Don't see one of these so I'd thought I'd make it. What are the best tips that you guys have for learning a language? I'm currently learning Korean and feel that my progress is kinda slow, partly because I've been focusing a lot on grammar and not so much on reading or speaking because reading material is hard to find and there aren't many Korean speakers in the area. You guys got any general tips?
In addition, unrelated, but how long do you guys think it would take to learn to read latin if I study it for 2-3 hours a day? What are the best resources/books for Latin?
>>8662904
What's your mother tongue to start with ?
I'm learning korean too, I had a test today and I failed >:(
>>8663331
I'm Korean American but my parents never taught me the language for some reason.
>>8663339
What's your level in korean ?
>>8663348
I've been self-studying mostly since July, and I can have relatively decent conversations with people and can understand most conversational Korean. But, literature is still out of the question.
>>8663356
It's been only 4 month and you can already understand most conversations ?? Just be more patient then your progression is rly good
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B9QDHej9UGAdcDhWVEllMzJBSEk
>>8662904
There is this free latin course that starts every September, but I lost my bookmark, does anyone know what I'm talking about?
>>8664299
Holy fucking shit, thanks so much dude, I've been searching for something like this on /int/ for months
>>8664299
Fuck this is a gold mine. It even has Gorani!
I'm a Persian/Kurdish/Bengali student. The only way to do it is too memorise shit endlessly. There's no magic trick. Sites like Quizlet and Memrise can make all this work feel less taxing and they're pretty decent at helping you commit vocabulary to memory, but speaking practice is absolutely essential, more than anything. Find a speaker and just go for it.