“Should I be watching Portuguese films with English subtitles, or is that just encouraging translation in my head?”
This brilliant question from Pete in Manchester gets to the heart of one of the biggest challenges language learners face: how to stop translating in your head.
It's a question I could honestly talk about for 7 million years (but don't worry, I won't!).
If you've been told to “stop translating in your head,” you've probably wondered how on earth you're supposed to do that.
Well, here's the thing – that advice, whilst well-intentioned, isn't actually very helpful. Let me explain why, and more importantly, show you what actually works.
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If you prefer watching videos to reading, hit play on the video version of this post at the top of this page. Otherwise, here's what you'll discover in this post:
Table of Contents
Why Translation Is Actually Inevitable (And That's OK)
Here's something that might surprise you: translation is inevitable.
Think about it logically – if you don't know what's being said in the language you're learning, what are you going to do? Just ignore it? Of course not!
You're going to try to understand. And the only way we can understand something unfamiliar is to translate it into English or at least have a go at it.
Translation is inevitable because language is fundamentally about communication. If you have any interest whatsoever in understanding what's being said, you're going to translate.
I certainly do when I start learning a new language – I translate everything because I have to understand how the language works.
Oh look, in Chinese it's also subject-verb-object – that's really helpful!
But in Japanese, it's subject-object-verb – now that's interesting!
This comparison work is genuinely useful when you're starting out.
The Real Problem: When Translation Stops Being Helpful
The issue isn't translation itself – it's when you get stuck translating everything, even at higher levels. Here's when translation becomes a problem:
At beginner level: Translation comparisons with English are incredibly useful for understanding basic grammar and structure.
At intermediate to advanced level: These comparisons stop being useful because you need to learn the nuances, little tricks, words, phrases and inflections that give the language its colour and meaning. There often isn't a direct translation for these elements.
Take the Portuguese word saudade – you can translate it into English, but not in a good way. There's no perfect English equivalent, and that's exactly the point.
The Key Mindset Shift: Learning To Live With Ambiguity
Here's the crucial breakthrough you need to make: you must learn to live with ambiguity.
I've learned Japanese, Cantonese, and Arabic – languages that couldn't be more different from English.
Looking back, I can pinpoint exactly when I stopped translating everything: it was when I learned to be comfortable not understanding every single word.
When you insist on understanding every word you hear, several things happen:
It slows you down massively
You lose focus on the bigger picture
You get stuck in the weeds instead of following the conversation
You miss the overall meaning whilst fixating on individual words
One of my strengths as a language learner is that I can look above the word level, even above the sentence level, and focus on the higher communication.
If there are words or even complete sentences I don't understand, I don't let that bother me. I focus on continuing the conversation as best I can.
How To Stop Translating In Your Head: A 5-Step Strategy
Step 1: Focus on Patterns, Not Individual Words
Your job isn't to learn every word – it's to notice patterns. Every language has patterns that are used throughout:
Grammar patterns
Words that commonly go together
Phrases that are frequently used
Inflections that change meaning
Action: When studying (whether from textbooks or conversation practice), be on the lookout for these patterns. Don't just learn isolated words.
Step 2: Notice and Connect
Here's one of the key skills of successful language learners: noticing.
Notice patterns in your textbook
Notice the same patterns in conversation
Notice them again in films or podcasts
Then start trying to use them yourself
This cross-referencing helps patterns gradually infiltrate your vocabulary and knowledge. It doesn't happen overnight, but it will happen.
Step 3: Work with Phrases and Complete Sentences
Always deal in phrases or complete sentences, not individual words. If you hear something brilliant in a Portuguese film, learn the complete phrase, not just one word from it.
This approach helps ensure you're always seeing the bigger picture rather than getting too micro with your focus.
Step 4: Separate Study Time from Exposure Time
This is crucial: distinguish between your study time and your downtime.
Study time: Go through material in depth, look for grammar patterns, analyse the language.
Downtime (like watching films): Relax, enjoy it, turn off those English subtitles, and just let your brain soak it up. There's too much in a film for you to understand everything, so don't try to. Just be present with the language.
A film isn't a good study resource – it's good for exposure to the language. So watch films every night by all means, but chill out and let the language infiltrate your brain naturally.
Step 5: Use All Four Skills
If you find yourself always watching films, do something different. If you only ever study textbooks, do something different. If you only ever speak, again, do something different.
Try to use all four skills (reading, writing, listening, speaking) because this increases the likelihood of you noticing those new verbs, grammar patterns and phrases in different contexts.
That's what ultimately helps you start to own the language rather than translate everything.
Real-World Case Studies: How This Works In Practice
Portuguese (Pete's Example)
Pete's watching Portuguese films – perfect! At his level (assuming he's past complete beginner since he's tackling films), he needs to focus on accepting Portuguese grammar patterns for what they are, not constantly comparing them to English structures.
Japanese
When I was learning Japanese, the subject-object-verb structure felt completely alien at first.
But gradually, through exposure and pattern recognition, I stopped mentally rearranging Japanese sentences into English word order. I learned to accept Japanese structure as normal.
Arabic
With Arabic's right-to-left script and completely different grammar system, translation became impossible at a detailed level quite quickly.
This forced me to develop that crucial skill of living with ambiguity whilst still following the general meaning.
The Bottom Line: How To Stop Translating In Your Head
Here's what actually works:
Accept that translation is inevitable at first – don't fight it
Gradually build pattern recognition through varied exposure
Learn to live with ambiguity – you don't need to understand every word
Focus on phrases and sentences, not individual words
Separate intensive study from relaxed exposure
Use all four language skills to maximise pattern recognition
There's no magic pill to stop translating in your head overnight. It's a gradual process that happens one word at a time, one phrase at a time, one grammar pattern at a time.
Your job is to keep noticing, keep being observant, and keep being curious about the language. The key is patience with yourself and trust in the process.
Right, so there you have it – that's how you stop translating in your head and start knowing the language for what it is.
Try this: Next time you're engaging with your target language, instead of trying to translate everything, pick just one or two interesting patterns to notice. Don't worry about understanding everything else – just focus on those patterns and see where else you spot them.
How To Stop Translating In Your Head FAQ
How do you stop translation in your head?
To stop translating in your head, practise thinking directly in the language you’re learning. Use simple phrases, label objects around you, and focus on understanding meaning rather than word-for-word translation.
Is it normal to translate in your head?
Yes, it’s normal for language learners to translate in their heads, especially in the early stages. Over time, with more exposure and practice, it becomes easier to think directly in the new language.
Do bilinguals translate in their head?
Most fluent bilinguals do not translate in their heads during regular conversation. With enough practice, the brain switches between languages naturally without needing to convert every word.
Olly Richards
Creator of the StoryLearning® Method
Olly Richards is a renowned polyglot and language learning expert with over 15 years of experience teaching millions through his innovative StoryLearning® method. He is the creator of StoryLearning, one of the world's largest language learning blogs with 500,000+ monthly readers.
Olly has authored 30+ language learning books and courses, including the bestselling "Short Stories" series published by Teach Yourself.
When not developing new teaching methods, Richards practices what he preaches—he speaks 8 languages fluently and continues learning new ones through his own methodology.
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