Tonto Silerheels wrote:John Prigent wrote:
Anyone of normal intelligence who understands their own language's grammar is capable of picking up basic conversational proficiency in a new language within days, and intensive study should give that person a complete grasp of grammar within a few weeks - definitely not months.
A good friend of mine stayed in Germany for three months with his aunt and uncle and their three daughters. He was the only English speaker. (I thought English was taught in school there. But this is his story.) He also worked there. He said that after one month he was picking up bits of conversation around him. After two months he could hold conversations. After three months he was fluent. He tells a story of getting back to the states and slipping German words into his English conversation. One story he tells refers to a time he didn't have enough cash to pay for a full tank of gas. When the attendant asked if he wanted a fill up, he replied, "Well, I would like to have a fill up, aber..."
That accorded well to something I had read shortly before he told me this story regarding immersion learning. I read that after one month you start picking up bits of conversation around you...well, you can guess the rest.
~Tonto
Actually, you can be conversationally fluent with basic grammar and about a thousand words vocabulary. But you would get lost trying to follow a graduate level lecture with that kind of fluency. It is also different than being able to write fluently expressing complex subjects that need a wider ranger of vocabulary. I took New Testament Greek as a college freshman and 8 years later I was still learning it. Part of the difficulty was there was no interest in speaking, only translating. That was over 40 years ago. I hope they have learned something about teaching it in the interim...
How fluent Kohdy would have needed to be in Spanish for his journal is not something we know at this point.
Don
Don