It's basically what is called "General American," meaning American English that lacks regional, ethnic, or class markers. It's what a majority of Americans speak, and what we think of if we say someone "doesn't have an accent" or "has a neutral accent" or talks like a newscaster.
See e.g. https://babbel.com/en/magazine/united-states-of-accents-general-american
From my personal experience, the best way to learn a language from scratch is by using emotions, visual stimulations (pics, videos) and audio. I use Babbel.com to learn Spanish without ANY experience. Rosetta Stone should be even better but it takes longer to reach a solid word pool and basic knowledge about grammar and sentence structures. I'd definitely not start with vocabulary lists. They are very effective after a while but almost completely useless to get a basic idea of languages.
Ho sentito dire che se hai accesso a informazioni i top secret della nato/eu Putin è felicissimo di farti un corso personale gratuito. In caso tu non voglia commettere alto tradimento io mi trovo bene con https://babbel.com/. Lo uso per tedesco ed è ben fatto. Magari è buono per il russo
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
At first, I only spent like an hour a day, two or more on weekends, but since I'm currently recovering from leg surgery and practically can't go anywhere, I got plenty of time to spend on chasing after this course. Give or take around 6 hours a day. But Duolingo is actually my secondary learning platform for Spanish, my primary focus is actually on Babbel.com as it is more academic and offers more detailed information. Complemented by regular usage of HelloTalk and WhatsApp to talk with the native Spanish speakers.
The "POLSKI krok po kroku" book series is one that is used in Polish classes in Poland, I have found anyway. They have a pretty good website which has a good online version of the book series along with other useful lessons which are pretty affordable. The Pronunciation one can be quite helpful as it can be a hard thing to get your head around, and the Grammar one also has good case drills. There is a trial period where you can try it all out for no cost. The website is here: https://e-polish.eu/
Babbel (babbel.com) also has a Polish course which is a good compliment to Duolingo, and it also has specialty lessons on cases and pronunciation.
Overall I have found mixing it up between the three of them is complimentary and also allows me to learn with other methodologies when one gets boring.
I actually subscribed to Babbel.com to learn the language just so I could understand the texts on the walls and such. And I did learn the cyrillic alphabet on my one month subscription!
usa duolindo, para ti serve, se já tiveste francês é só reavivar a memoria, escusas de tar a gastar dinheiro... mas isto é a minha opinião, só tive 2 anos de francês e o duolingo serviu.
tens também sites gratuitos, tipo
bbc languages
bonjour de france
entre muitos outros, estes são só os sites de que me lembrei.