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Peter Stamos
Professional TeacherIs it possible to learn a language (ENGLISH) and become relatively fluent if you start after the age of 30?
I started learning Mandarin 4.5 years ago (well after my 40th birthday). Of course, it helped that I lived in China for four years. I am nowhere near fluent, and still have a hard time with pronunciation. But I am able to communicate effectively, and improved my tones and accent during the last year (when I got over my "fear" of sounding bad). During that year, I also met an "older" British woman who was fluent in Mandarin (she didn't speak a work until her 42nd birthday).
All this to say that learning or improving English at an older age is possible. I think the biggest obstacle is overcoming the fear of sounding "ridiculous." It took a long time, but it doesn't bother me that I will not sound natural speaking Mandarin. Once I accepted that, my fluency and ability to speak and to be understood improved a lot.
Some people will laugh at you in the beginning. So what! A good Chinese friend (she did not speak a word of English) used to laugh with me - and at me - as we spent several evenings walking through the streets of Shangrila, China (Yunnan province) with her helping me read and pronounce storefront signs. Her "laughter" was a tremendous help to me.
I am fluent in English, French and Greek and sound natural speaking these three languages. I am lucky. I learned them at a younger age - before graduating from high school. But that does not equal the satisfaction I have had improving my Chinese skills later in life.
No, it did not happen because I have a "gift" for languages. I improved because I wanted to and worked at it. And because I got over the fear of sounding silly or ridiculous.
YES, learning or improving ENGLISH is possible at an older age.
Why should the young people have all the fun?
Feb 26, 2020 6:34 PM
Comments · 4
2
It's truth that language learning is Ann easier phenomena at an early age but the only thing that makes a teen ager or a child able to learn a new language is ...they don't have fear like adults ...fear of what society ll say if I ll make a mistake...in my humble opinion even a single person can enable us learn a new language ..n I am trying to find that single person for like ages ....haha anyhow I ll get there eventually so ll you
February 26, 2020
1
I think the younger you are the faster you learn the language, but that it doesn't prevent you to try learning anything you want.
I believe in if you are still breathing and you are still alive you have a chance to Learn or do anything (that's my logical in life and we have been created for that reason.
And first step to achieve success is to let people say what they want to and at the end let them see the result.
February 26, 2020
1
I agree. You can become fluent in any language, no matter at what age you start. If you start as an adult, you might retain an accent but you can achieve fluency nevertheless. One woman who became fluent in Russian after starting it at the age of 56 is Mary Hobson: <a href="https://www.rbth.com/arts/literature/2016/04/22/learning-russian-has-given-me-a-whole-new-life_587093" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">https://www.rbth.com/arts/literature/2016/04/22/learning-russian-has-given-me-a-whole-new-life_587093</a>
February 26, 2020
A 105 year old man once said, I can do plastic surgery to look younger.
I admire his spirit of still wanting to improve and keep moving at this age.
keep going!
November 25, 2021
Peter Stamos
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, Greek, Korean, Spanish
Learning Language
Chinese (Mandarin), Greek
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