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Monday, May 27, 2019

Using Google Translate to Learn Languages by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Using Google Translate to Learn Languages by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget


I do have some tips for learning how to listen and respond and ask questions in German that I used when I lived there.  This is not all there is to learning another language obviously, but many students memorize rote dialogs that fail them when they are in real life situations.

I did not have a German class when I was in Germany and all of my neighbors in Stuttgart were Italian or Croatian.  So, I devised a method for learning how to speak German using Google Translate and its microphone function.

Basically, I would write out a question I needed to have an answer to and brainstormed several responses.  I would type the questions and responses into Google Translate one by one and write out the German sentence.  Then, I would get the pronunciation from the Google Translate microphone and practice saying the questions and responses.

I used this method to develop questions and responses for the following 31 real-life situations:

1 – making reservations at a restaurant by telephone

2 – listening to see if a plane, train, bus, or boat is late or has changed gates and asking to verify if you have correctly understood

3 – making and canceling appointments by phone at the doctor, dentist, manicurist, and hair stylist

4 – ordering in a fast food restaurant (very high pressure situation)

5 –ordering at a restaurant

6 – buying train and bus tickets

7 – ordering items in a grocery store such as fish, cheese, and deli items (getting a store advertising newsletter helps with food and drink vocabulary)

8 – getting gas at a gas station

9 – asking for directions

10 – listening to weather broadcasts and asking about the weather

11- asking to set up a post office box in Germany

12 – asking to open up a bank account

13 – calling emergency services to report a problem

14 – describing medical conditions

15 – asking for a floor on an elevator

16 – taking a phone message

17 – asking for items at a pharmacy

18 – describing what you want at a clothing store

19 – getting a cab and giving your home address and preferred route home

20 – buying movie tickets

21 – changing airline reservations

22 – making airline reservations and cancellations

23 – asking where items are in a grocery store

24 – ordering items at a bakery

25 – asking for a restaurant bill

26 – asking for a wi – fi code and/or password

27 – asking where the bathroom is

28 – ordering a drink in a restaurant or bar

29 – asking for items at an outdoor market

30 – making arrangements for service people to come to your home by phone such as plumbers, electricians, and painters

31 – ordering items at a butcher

I used this method to learn to speak Spanish, when I was a youth services librarian in California as well, so I knew it would work with German as well when I lived there for five years.

If you have a language-learning partner, you can role-play these situations and think of how to generate vocabulary for more extensive conversations.


By Ruth Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books