English for Beginners: Your First Steps to Speaking and Reading
English is spoken by around 1.5 billion people worldwide — and starting from scratch is more straightforward than most learners expect. The alphabet is Latin, the word order follows a clear pattern, and everyday vocabulary builds fast in the first few weeks.
What Makes English Approachable for Absolute Beginners
English has no grammatical gender. Every noun is simply a noun — there is no masculine, feminine, or neuter form to memorize alongside each word. Word order is fixed: subject, then verb, then object. That regularity makes sentences predictable from the start. Verb conjugation is also minimal at A1 level. You say I speak, you speak, we speak — and only the third-person singular adds an -s. English also borrows heavily from French, Latin, and Greek, so if you already read a European language, you will recognize hundreds of words on sight. These features give beginners an early foothold and make progress visible within days.
Your First English Words and Phrases
The first 100 words in English carry an outsized load. Research on spoken language shows that the 100 most frequent words account for roughly half of all everyday speech. In English, these include the pronouns I, you, he, she, it, we, they — plus the core verbs be, have, do, go, say, get, make, and know. Add numbers one to twenty, basic colors, and greetings like hello, goodbye, please, and thank you, and you have a working A1 toolkit. One thing beginners encounter almost immediately: English contracts constantly. I am becomes I'm; do not becomes don't; it is becomes it's. These contractions appear in nearly every sentence, so you absorb them fast through repetition.
The English Sounds That Take Practice
English has around 44 sounds but only 26 letters — which is why spelling and pronunciation often diverge. Two sounds stop most beginners: the voiced and unvoiced th. In think, the tongue rests lightly behind the upper front teeth and air flows through without vibration. In this, the same position produces a buzzing sound. Neither exists in most other languages, and both take deliberate practice. English vowels are another sticking point. Ship and sheep look similar but sound very different — a short /ɪ/ versus a long /iː/. Stress also falls in unexpected places: phoTOgraphy versus PHOtograph, both from the same root. Langula's in-browser pronunciation tool lets you say each word aloud and receive a score immediately — no app to install, no audio stored.
Common Mistakes English Beginners Make
The most frequent beginner error is forgetting the third-person -s. You say I speak and you speak, but she speaks and he speaks. That one letter trips up almost every new learner. A second trap is the make-do distinction. English does not use one general verb for both. You make a mistake, make a sandwich, make a decision — but you do homework, do the dishes, do your best. A third issue is translating prepositions directly from your first language. In English you are interested in something, good at something, and afraid of something. These combinations do not follow logic; they follow usage. Learning them as fixed phrases rather than applying rules saves a lot of frustration early on.
A Realistic Picture of Your First Weeks
In the first week of regular study — around 20 minutes a day — you will learn to introduce yourself, say where you are from, and use numbers to talk about age and price. By the end of week two, you can ask for things politely, say what you like and dislike, and describe your immediate surroundings. After a month of consistent practice, most beginners reach A1 level. That means roughly 500 to 800 words in active use, the ability to handle predictable daily situations, and enough listening comprehension for slow, clear speech. It does not mean fluency, but it means a real conversation is possible — especially in English, where native speakers are generally patient and accustomed to learners.
How the A1 Path Works in Langula
Langula's English course starts at absolute zero and runs to B2 across 80 structured lessons. The first 20 lessons cover A1 ground: greetings, numbers, essential verbs, everyday objects, and core sentence patterns. Each lesson introduces new vocabulary, then locks it in through Leitner flashcards — a spaced-repetition system with five boxes that shows you each card again just before you would forget it. Lessons with a pronunciation component let you speak into your browser's microphone; Langula scores your attempt and highlights which sounds need more work. Audio is processed in your browser and never stored on a server. When you complete an A1 block, you receive a certificate. No account is required to begin — open the app and start your first lesson now.