- Oct 5, 2016
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Yeah, Rosetta Stone frustrated me greatly even though I have had off and on interests in language, duolingo is a lot more encouraging. The graphics are cute and it can give you challenges or easy days.... that's just more my style. I can use memrise but it's not as useful because it's harder to apply. Welcome to the thread btw!Wow, missed this thread 'til @Shoetoyou pointed it out. I'll fill in my bio later.
I had almost given up on language learning a number of years ago because I couldn't really make much progress. It turns out I'd been doing it very ineffectively and was pretty much wasting a lot of time and energy for few results.
I've been spending a lot of time learning languages lately with a lot more success. 2 years of university German with As and not able to do much with it in a practical sense beyond ask where the bathroom was. I spent about 30 years banging my head against the wall not accomplishing much in NT Greek. Then I ran across some sites with successful self-taught polyglots and started adapting their methods instead of the traditional memorize grammar and vocab approach. 30 years of working on Greek and not able to do much more than look up words in lexicons and grammar tables. 5 years of better methodology and I'm now reading the NT and OT (Septuagint) in Greek for my devotional reading with occasional reference to English. I also learned about the Assimil language courses. I started with their English to Spanish course about 2 years ago. It started me on a path so I can now comfortably watch Spanish dubbed TV shows on Netflix (with Spanish subtitles). I'm also reading the NVI (almost done with Jeremiah) without referring to English. We got together with an old friend from Panama about a month ago. She seemed surprised (in a good way) with my pronunciation.
The key is not so much "language learning ability" as I had about given up on things, but actually practicing the skills you want to develop. It's much more about figuring out the best methods to use rather than just throwing time at it. I'm now using Assimil's Hebrew and Chinese courses to "prime to the pump" so to speak by just spending a few minutes a day getting used to the sounds and characters. In another year or two (once Greek and Spanish are to a solid level), I'll start hitting one of them harder. I started a thread on language learning in the Languages subforum awhile ago that shows a quick example of the approach I start with now.
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