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The best way to learn Serbian is by speaking the language.

Anyone learning Serbian as a new language often spends hours cramming vocabulary, swotting up on grammar rules and reading texts. All of this is useful – and yet it doesn’t go far enough. Because language is, above all, a living, spoken phenomenon. If you really want to understand Serbian, you have to speak it too.

That may sound trivial, but it is well-established by science. Active speaking activates different networks in the brain than passive reading or listening. Motor memory, auditory processing and emotional association all interplay. A word that I have spoken, heard and perhaps felt something whilst doing so sticks in my mind more firmly than one I have seen ten times on flashcards.

There are three aspects of language learning in particular that can only be practised through active speaking:

Facial expressions & gestures
Every language has its own repertoire of non-verbal communication. Speaking forces us to incorporate this physical dimension – and is what allows us to fully grasp the meaning.

Intonation
Whether something is a question, a statement or a request is often determined solely by the melody. Intonation patterns cannot be read – they must be practised and heard.

Speech rhythm
Every language has its own temporal pattern – where the stress falls, how long syllables sound. This rhythm only becomes intuitive through regular speaking.

Then there is the psychological aspect: anyone who speaks Serbian makes mistakes – and learns in the process. Mistakes in conversation are immediately flagged up, through confused looks, questions or friendly corrections. This immediate feedback is more valuable than any red pen in the margin of an essay.

Of course, it takes courage to start speaking – especially at the beginning, when the words still stumble and the accent sounds strange. But it is precisely this stumbling that is a sign of learning. Speaking a language means learning it with your whole body – with your breath, lips, sense of rhythm and attention.

Learning Serbian through a language exchange

A particularly effective method for focusing on speaking right from the start is learning through language tandems. This involves meeting someone who speaks Serbian as their mother tongue and wants to learn another language. The exchange is mutual: you take turns speaking in both languages, gently correct each other and learn not from textbooks, but from real conversations about real topics.

Language tandem creates exactly the space that language learners need: a safe, motivating environment where mistakes are welcome and authenticity counts. Anyone learning Serbian through language tandem isn’t just practising vocabulary – they discover what Serbian really sounds like when you live the language.

Find tandem partners in over 70 languages ✌️

Last active: 4.6.2026

Response rate: Excellent

Speaks

  • Bosnian
  • Croatian
  • Serbian

Learns

  • German
  • English

Marjan

  • Zürich
  • 50
  • ☕️ In-Person

Radujem se da upoznam nove ljude i da podelimo razgovor uz šetnju ili kafu .Spaziergang oder Kaffee…. Volim rad sa ljudima, kreativnost i razgovor. Priroda, planine i introspektivni trenuci daju mi snagu. Još učim nemački (ich lerne Deutsch) i voleo bih da vežbam kroz razgovor. Za mene su prijateljstvo i Ehrlichkeit važni u životu.

Hobbies and interests

Putovanja, knjige, filozofija, priroda, sport. Učim jezike ..Sprachen lernen…

Last active: 14.6.2026

Response rate: Good

Speaks

  • Serbian
  • German

Learns

  • German

Slavica

  • Aarau Rohr
  • Female
  • 32
  • 💻 Online
  • ☕️ In-Person

Ich bin Mama eines Babys und reise gerne, um neue Orte zu entdecken. In meiner Freizeit tanze ich und spiele Schach als Hobby. Zurzeit lerne ich Deutsch und würde gerne jemanden finden, mit dem ich regelmässig reden kann.

Hobbies and interests

Reisen, Tanzen

Last active: 13.2.2026

Response rate: Excellent

Speaks

  • Serbian

Learns

  • German
  • French

Marko

  • Zürich
  • Male
  • 38
  • ☕️ In-Person

Hello everybody! I am a 36-year old Serbian guy, currently working in as a researcher at ETH Zurich. I would like to improve my German (B2) and/or French (B2). In return I can offer native Serbian or fluent English.

Hobbies and interests

sports, nature, travels

Last active: 22.5.2026

Speaks

  • German
  • Serbian
  • Swiss German

Learns

  • English
  • Spanish
  • Russian

Suzana

  • Zürich
  • Female
  • ☕️ In-Person

Hi there, I studied Applied Linguistics (interpreting and translation) English, French and Russian. Unfortunately, I have no opportunity to practise my French/Russian. Since my Erasmus in Paris, I didn't use my French at all. By the way, I already have experience in teaching German and I would be happy to help you to improve your German

Hobbies and interests

Travelling, cooking, cinema, literature, sport, hiking

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