this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2026
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Language Learning

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[–] arxaseus@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Doing 30 mins of Japanese, 30 mins of Spanish and 30 mins of Irish again. Also yeah I know for languages like Japanese, it's still not enough. Though I am watching a fair amount of shows that incorporate the languages. Still need to go to comprehensible input videos for all though.

Also thinking about picking up a proper language course that might start in the next few weeks, but I'm unsure if that's a good idea or not. It's a 10 week course, that spans 2 hours per week, and it'll cost roughly 200 euro. So it's like a tenner an hour or something, which is decent, but I'm not sure if I can afford it just now is the thing, but then again I'm unsure if they'll have these courses again in the next few months. I have about a week or so before courses fill up, so I'm limited for time, so I'm just mulling these things over in my head wondering if it's worth it or not.

[–] lalah@sakurajima.moe 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

@arxaseus what are you using to study Irish?

[–] arxaseus@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 day ago

I use Duolingo with the audio turned off for a bit. Sionnach at an odd time if I want to see if the apps updated to something with more of a bite, but my main go to has been Teach Yourself Complete Irish by Diarmuid Ó Sé. I also tried the book Gaeilge Gan Stró, but it felt too touristy in its approach to teaching it, learning whole sentences before they explain the individual words. Complete Irish is more explained, however condensed and to the point which is a bigger strength to me, but also sort of a bad point too.

I sort of want a longer grammatical explanation and then examples, and then maybe some SRS to work with like an Anki card deck. There's a lot of Irish resources out there, but none of them are good. And the best you can get are just old hardcopy books.

In a while, whenever the depression fully goes away, I'll probably automate my own Anki card word-lookup Deck. But yeah, just I need my energy back firstly.

[–] emb@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I've heard it said that an hour every day for most hobbies would be plenty, for language learning it's just the start. Makes sense, most activities I do throughout the day use language, so for at least your first language you naturally practice all day.

Always gonna be a hard call when affordability enters the picture. I think courses are pretty fun and motivating so it sounds like a good opportunity. But you gotta do what works best for the situation.

[–] arxaseus@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 day ago

It was like 10 euro an hour, which, I mean, if I really really really tried, I could make something work, but I think at least for the start of this course, it'll help set me up for success, because I'll be able to at least attempt speaking the language properly, getting the phonetics right, and that being important. Then the reading, and phonetics to readings and etc, and dialects, and understanding nuances of gender based grammar better (Duolingo is absolutely shit for explaining any of that), and well, just overall language attempt. This will be my first actual proper course I paid for, as I try to be self learned, but I guess for this language I've completely given up on finding decent sources, since everything good is still all over the place.