Choose your language →

Many English learners make one surprisingly common mistake:

“Can you learn me English?”

Native speakers immediately understand what you mean.

But the sentence is incorrect.

Why?

Because English separates giving knowledge from receiving knowledge.

The two verbs describe the same process from different perspectives.


The Core Difference

The easiest rule is simple:

teach = give knowledge

learn = receive knowledge

Think of one classroom.

The teacher teaches.

The student learns.

The same lesson.

Two different viewpoints.


Using TEACH

Use teach when someone gives information or skills to another person.

Examples:

  • She teaches English.
  • He taught us German grammar.
  • My father taught me to drive.

The knowledge moves from the teacher to the learner.


Using LEARN

Use learn when you gain knowledge or develop a skill.

Examples:

  • I am learning English.
  • She learned Spanish in Madrid.
  • They learned how to swim.

The learner receives knowledge.


One Situation — Two Perspectives

Imagine a lesson.

The teacher explains grammar.

The students understand it.

From the teacher’s perspective:

  • The teacher teaches grammar.

From the students’ perspective:

  • The students learn grammar.

Nothing changes except the point of view.


The Most Common Mistakes

Mistake 1

❌ Can you learn me English?

✔️ Can you teach me English?


Mistake 2

❌ My teacher learned me pronunciation.

✔️ My teacher taught me pronunciation.


Mistake 3

❌ I teach English from my teacher.

✔️ I learn English from my teacher.


Why Learners Confuse These Verbs

Many languages use one verb or closely related constructions for both ideas.

English prefers a clear distinction:

Who gives the knowledge?

Who receives the knowledge?

Once you answer that question, the correct verb becomes obvious.


A Simple Way to Remember

Ask yourself:

Am I giving knowledge?

→ teach

Am I receiving knowledge?

→ learn

That’s the entire logic.


Related Articles


Learn Languages Through Logic

Real fluency comes not from memorizing thousands of words, but from understanding how ideas are connected.

Explore English learning opportunities here:


© Tymur Levitin
Founder & Director
Levitin Language School