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learning a new language
Hi guys,
At the ripe old age of 27 I've decided to learn a new language. Knowing that it would have been much easier while I was young, I'm hoping that my brain is still plastic enough to cope. With that in mind, I'm seeking some advice about the best way to go about it. I thought that a sensible approach would be to first learn how to learn a new language. Any new language. Is there some sort of mental limbering up that I can do to make it easier? I imagine that there are a lot of practices related to speaking english that I will need to "forget". Or is it easier to pick a language and jump right in? If anyone has any tips or links that they could share, I would really appreciate it. Thanks |
Re: learning a new language
Well, my first recommendation would be to FORGET what you know about English. When I learned Spanish in college, we started very basic--we started using Spanish words for the things around us and learned Spanish commands. Also, another thing that helps is having a friend or people with whom you can speak the language.
What language are you considering? |
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I remember from high school French that the ordering of the sentence structure was different. I think that will be the hardest thing - forming sentences that don't sound jumbled up. As far as I know, the emphasis and inflection will be more pronounced as well. And also carry much more meaning. Just poking around the net I have seen that very different words sound similar in some languages. Quote:
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Plus I like the idea that you are likely helping someone else improve their English. Good karma :) Quote:
After that, an Asian language. But I'm not sure which one yet. I'd be more likely to get into the Indonesian areas than into Japan or China. |
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Well... I've had to do it twice: German and Russian. The most important thing I could suggest would be to immerse yourself in it, to the extent you're able. Make it a part of your daily life... listen to the music, replace the magazines in your bathroom with a bilingual dictionary, get yourself a shortwave radio and listen to broadcasts in your new language. Whatever it takes.
I was lucky: both times, I had plenty of access to people who spoke the language every day. I learned Russian from native speakers of the language. And, although I'd had 4 years of high school German and 4 more semesters in college, I didn't really learn to SPEAK German until I lived in Germany and had to use it for everyday living. I don't know how your brain is wired; everybody learns differently. But, for what it's worth, here are a couple of things that I've found useful. First, I'd suggest brushing up on English grammar as a precursor to your studies. Remember how you hated diagramming sentences in 10th grade English class, and wondered why you'd ever need to know what the hell the a direct object was? Bend over... here it comes again! Grammar is the skeleton of any language. Once you learn the rules, the rest is just memorization. Renewing your acquaintance with the rules of grammar will make your road to a new language a lot smoother. And, as you make progress with your new language, you'll come to appreciate (and love) what a silly language English really is! Second, as Sycamore correctly points out, there's no substitute for practicing with native speakers of the language. Go out of your way to try out your new skills on people who grew up speaking the language. Frequent their restaurants. Patronize their shops. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. You WILL make mistakes, and you'll learn from them. And the more you practice, the smoother and more idiomatic your speech will become. After all... you want to speak like a person, not like a grammar book, right? Best of luck to you. |
DUDE!
Where you been? |
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Enough of this... I will NOT be a party to Thread Hijacking! Anybody else got any language-learning tips for our friend hertz? |
Just had to ask. Me and sycamore been wondering where the hell you went. But yeah. I'm done thread hijacking too.
*hangs up his thread hijacking trousers* Hey, can we call it like "thread stealing"? I don't want the FBI knocking on my door... |
*koff*
What I always wonder is whether those computer-based language training thingies are worth anything. I took French in H.S. but was depressed when, 15 years later, it was damn close to meaningless when actually going to Montreal. |
I took Spanish in high school - 3 years of it (okay, 1 year was in 8th grade, and the other 2 were 9th and 10th). It came in handy once.
It was a really cold day in March of this year (today is the last day I can say that), and I was sitting at the Vienna/Fairfax-GMU metro station waiting for my bus. There was a young girl (17 or 18) sitting a couple feet from me, and I swear we were the only people at this metro station. I had a 40 minute wait at that station, so I called Joann and asked her to come get me. She actually agreed, and said she'd be there in 20 minutes or so (she was fixing dinner or being repulsive or something). Anyway, we're sitting there, and after about 10 minutes, she says: "Sir?" I look over to her. "Yeah?" She pulls out a dollar bill and tells me, in Spanish, that she needs to make a phone call but doesn't have any change. Guess what - I actually understood her! I guess I looked like I didn't, 'cause she had this look on her face of desperation, and she started waving the dollar and making a fake phone with her other hand, holding it up to her head. I smiled at her (it was cute!), reached into my pocket, and dumped what must have been about two dollars in change into her hand. She got this huge smile and tried to hand me the dollar, saying "Gracias" over and over. I just said "de nada" and politely refused the dollar. She went, made her phone call, and got picked up, and for once, 3 years of Spanish didn't seem wasted. |
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When I took Spanish in college, they stressed it was basically what you would hear in Mexico. For the most part, they were on target. From what I've seen, there are a few differences in the language, depending on what part of Latin American you're dealing with. Puerto Rican Spanish...that's a WHOLE new ballgame. ;) Spanish in Spain seems to differ primarily in pronoun usage and idioms. Argentina seems to stay the closest to formal Spanish in this part of the world. |
No, it wasn't a matter of local differences, it was more a matter of a massive faiilure to communicate with even the most basic vocabulary and tenses and whatnot.
I take it to mean that the school system wasn't really interested in making me bi-lingual. That would be impossible to promise. What would be possible to promise would be "four years of language education for college-bound high-schoolers", and that's what I got. |
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Since I left high school (in 1994), they seem to promote foreign language more strongly, and seem more devoted in getting people to actually USE it. That sucks though Tony...were you actually looking forward to using it? When I got to college, at Southeast Missouri State, we only had to take 3 hours of a "communications" class. Southeast had a unique curriculum, and the "basic" classes were broken down into a variety of categories. "Communications" was not only several languages, but theatre, public speaking, etc. Then, I transferred to UM-St. Louis...and 13 hours of foreign language was required (3 classes--5, 5, and 3). I took 16 hours total--and had I continued to use Spanish, I would probably be highly fluent in it now. At first, my whole rationale was "I just want to get this shit out of the way, so let me take the easiest one--Spanish." But then, I met various friends, and many of them spoke Spanish, so I had the opportunity to use it. Then, when I started going to Chicago on a regular basis, I saw how helpful it was. That dramatically changed my attitude regarding foreign language. Plus, I had a good professor, who made it fun to learn. |
It didn't occur to me that I'd really really want to be able to speak another language until about 7-8 years after high school.
Sure, if I'd have known, my attitude would have been different. On the other hand, how can a high schooler have the understanding to know the value of speaking another language? Only if they're educated. And I got decent grades in those classes, so what was I being evaluated on? A few years back my wife and I were comparing notes on our high school experiences. "And I got the Physics prize, for being the best Physics student," she said. "Wow, Physics, I wouldn't have expected that," I said. "Tell me something. What's Ohm's law?" She didn't know. The most basic law of electronics, a major part of Physics. But I knew it - and I would never forget it - because instead of Physics, I took Electronics Shop. I would have failed Physics the way they taught it; the most important aspect of the class was good lab notes, and I was not capable of nor interested in that sort of meticulous toilet training. Instead, I took a class where I had 60 IQ points on the average kids, and learned some of the most important, lasting things ever. Because we didn't have "lab" - we just "built stuff". We wrapped our own coils, put voltage through our own circuits. We didn't take any goddamn notes; we heard and smelled the blown capacitors when somebody didn't get something quite right. We even etched our own circuit boards -- a wonderful gift to me, when I didn't even know I'd be heading into Computer Science. Maybe some people can learn from lectures and bogus "labs" and meticulous "lab notes" and so forth. But I can't help thinking that, if I'd taken "French Shop" instead of "French", I'd still be speaking it today. |
It looks as if so far, I can take the cake for the most useless language "larned" in high school: Latin. Yes folks, the dead language. :)
Realistically it was reasonably useful, as it's strengthened my grasp on English vocabulary, and made me realize just how much the rules of a language are stretched when you listen to music or read the poetry. (That was a nightmare, Latin poetry... <shudder>) That said, immersion in the language and culture is probably one of the best ways to learn it. Another tip is to learn a language that's similar to English, as it would be much easier. Spanish, French, Italian, or to a lesser extent, German or Russian are good choices. Most of the Asian languages or the languages of the smaller island nations (Hawiian, etc.) would be hellaciously difficult to learn, because the evolution of the language had no common roots to English. Hell, even a few of the Asian languages evolved completely differently from each other. |
Thanks for all your suggestions. Spanish looks to be the right choice.
(Although comments like "Castillian Spanish will get you funny looks in Mexico" and "Puerto Rican Spanish...that's a WHOLE new ballgame" have me a bit freaked out.) I think that I'll enrol in a TAFE (community college?) course that teaches introductory Spanish. Better than a book, and probably a good way to meet up with a few like minded individuals. |
I took Spanish in college after evading it in high school. It was tough but you really can just jump in at the college level since the advanced students will test out of the intro course. I made the mistake of going to a cowtown college so immersion in spanish culture wasn't gonna happen. Outside of the Puerto Rican girl I tutored in history I really had no real world foreign language experience. I assume it will lie dormant unless I move to latin america. My brother was a terrible language student but by living in various countries over the years he's now bilingual (Spanish) and wouldn't starve in Turkey. He could probably teach a course in spanish language differences, which comes in handy teaching in California. Advice: Go for it! Seek out chances to use it though, otherwise it won't be readily available when you need it.
edit smelling: i before e... like hubris said outa know your native language |
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If you go to a community college, you will most likely learn Mexican Spanish. Although someone in Spain would call this "dirty Spanish," most Spanish speakers would understand. Same if you spoke Spanish from Spain to someone in Mexico. Just like in English, it's spoken a bit differently, depending on which area you are in. Australia and Britain use words that Americans may not quite understand. How many Americans do you know that refer to 2 weeks as a "fortnight"? Some of us call a bathroom a "toilet," while Brits may use the term "loo." That's how Spanish can be. Where as Mexicans call a bus an "autobus," Puerto Ricans call it a "guagua" (pronounced like the convenience store chain: "wa-wa"). Worry about learning the language first...THEN worry about how to speak it where you're at. ;) |
Immersion. Travel is Good. I went to Guatemala in celebration of my 30th year, studying Mayan textiles and taking Spanish classes. I was matched with a woman my same age who spoke no English. We really became good friends over 4 weeks, dumping the textbook and just trying to share each others' stories. And my story was nothing compared to her life. Quite an eye opener. (this was in 1993, still very volatile) She was married with 6 daughters, her spouse was an amazing woodcarver. Her father and brother disappeared, her dad was a teacher and radio newsbroadcaster. Something amazingly poignant about her lowering her head, looking from side to side and whispering in Spanish what had happened. The best lesson.
You have to be committed to using it, wanting to communicate enough that you will risk sounding dumb.I havent had many moments, my skills are sketchy, but the coolest thing is when you start to *think* in that new language. Hey maybe I'll keep trying! thanks for the motivation. Maybe I'll catch Eric Estrada on Univision! Adios. |
jsut my 2c but yea - Immersaion is essiential, i learnt friench for 3 years, i leant 10x more in the last year because all we spoke in cals was french, everyhting, the more hte better beause it forces you to rmeember allot ore than being able ot slip back into english..
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Well back to the languages, I am attempting to learn Ancient Egyptian. You know, hieroglyphs, mummies, etc. etc. It's interesting.. and somewhat frustrating because I can't concentrate on it for periods of time, so I always have to go back and review things that came before. ("Oh yeah, I forgot they could use that as a first person pronoun.") I've always had an interest in Ancient Egypt and it's gratifying to have some knowledge of the language, though I doubt I will ever be able to read anything without a dictionary and a grammar at hand. I am now at the point where I recognize many of the most common signs (even if I don't recognize the words they're spelling), and some of the pharaoh's names & titles that I'm more familiar with. So we'll see how far I can go with it. What really shocked me, from the aegyptian-l mailing list (which I recommend as a starting point for anybody else who wants to try this) was that for the movies Stargate, The Mummy, and The Mummy Returns, they actually retained a specialist in the ancient egyptian language and used "real" egyptian in the movies. I'd never have imagined they'd go to that much trouble. |
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