Archive for February, 2010

You can be fluent in one year or less

Hello, and welcome to my new blog “Fluent Every Year…“. I am creating this web site in order to share my experiences and learning techniques. After having studied Spanish, German, and French in high school, and later reaching fluency in Spanish I thought I had learned a lot about languages.  But my proudest accomplishment

My language choice for 2010 is…

I was really torn about which language to focus on this year. The two I was most interested in were Italian and Polish. Italian, because it’s really the link between all other so-called romance… languages; and Polish because I live in Chicago, where there are more Polish people than anywhere else in the world, outside

The most important step you'll take toward fluency

I’ve chosen to learn to speak Italian fluently this year, but I have yet to complete the most important step I’ll perform this year. There are a lot of important steps involved in becoming fluent in a new language: learning vocabulary, figuring out those strange new grammatical constructs, opening your ears to hear the language,…

Finding the sounds of Italian

Some people have the fortune of a life that allows lots of travel, and for them, the best way to learn a language is, without a doubt, immersion in a country that speaks the language. For most of us, though, our careers or families keep us planted in one spot for most of the year.…

The sounds of Italian

Now that we’ve got our alphabets learned, let’s take a deeper look at the sounds of letters and letter combinations, and learn a little bit about spelling.

You already speak a foreign language!

Remember that knowing what you’re saying doesn’t matter; you’ve only just begun. The goal is to be fluent in one year, not in one day. Though it may not sound like much, you’ve got time. A whole year. What’s important is that you’re already speaking in a new language!

Really getting started

Okay, so we’ve spent a week learning little more than the Italian alphabet, and you’re starting to wonder how anyone can be fluent in a year at this pace, right? Obviously, they can’t, but I still insist that this was the most important week you will have spent on the way to your goal. Everything else is just learning! Okay, okay, don’t panic. I’ve still got a lot of tricks up my sleeves to share with you. We’re definitely going to make it more interesting and fun.

Make time for learning

It can stay exciting, if you keep the right attitude. But just as that emotional burst you get from your excitement can keep you going all year, the disruption you get from distractions and competing obligations will be there to slow you down or make you give up altogether. We’re not going to let that happen!

The best free dictionary money can buy!

By now, you know how to pronounce words, and you’ve gotten started learning new words. But you probably don’t feel like you know anything really useful yet, and that’s not fun. So let’s change that.

Describing people and things in Italian

The key to remembering what you learn is to use it. If you have a friend you can talk to in your language, that helps. But if not, it’s still okay to talk to yourself. Just look at the world around you and see how much you can already describe.