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Teach Conversational Punjabi?


TuhiNirankar
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Wjkk wjkf!

So i am very fluent in punjabi which means i can read, write, speak punjabi,,

Soo, Sumone wants me to teach them how to speak conversational punjabi but i have no idea how or where to start?

Any ideas??

or like is there sum kind of english teacher curriculum thingy i could use towards teaching how to speak punjabi,,

I am teaching sumone who understands punjabi but speaks very poorly and doesn't understand big words,,

:D thanks!!

:happy: please reccomend books you know of that coulod be of help,

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1. you should practice speaking punjabi - the more you converse with this person, the more confident they will become in speaking.

2. help them learn commonly used phrases - helps build up the accuracy and the fluency of their speech. more confidence to speak in front of people

3. stay away from teaching them grammar - you want them to know instinctively which tense/gender of word is most suitable.

4. build their confidence - if we speak with confidence, minor errors in our speech can easily go unnoticed. also they should surround themselves with punjabi.

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If you have access to short stories, give the person one story to read. If there are question/answers at the end of the chapter book, ask person to find answers for it.

Make up some jumbled up sentences and ask to put them in order.

Tru to have a conversation with person in punjabi and ask to answer to you only in punjabi. Help where person needs push to have the sentence going.

ARE'nt WE LUCKY TO BE BORN IN THE ENVIRONMENT OF LEARNING GURU'S LIPI. GURUan dee boli.

Oh, I feel so lucky.

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Wjkk wjkf!

So i am very fluent in punjabi which means i can read, write, speak punjabi,,

Soo, Sumone wants me to teach them how to speak conversational punjabi but i have no idea how or where to start?

Any ideas??

or like is there sum kind of english teacher curriculum thingy i could use towards teaching how to speak punjabi,,

I am teaching sumone who understands punjabi but speaks very poorly and doesn't understand big words,,

:D thanks!!

:happy: please reccomend books you know of that coulod be of help,

100% serious answer. The person should take there holidays in India, Punjab. Please I ain't taking the mick. Both my parents were born in UK so at home I always spoke English, only with my Bibi I spoke semi-broken Punjabi and my grandad also spoke English / Pinglish. I used to go India nearly every year since my childood and that really helped me with the speaking and pronounciation, as I could understand it, just not speak it. Anyways it's not possible to go there every year so just conversing with people who speak Punjabi helps alot more than Dr J.S Nagra's Panjabi made easy. Thats where I started to learn how to read Gurmukhi last year, I can read Gurmukhi to a decent standard now.

Seriously having people conversing with you in Punjabi really helps, my kids, don't speak very good Punjabi at all as we live in London, they understand but speak very poor. But my brothers family live near to my parents / Bibi and near their nana/nani so they speak good level of Punjabi

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thanx for all the help :)

i think its going to be more complex if i am teaching a gora-sikh,

so they have been in sikhi for a long time which means they understand phrases that are used over n over again but for punjabis we are born in a punjabi family so its really really easy to understand punjabi and with lil bit practice its easy to upgrade our punjabi,

The focus of the one on one class would be just teaching conversational punjabi

hmmm :umm: :huh:

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