I took my "good base" and started practicing every day last September. Becoming fluent is almost 100% dependent on talking with native speakers. As I am pretty shy, this has been difficult and slow going for me, but after a year many people tell me I am fluent. I think if you can put yourself in situations where you speak with native speakers, and DON'T BE AFRAID TO MAKE MISTAKES, you could probably do it in a much shorter time - my gut tells me that 1-3 months of steady practice would probably do it.
2006-10-02 04:58:48
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answer #1
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answered by mthompson828 6
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well if you really enjoy speaking spanish and you really want to be fluent then all you need to do is practice. Try to use what you already know, in your everyday conversations. Also the more you listen to the language the faster youll pick it up. Try to be around fluent spanish speakers and dont be shy about using what you know. What realy helps hispanics learn english is watching tv and being faced with people that dont speak nothing but english. If you force yourself to find yourself in confusing situations then i say in a year or two (depending on how bad you want it) youll be fluent in no time.
2006-10-02 05:16:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Spanish was my first language, but it took me about a year to learn English fluently. So, I assume it would basically be the same the other way around. I recommend the immersion theory if you really want to learn Spanish well. In Mexico, my stepfather was "supposedly" taught how to speak English, but it wasn't until he came here and was forced to learn the language that he really did. Watch a lot of Spanish television, talk to native speakers, and overall try to immerse yourself in the culture. That's really the best was to learn because when you're forced to learn the language, you will.
2006-10-02 12:52:48
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answer #3
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answered by Love, Jealous One, Love 3
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That depends entirely on your definition of fluent..........
If you call fluency the ability to understand and make yourself understood to others in Spanish I would say with a good base knowledge and daily practice, preferably with native speakers, a year.
But if you call fluency the ability to speak the language without any errors just as a native speaker would, I'd say a decade or longer. Remember it took you about five years of doing absolutely nothing besides exploring your world (early childhood) to acquire that kind of fluency in English.
2006-10-02 05:55:16
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answer #4
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answered by cstoa10 5
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Well, it is difficult to estimate time all depends in practice as you said but one important thing will be who you practice with, you need to have somebody who really talks good Spanish so you can learn good grammar as well. ( as in English, Spanish has also different ways to say things) but the best is to learn complete sentences, probably if you do this you will be ready in 4 months maybe. Le deseo mucha suerte!
2006-10-02 06:36:17
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answer #5
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answered by Mercy 2
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It all depends here you are and how inmersed you are culturally speaking. if you are in any country in latin America then the time would be very quick, but if you are in the States, it will take you considerably longer to gain fluidity. Fludity is achieved as soon as you can and are free to express yourself and to communicate in any given language without the need to translate first in your mind, when the word and its acoustic impression has been registered in the frontal lobe (the area of Brocca, language responsible) and is familiar enough that you can pull it out of the file without actually thinking CONSCIOUSLY about it.
If you are in the States, go out and hang out with any Latin friends that actually speak ONLY spanish among them, enjoy a beer or two while doing it and you'll see how easy your tongue gets loose. Ah, the other best way to learn a language is in bed my friend, Yes! Amazing as it may sound it is the one infallible way to gain mastery of a language in record time: get a Latin girlfriend and let he introduce you to her family. GUARANTEED SUCCESS!! LOL
If you don't do any of these things: Culture, Friends, or Girlfriend: I give you about a year to communiate in good but not fluent spanish.
Good luck
2006-10-02 06:01:25
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answer #6
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answered by Dominicanus 4
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Definitely Spanish. You will use it everyday, regardless of wherein you come to be practising within the US as a speech pathologist--- most likely at any place. Working in educating hospitals within the LA discipline, greater than part of my sufferers spoke best Spanish. Of the ones, various have been Central American indians who knew Spanish best as a moment language-- none knew a phrase of English. ASL is best handy if you happen to plan to paintings with deaf and HOH kids solely-- no longer too many roles in the market for that. To inform you the reality, certainly not, in twenty years operating in hospitals and ENT clinics, did I EVER stumble upon a deaf sufferer who used ASL. To a person, they have been adventitiously deaf and did not even realize ASL. You would discover it priceless if you happen to pursued fitting an audiologist, when you consider that they paintings with individuals who're deaf from delivery and are individuals of the deaf group wherein ASL is the predominant language, however you don't seem to be. If you intend to paintings in early intervention, it could behoove you to choose up a couple of indicators, however we use Signed Exact English ("SEE") for that, no longer ASL. I've determined that due to the fact that I talk respectable Spanish, I continuously obtained the activity if up in opposition to one other candidate with identical enjoy. You quite best have to grow to be conversant; fluency is quintessential best while operating with older kids (3rd grade or greater) or sufferers in top-degree cognitive or language cure. Living in CA, you'll choose it up very swiftly; one hears it all over, and we now have many Spanish-language TV stations you'll watch to choose up the accessory and extra grow to be extra fluent.
2016-08-29 09:15:00
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answer #7
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answered by bollinger 4
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If you only SPEAK Spanish one hour a day, you should
be fluent in a.n Academic quarter that is 3 months.
Dont forget to WRITE down all the new words.
2006-10-02 05:05:29
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answer #8
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answered by opaalvarez 5
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