Global Learning. Personal Approach.

Every month, thousands of people search for the same thing:

  • learn English in 30 days
  • speak English fast
  • English in one month
  • how to become fluent quickly

The internet gives them exactly what they want to hear.

“Learn English in 10 days.”

“Become fluent in one month.”

“Just memorize these 300 words.”

Most people click because they want hope.

There is nothing wrong with that.

The problem is that hope without reality usually leads to disappointment.

So let us answer the question honestly.

Can you learn English in 30 days?

Yes — but only if you understand what “learn English” really means.

You will not become fully fluent in one month.

But you absolutely can:

  • understand basic conversations;
  • learn the most important words and phrases;
  • introduce yourself;
  • ask for help;
  • speak in simple sentences;
  • and stop being afraid of English.

That is already much more than many people think.

If your goal is not just to memorize random phrases but to build real English step by step, start here:

What You Can Realistically Do in 30 Days

If you study consistently, even 20–30 minutes a day can change a lot.

Week 1: Understand the Basics

During the first week, most beginners can learn:

  • greetings;
  • numbers;
  • days of the week;
  • basic questions;
  • simple present tense;
  • around 30–50 useful words.

For example:

  • Hello.
  • My name is…
  • I am from…
  • I need help.
  • Where is…?
  • I do not understand.

These phrases may seem small, but they already allow you to survive in a real situation.

If you need a basic vocabulary list, read:

Week 2: Build Simple Sentences

After you know some words, you can begin to combine them.

For example:

  • I work online.
  • I live in Poland.
  • I want coffee.
  • I do not speak English very well.
  • I am learning every day.

This is the moment when many people suddenly feel:

“Maybe I really can do this.”

And they are right.

The problem is that this is also the moment when many people stop.

They understand some words. They read simple texts. They watch a few videos.

Then they think they “know English.”

But understanding is not the same as speaking.

Week 3: Discover the Difference Between Knowing and Using

At this stage, many students know the word, but cannot use it naturally.

For example, they know:

  • do
  • make
  • say
  • tell
  • work
  • job

But they still do not know which word is correct in a real sentence.

That is why people say things like:

  • “I made my homework.”
  • “He said me.”
  • “I have a very interesting work.”

The words are almost correct.

But English is not only vocabulary. It is logic.

That is why many students can read an article and understand everything — but then cannot say one sentence themselves.

If you want to understand why this happens, read:

Week 4: Start Speaking Before You Feel Ready

Most people wait too long.

They think:

“I will speak when my English is perfect.”

But no one starts speaking because they are ready.

People become ready because they start speaking.

Even after only one month, you can already:

  • answer basic questions;
  • talk about yourself;
  • order food;
  • ask for directions;
  • write short messages;
  • understand simple videos;
  • have a short conversation.

That is not fluency.

But it is the beginning of fluency.

And beginnings matter.

The Biggest Lie About Learning English Fast

The biggest lie is not that English can be learned quickly.

The biggest lie is that you can do it without practice.

Many websites promise results if you:

  • read one article;
  • memorize one list;
  • watch one video;
  • download one app.

But language is not information.

Language is a skill.

Reading about swimming is not the same as swimming.

Reading about English is not the same as speaking English.

That is why students often tell me:

“I understand everything when I read. But when I need to speak, nothing comes.”

This is normal.

Because passive knowledge always comes before active language.

The only way forward is to practice before you feel comfortable.

So How Fast Can You Really Learn English?

That depends on your goal.

If You Want to Travel

You can learn enough English for travel in 2–6 weeks.

If You Want Everyday Conversation

You usually need several months of regular speaking and listening.

If You Want Work, Immigration, or Exams

You will probably need a longer plan, because real communication requires more than memorized phrases.

That is exactly why Levitin Language School works differently.

We do not promise magic.

We help people:

  • understand how English really works;
  • stop being afraid of mistakes;
  • learn to think in English;
  • and build real speaking step by step.

You can continue here:

Final Thought

You do not need 10 years before you can speak.

But you also do not need false promises.

Thirty days are enough to start.

Thirty days are enough to understand the basics.

Thirty days are enough to prove to yourself that you are capable.

And after that, the real work begins.


Author: Tymur Levitin — Founder & Director, Levitin Language School / Language Learnings

https://levitintymur.com/

Telegram: @START_SCHOOL_TYMUR_LEVITIN

© Tymur Levitin