Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she is able to use Spanish in her every day life she won’t be able to be proficient in conversation.
Are there any neighborhoods with a large Latino population? She could speak to various store owners or workers if she heard them speaking Spanish.
Whatever you do, don’t rely on Puerto Ricans to help her learn. They speak at a rapid pace and use a lot of slang exclusive to them.
This is not true.
She’s going into her second year of Spanish class. She started learning the language at a later age which makes it more difficult. She does well with the grammar part which is much easier than conversational Spanish. Do you really think she could converse with someone at this point?
Yes. She can learn to converse. I did, having started at age 12. I can speak, read and write it well enough to travel and work at a professional level in Spanish. Is my grammar and accent perfect? No. But it’s quite good. Yes, it took work, but was totally worth it. Don’t be discouraged by the naysayers OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she is able to use Spanish in her every day life she won’t be able to be proficient in conversation.
Are there any neighborhoods with a large Latino population? She could speak to various store owners or workers if she heard them speaking Spanish.
Whatever you do, don’t rely on Puerto Ricans to help her learn. They speak at a rapid pace and use a lot of slang exclusive to them.
This is not true.
She’s going into her second year of Spanish class. She started learning the language at a later age which makes it more difficult. She does well with the grammar part which is much easier than conversational Spanish. Do you really think she could converse with someone at this point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she is able to use Spanish in her every day life she won’t be able to be proficient in conversation.
Are there any neighborhoods with a large Latino population? She could speak to various store owners or workers if she heard them speaking Spanish.
Whatever you do, don’t rely on Puerto Ricans to help her learn. They speak at a rapid pace and use a lot of slang exclusive to them.
This is not true.
Anonymous wrote:Unless she is able to use Spanish in her every day life she won’t be able to be proficient in conversation.
Are there any neighborhoods with a large Latino population? She could speak to various store owners or workers if she heard them speaking Spanish.
Whatever you do, don’t rely on Puerto Ricans to help her learn. They speak at a rapid pace and use a lot of slang exclusive to them.