1 / 50
Sep 2017

Hi everyone!

I'm currently living in South Korea and working but on the side I'm also self studying Korean and Japanese. I've been self studying Korean for about 2 years and I just bought my books for Japanese.
I really wanted to make some online friend peeps who may also be studying a new language either by themselves or in school. Even if we may all be studying different languages I thought it might be fun to just have people to chat to about studying and giving eachother little tips and suggestions. What do you think?

Any suggestions too on a mutual internets meeting place? Or this thread is fine as well :slight_smile:

  • created

    Sep '17
  • last reply

    Oct '17
  • 49

    replies

  • 3.9k

    views

  • 31

    users

  • 19

    likes

Frequent Posters

There are 49 replies with an estimated read time of 6 minutes.

I'm living in Brazil currently. I decided to start studying Japanese on my own recently (like 2 months ago). I'm already fluent in English, so I feel like it's easier the second time. (but japanese is haaaaaaaaaaard)

I am self studying Korean as well using an app and website combo called Coursea. I recommend it because it is an actual class taught by a college that you can use for free. You just don't get a certificate in the end. It does have due dates and test though. I have had to start it over because my schedule got busy and I couldn't keep up. But the great part is you can start again any time.

English is my first language, and I learnt Irish in school for like, nine years, but I'm still really bad at it. I speak the tiniest bit of German (I did it for a few months in school) and I'm learning Japanese now. I would like to pick German up again, but Japanese is fun so I'm focusing on that!
I use a website called Mango Languages, and it's free in my country, but I don't know how much it costs for other countries.

I have the desire to learn Italian and French. For Italian, I've always wanted to live in Venice, italy. Something calls me to that city. I heard it was difficult to get internet there though haha.

French to communicate with my family in Haiti.

As I'm focused on other objectives and skills to accomplish. The languages will be put on hold until I feel it's time to learn. :slight_smile:

As an Oklahoman, English is my second language.
I have no first language.

I have this bad habit of dabbling, but not focusing, on new languages.
I would say I have a quarter mark in Spanish, Japanese, and I'm currently poking around classic Latin and French.

Working out how others organize their minds is super interesting.
And Language is a hot-line to the way people think.
To read their words is to step inside their brains, if only briefly.

English is my first language. Last year, I started doing the German course on Duolingo. And I finished it. I am not a pro but I can read simple sentences.

I am sort of waiting for Duolingo to add Korean mostly because I live in an area with a lot of Korean Americans.

I do know a little Japanese but not enough to have elaborate conversations. I learned through an online program and I took one class last year. The app Obenkyo is really useful for learning characters. Duolingo is good if you understand some Japanese and you want to practice sentence structure. However, if you are a beginner with Japanese, I would recommend you not use Duolingo, you might just end up really confused.

Ive recently been self studying Tagalog so that i could talk to my grandmother and other family, and itd just be cool lol.
ive been... forgetting to study it so im slowwww

"A first language, native language or mother tongue is a language that a person has been exposed to from birth or within the critical period."

I-I don't get it. How is English not your first language?
I'M SO CONFUSED! HALPH!

Yo! I'm also studying Korean! I attend three classes a week at a local academy.
It's hard though, the alphabet's simplicity is a trap!

I've started refreshing my German. I've studied it in high school, but haven't used it since then. I go to a teacher once per week and I found this site: Babbel, it has a mobile app version, too. It's been great with the exercises, I really like it :slight_smile:
I'm native Hungarian, with C2 level English. Then there were Japanese, Korean and Russian studies at university, but I definitely need improvement there, esp. the with the last two. All beautiful, and I have a list of language I'd like to learn; or at least, dabble in :wink:
...
Lately, I've been getting the sense I have trouble focusing!!!

Years ago, I studied Japanese, but I haven't used it again until this week. Now since I've finally got to use it again, I plan to continue my study. =)

I almost forgot how much fun it is to study other languages.

I'm studying medicine in Hungary so as a way to adapt I'm learning Hungarian now

I (like many others here apparently) have self-studied some Japanese, but am not actually proficient enough in it to have any real conversations, lol. I can usually read/write in it with a dictionary and enough effort, though probably not well. :stuck_out_tongue:

I love languages though! I'd love to be able to speak fluently in at least one other language.

My mother tongue is hungarian. First I learnt english in school, than we had to choose a second language to learn which was german for me. The fun fact is that I haven't used german for ages so I completly forgot it X.X) After school I've learnt japanese in a course, but it was too expensive, plus after a time I lost motivation. It was really interesting, maybe I just got tired. I have a new job now, and I need to use english (or german) but I just feel like a beginner with all those business expression I need now, plus I'm too shy to speak... so... I feel I should practice english, but I have no idea how to start it.

Watch out, the Hungarians are coming out of hiding :DDD
Ăśdv, Ayumi :smiley:

Yay! It's always nice to meet hungarians on Tapas. :smile: Ăśdv. ^^

My native language is Spanish, so I´m learning english, japanese and italian this year. The next one I would like chinese and korean.