For me fluency means that I turn on the TV and you can understand and summarize an average news broadcast, movie, documentary or quality of life show (cooking, travelling etc). This level of fluency can't be reached in 3 month unless the target language is very close to one of the languages already spoken by you. For example you are Thai and learning Lao then maybe you can reach fluency in 3 months. For Thai language speakers Indo-European languages are very different and very difficult, but you can learn them. My first language is one of the Finno-Ugric languages and I learned Russian in about 1 year to the level that I could attend university and finish it in Russian, English was maybe around 12-14 month the biggest jump in my English learning happened when I had lot's of free time with no TV or Internet and reading was the only option for entertainment and had lot's paperback novels about gangsters, detectives and piranhas in the jungle, so I started to read books and my comprehension and vocab was growing day by day. So don't feel bad If you are not fluent after 3 months, whoever makes statements like that they are โกหก and want to sell their books for good money.
I totally agree with you! we should eliminate or avoid the myths society. At first, I had lots of fear to study German because many people told that this language is so difficult. But then I just don't care, and try learning it. Now I achieved A1 already with the score 95/100, and I keep learning it every day. Hence, I would like to say that you should set your goal, and go for it! Practice makes perfect: Auf Deutsch ist Übung macht den Meister.
I've been listening to this podcast for immersion and comprehension (American learning Thai) and your English pronunciation and inflection are soooooooo good, hope my Thai gets this clear one day ^^;
@alicemennella10632 жыл бұрын
Sameeee!!
@charukit64192 жыл бұрын
I hope you enjoy learn Thai and success as soon as. :)
Gee is so beautiful and I've been following her for long. 🤘
@thanamasg7511 Жыл бұрын
This is good content and a good voice, it also inspired me to practice English forward. Thank you so much!
@acewongsawad6910 Жыл бұрын
I'm Thai and I've had a fairly difficult time learning Japanese for some reason. I've been learning it on and off for many years but still lack the skills and confidence to carry on a conversation with the natives. I tried to learn it from an English speaker's point of view but wondering if it's any easier from a Thai speaker's point of view. Any thoughts or suggestions? Thanks.