kittyray (02-10-2024)
trying to learn a second language actually
at that point where i feel like i'm too old and too ADHD to actually have anything stick ;--;
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kittyray (02-10-2024)
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♥ Crowley ♥ (02-06-2024)
My native language is Hebrew.
I learned English through school but mostly by myself since the level taught in schools here is very low.
Aside from that, my Japanese level is pretty decent as well. I'm at around 99% of understanding (listening), so currently I'm working hard on improving my reading, writing and speaking (though I can totally get by in Japan even with my relatively low level in these)
I also took a Russian course in uni - I always wanted to learn Russian. After finishing the course I kept and still keeping the knowledge I gained mainly through Duolingo. Duolingo is a very bad resource when it comes to actually learning new things imo, but it's good for keeping up with what you already know up to a certain level. Hopefully one day I can put more time into Russian again to actually have some real progress there.
Btw, all that means that I can pretty much read stuff in 4 different alphabets
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I̶ ̶w̶a̶n̶t̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶b̶a̶k̶a̶ ̶u̶s̶e̶r̶b̶a̶r̶ ̶v̶e̶r̶y̶ ̶m̶u̶c̶h̶!̶ I GOT IT!!!
kittyray (02-10-2024),mokavanila (02-06-2024),nousha (02-06-2024)
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TsUNaMy WaVe (02-06-2024)
I've tried a few methods - my first foreign language, I was learning in high school, very traditional methods, writing new words dozens of time, etc. Works well when you're a student and the main purpose of the school is to teach you that language as you have all the time in the world, more or less. Throw in the mix a native speaker teacher and it gets even better. But unless you're very rich, don't need to work and can afford to study for a few hours a day with a private native speaker, I don't think it's suitable for adults
Then another way is the way I studied English, it worked very well but again, not very suitable - I started at a low level, at the time I was teaching French as a part-time job to support myself while at uni and the owner of the language school decided than I can teach English as well (less demand for French, more for English). I was very young and stupid, so I agreed and frankly, I learned the language by teaching it (was afraid I'll be ashamed if I was asked something in class that I didn't know, so I prepared extremely well for every lesson). I don't recommend this in hind side though
What I think works very well is immersive learning, meaning you're in an environment where the language is spoken exclusively and if you cannot afford to do a language course in the country of origin, try to expose yourself as much as you can to the language by watching movies (subtitled, not dubbed), listening to podcasts, YouTube videos, radio, whatever. That really helps a lot as the brain subconsciously remembers thing, gets the pronunciation and the rhythm of the phrase, remembers word associations etc.Still, I'm a visual learner and I do need to write things down in order to remember them well, so apps don't usually work well for me.
caviar (02-08-2024)
Honestly, I'm finding you're kinda right. I took Spanish in high school but it's been years and years since then. The Spanish lessons, at least the early ones, have been easy and are jogging my memory. I'm struggling with the Japanese ones. I'm getting things right, but they're not actually sinking in, really. I just recognize them, I guess. I'll have to look into a Japanese class.
TsUNaMy WaVe (02-08-2024)
Spanish is my first language which I can still read, write, speak, fluently. English next, studied a lot of French, then some Brazilian Portuguese, dabbled in Italian, now getting the basics down for Cantonese. So, basically Spanish and English, but pick up a handful of stuff with other languages.
kittyray (02-10-2024)
Do you guys also feel like you need some sort of motivation to learn a language? Like living in a foreign country, having friends that speak it, having specific hobbies linked to that country, etc. I've been trying to improve in Spanish (my 3rd language) but finding motivation is hard...
english, german, polish (in that order), plus also learning some russian!
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<3 adorable wonderful art by my friend Elle <3
I am English first language, but I can read and speak Japanese at an intermediate level (though I could definitely use more Kanji knowledge). I can also read quite a bit of Korean, though I cannot speak it well...I used to play on Korean Maplestory servers, and they had random bot checks that would also flag people who might be from NA/EU that weren't supposed to be on Korean servers. I had to learn enough Korean to get by and pass the bot checks. I know a bit of Portuguese as well because I have lots of online friends from Brazil that I game with often, but only enough to get the gist of what's going on.
I want to become more advanced with Japanese and Korean.
♜