Sup fuckers! :honk:

Hope you practiced today! I've been busy with other things but I'm about to get to it. Gonna go buy a burrito and listen to Language Transfer in the car on the way there/back and then maybe do some duo-lingo lessons. I don't know, not every day has to be an hour plus, right?

Is daily too frequent? Not frequent enough? We could make this a weekly thread like they have in some other communities, but we gotta get HYPED for the first week at least I think.

We've had really positive engagement so far. Maybe we can get one of these posts featured/cross-posted to main, let other comrades know what we're up to. I dunno, we'll feel it out as we go!

  • MemesAreTheory [he/him, any]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    4 years ago

    Welcome to the super secret club! We'll need you to sign in blood on the dotted line.

    I'm cautiously going to say become fully proficient in French before jumping along, the point of a language is to be able to speak it in earnest, but that's my philosophy and why I'm returning to Spanish. I figure it will be easier to learn my follow up languages (French and German, maybe mandarin) once I learn the skills and discipline required to complete a project!

    But I'm sort of starting at the beginning with Spanish myself. If you're familiar with French and English you might have a real easy time of getting up to my level, and then we could be practice partners if you like. It's your choice of course, so let us all know what you decide!

    • Sphere [he/him, they/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Hey, thanks for the reply!

      I can definitely understand that philosophy, but I think I'd rather finish learning French by moving to a French-speaking country, if I'm honest. That list of mine is too long to keep deferring if I want to make even a dent in it, particularly since traveling and seeing more of the world (in the sense of moving to other places and living in them for a while, rather than the tourist sense) is truly my strongest motivator for learning languages. I've also always been told that immersion is the most effective way to push yourself to fluency in a language, so in my view what I really need is enough of a grounding in a given language to be able to get through a day in a country where that language is spoken. (Then I need the Covid vaccine so I can actually go places, lol)

      But yeah, Spanish is probably a pretty easy reach for me (I think once or twice I've read Spanish text and been able to pretty much understand it solely from my knowledge of French and Latin roots), and it's probably best to get used to learning languages with something relatively straightforward, so I think I'll give it a go. I'll go looking for resources tomorrow (it's getting a bit late here), and then check in on the new thread tomorrow night.

      Thanks again!

      • MemesAreTheory [he/him, any]
        hexagon
        ·
        4 years ago

        Sure thing! Check out "Language Transfer" on SoundCloud. Several members recommended it to me and I'm finding it very useful. Start your streek on duo-lingo, and in a month or two we might be ready to practice together!