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Learning a new language
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Oh, good to know. I learned Spanish easily as a child, and I do think Spanish is the easiest foreign language for native English language people to learn. I struggled mightily with French in college. Ending up taking just 2 semesters of it. I don't think it was taught very well but mostly it was me with a the problem of learning it.

I couldn't learn/relearn Spanish at 12. But I learned easily at 9. I think for many, and definitely for me, it's hard to learn new languages after puberty/age 12 or so.
I learned German at the ripe old age of 35, and I'm working on Japanese (although I've gotten lazy). Being in Germany, and being immersed in the language really helped. When my daughter & I were studying Japanese together, I felt that I was retaining it, but now she's moved on to Chinese. I think some people, like my daughter, have a knack for languages.


It's so much easier to acquire a second language as a child than as an adult. However, the acquisition of a second language at any age makes it easier, I think, to learn a third or a fourth. I've spent time learning Persian as an adult and the fact that I speak French and studied German in high school definitely helped me come to grips with that language.
I think the biggest advantage to learning a second language as a child is that the vocal chords "learn" to make the sounds needed for proper pronunciation of the second language. Lea was immersed in German from infancy, but she chose to respond in English, and as a result her German lagged behind. She has a very good German accent, and will always pronounce things as a native would. But, she had to get up to speed with proper grammar. All of her German tended to be "at home" talking, and certainly not "school-level" quality.

I can't roll my r's, nor can I distinguish or correctly reproduce the ü or ö sounds all the time. I'm mostly okay with the z and pf sounds.
You should hear Lea speaking Mandarin -- her teachers are impressed. Language is her thing; math is not. ;)
You should hear Lea speaking Mandarin -- her teachers are impressed. Language is her thing; math is not. ;)




That's interesting! I don't know if it's because of the way I studied languages in the past few years but I think I'm a better reader with another language than speaking it. I know I should practice speaking more but for whatever reason the words always escape me when I start formulating a sentence! lol
Kim wrote: "I've spent time learning Persian as an adult and the fact that I speak French and studied German in high school definitely helped me come to grips with that language."
That's true; although I never mastered French very well when I was in high school, I remembered enough since it's helped me understand Italian grammar right now.

I'm also a very visual learner, but having tried to teach myself out of a book, I know that I also need to hear the language and be able to practice. I think that's probably my biggest hurdle in language learning.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Discovery Of France (other topics)The Discovery Of France (other topics)
My Father's Paradise: A Son's Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq (other topics)
My Father's Paradise: A Son's Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq (other topics)
Handbuch zur Deutschen Grammatik : Wiederholen und Anwenden (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ariel Sabar (other topics)Betty Schrampfer Azar (other topics)
That's interesting! I always thought it would be cool to learn one of the Scandinavian languages. I had a colleague during my grad program who picked up Swedish while she was studying there (for the semester) and I think she's still competent in it, it's pretty cool.
I've been taking Italian language classes for the past few months now (am at the equivalent of a B1, I think) and I've been enjoying it. It seems to come a lot easier to me than French, but I hope to go back and brush up on French at some point.