Posted September 14, 2013
As an American that already speaks a little language called “English”, and is largely isolated from any neighboring populations that speak other languages(comparatively speaking) I haven't had much reason to learn another language.
I consider it to be a bit of an unfortunate reality that we just don't have the same need to develop skills in other languages that other populations do. (Spanish is something of an exception, but it's quite possible to get along without any Spanish in life and never feel the slightest bit like you are missing something.) It might even sound strange to some of you that someone would only know one language, but that's the common situation. At some point I think it would be nice to be able to say I am bilingual, but I'm not sure how one does that without a great deal of saturation. So much of it is raw memorization through constant exposure which would be difficult to manufacture.
I'm actually quite impressed that I can come to this forum and there are people from all over the world speaking with one another in a language that often isn't their native language. Even more impressive is how well so many people speak (type anyway) what is often branded as a difficult language to learn, so it is here I appeal to those that have done it.
What was involved? How long did it take? How old were you when you started? How comfortable are you speaking in second language? How difficult was it, and in what way? Did anything really help, or hurt the process? Was it required learning, or voluntary? How much resolve did it take? Was there a goal in mind for doing it?
For reference I've poked around Japanese a couple of times. I have interest in knowing it, but I'm not sure I have the drive to keep on it enough to get it done. I have word lists made I don't review enough, a nice little android app called “Human Japanese” to explain the mechanics I should have been through 2-3 times by now, but have only gotten a little over half way through. For awhile I slapped hours of recorded audio from Crunchy Roll content on an MP3 player so I could just listen to the raw language whenever my ears weren't busy, but I wasn't sure that would be considered intended use.
Anyway, what say you?
I consider it to be a bit of an unfortunate reality that we just don't have the same need to develop skills in other languages that other populations do. (Spanish is something of an exception, but it's quite possible to get along without any Spanish in life and never feel the slightest bit like you are missing something.) It might even sound strange to some of you that someone would only know one language, but that's the common situation. At some point I think it would be nice to be able to say I am bilingual, but I'm not sure how one does that without a great deal of saturation. So much of it is raw memorization through constant exposure which would be difficult to manufacture.
I'm actually quite impressed that I can come to this forum and there are people from all over the world speaking with one another in a language that often isn't their native language. Even more impressive is how well so many people speak (type anyway) what is often branded as a difficult language to learn, so it is here I appeal to those that have done it.
What was involved? How long did it take? How old were you when you started? How comfortable are you speaking in second language? How difficult was it, and in what way? Did anything really help, or hurt the process? Was it required learning, or voluntary? How much resolve did it take? Was there a goal in mind for doing it?
For reference I've poked around Japanese a couple of times. I have interest in knowing it, but I'm not sure I have the drive to keep on it enough to get it done. I have word lists made I don't review enough, a nice little android app called “Human Japanese” to explain the mechanics I should have been through 2-3 times by now, but have only gotten a little over half way through. For awhile I slapped hours of recorded audio from Crunchy Roll content on an MP3 player so I could just listen to the raw language whenever my ears weren't busy, but I wasn't sure that would be considered intended use.
Anyway, what say you?
Post edited September 14, 2013 by gooberking