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      Showing content with the highest reputation on 06/19/16 in all areas

      1. NOTE: THIS IS NOT MY OWN QUESTION, THIS TOPIC IS MEANT TO CUT THE AMOUNT OF "WHAT SHOULD I LEARN"-TYPE OF TOPICS! Even though the best answer is obvious and applies to literally everyone, I understand beginners to language learning don't know the answer. You can see this throughout this entire forum, on other forums, on social media, even in real life this question seems to be a big struggle to everyone. With this thread I'd like to give you a solid answer to both questions: "What language should I learn"? and "What is the easiest one"? The answer is: follow your heart. Take an honest look at the culture of all languages you consider to learn, research each of them throughout. Which culture did you like most? That's the language you should learn AND that's the easiest one. Simple enough ey? Languages are closely tied to cultures. The golden rule is: if you don't like the culture, it'll be very difficult to learn. And if you manage to learn it any way, you'll forget it quickly. This goes for all languages, from Romance languages to Chinese. From Swahili to Slavic languages. That's all. Any complaints, doubts, disagrees or similar? Feel free to ask or comment.
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      2. Hi, I'm Andrew and have been learning French for around 5 years. Just a quick background to my level - I speak French to my Parisien girlfriend every day without concern, have regular skype language exchanges with an older French lady, go to Paris regularly and have no issues with communication, read almost without question to vocabulary most newspaper articles and have likely a better understanding of French grammar than many natives. I've been very motivated in these last 5 years and I know the results have shown. Previously I studied German in school to British GCSE level, and Japanese off my own back for 5 years to around the same level. I think I surpassed these levels with my French in less than a year (within 1/5th of the time), with ongoing improvement at the same speed. It's great to have studied languages before as I can really gauge my level this time round. However, I'm really concerned that all this work and my apparent "fluency" in french still leaves me struggling to pass a fluency exam. I want this exam to prove my hard work paid off and so I can put the word "fluent" without question on my CV. I tried several pass papers for the DALF C1 exam and pretty much failed straight out. I got around 25% correct, suffering mostly on listening surprisingly, and you need 50% to pass. I then tried the DELF B2 exam pass papers and got a borderline pass mark. There are so many people out there saying that B2 is intermediate level and equivalent to British school A-Level, however to think that I could really be at this level sickens me! I had my girlfriend take the C1 exam (after a lot of convincing) and she passed with around an 80% pass mark. She's good at her own language but found this hard, much harder than any English exam she took - just a note. With this in mind, I can imagine that the average French person would struggle to pass the French C1 and would easily fail the C2 exam. My question to you is if I am only just able to pass a B2 exam, and seemingly far from passing a C1; what level am I at? I don't see how I can improve much from here. Of course spending several years in France would boost my vocab and get my listening and speaking skills spot on, but frankly that opportunity won't be coming my way any time soon. I'd be really interested to hear your thoughts and experiences on this, especially with regards to French exams. Thanks!!
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      3. I'm single language user if you are asking for the fluency in language otherwise, I can talk in two Languages
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      4. If we're talking about 100% fluency, then I'm a single language user. I wish I could say I was one of the other two options though. If I could go back in time, I would start learning other languages at a very young age and hopefully by now by able to speak at least three or four languages fluently. It's such a brilliant skill to have.
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      5. I believe these media and all others (social media, language learning apps) do indeed provide great assistance in the language learning process. I also agree that reading is the foundation for studying any language. But that's just it - a person wanting to learn a new language should not limit itself to just reading. One can devour all books he wants, but must not forget that 'language' is a tool for communication and that communication is a two-way process. As it is a two-way process, one must test or at least practice what he's learning from the books from going out of his way to engage another individual. The language must force himself to interact with people in order for him to cement his learning and eventually acquire fluency.
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