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Yesterday I finished Duolingo, the whole Spanish tree, and mostly without jumping levels (more about this below). It took four and half months, practicing 2-3 hours a day, each day. Usually cleared a full circle level in one day, spread around; sometime two or even three (there are a few tiny lessons).
If you access your profile on a PC and then edit the profile, go to languages, and there's an option there to reset or remove. You will lose all the work you've done thus far though, I believe. I've never done it, so not sure if there other repercussions. As far as I know there's no way to do the test after the fact.
It "is the official accreditation of the degree of fluency of the Spanish Language, issued and recognised by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport of Spain." Sample exams are available to gauge your level. The levels for the test are based on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) proficiency scale, with A1 being ...
Taking Placement Test Again. I took the Spanish Placement Test on DuoLingo about 2 years ago when I was starting out. Then, I took 2 years worth of Spanish courses at Uni, and now I'm at a B1 level, and I wanna start using Duolingo again, however, I'm stuck with a backlog of lessons, and taking those skip quizzes is taking too long.
so, in total 205 units. dogsandhalloween. • 8 mo. ago. You should see an upward arrow on the top left, just underneath the language flag - Tap that and it'll take you to a page outlining units and sections of the course. I'm doing Spanish too, there are 10 sections in total, smallest section has 5 units, biggest has 41.
Posted by u/iberiagabrwyindeba00 - No votes and no comments
In fact, completing every course would take around 600 hours of active learning, the amount of time generally needed to fully learn one FSI Category I language to proficiency. For languages such as Chinese (Mandarin) and Arabic, approximately 2200 hours are needed for general proficiency, and the Duolingo course only provides around 12 and ...
English/Spanish-language coverage of Mexican Soccer (Liga MX, National Team, Liga de Ascenso, Women's, Futsal, Beach Soccer, etc) and Mexican players abroad. Members Online Que no se me quiebre ninguno de estos 3.
The Japanese course on Duolingo is mainly a word learning course. Each unit will introduce you to a couple new words (between 15 and 30), then it will incorporate some of those words into sentences, and finally those sentences will try to teach a couple grammar points as well. Assuming, you get each unit to max level, most words are gonna stick.
It's just Duolingo's proprietary metric for measuring proficiency. I dunno how legit it really is, since they only offer the test for English and if people will really accept a 120 on the test as a "C1" on the CEFR. The Spanish tree supposedly gets you to 80-90, which is B1/B2, but I HIGHLY doubt it you will pass the B1 test with Duo alone.