad’s house. This was during the dictatorship in Argentina, and that afternoon, without knowing it, Andrea witnessed a scene that would change her life and make her key to the country’s historic return to democracy.

Episode 17: Aventuras con mi padre

When Sonia González was a child, her father was the center of her universe, always leading the family on adventures to different parts of Venezuela. But one day, all of that changed and Sonia and her siblings became the leaders of the most challenging adventure the family had faced yet.

Episode 16: Shakespeare en la montaña

When Nicolás Barreto went up the mountains of Venezuela for the first time, he was chasing after a girl. There he worked alongside her for a month putting together a play that would inaugurate the highest theater in the country. He came down from that mountain transformed, filled with a love he wasn’t expecting.

Episode 15: Nuestro Naranjito

Classifying for the World Cup is an emotional roller coaster for most soccer fans, but in 2018, that was especially true for Peruvians, who hadn’t seen their country compete on the world stage in over three decades.

Episode 14: Piji y yo

In Perú, writer Marco Avilés and his dog Piji were inseparable. But when Marco decided they should pursue better lives in the United States, and Marco found himself working for a top chef, their bond and sense of adventure would be tested in ways he had never imagined.

image
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9