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Fastest Way to Achieve Fluency in Esperanto?

dari jsewell94, 21 Juli 2009

Pesan: 54

Bahasa: English

mnlg (Tunjukkan profil) 27 Juli 2009 19.54.40

jchthys:More work by Claude Piron:
Much better sources. Thank you.

Greyshades (Tunjukkan profil) 3 Agustus 2009 07.36.38

I found this poll funny humorous due to the lack of a "I'm not fluent yet" answer. I still have a long time ahead of me though ridulo.gif

jsewell94 (Tunjukkan profil) 4 Agustus 2009 01.29.23

Yeah, after creating it..I realized that I should have added that option! What a silly mistake on my part.

Yeah, my dad keeps making more comments about 'wasting my time'...And I told him 'Well, working on your car is no more productive than learning another language' (Because he lovvvess cars.). And he said 'That's definitely not true at all..'. It was really stupid.

And apparently some guy who has traveled around Europe and stuff said that "English is going to be the next Universal Language because it's 'everywhere'..."

That's sorta been why I have been so discouraged.

ceigered (Tunjukkan profil) 4 Agustus 2009 01.54.55

Yo jsewell94 - ask your dad how his car allows him to communicate to Dutch, English and Australian university students, English expats living in Europe, and German nationals, and how many valuable contacts and mates he can yield with that car overseas lango.gif

And you never know - some of us homoj who you talk to here might be politicians or business men/women when you've become the president of a large multinational corporation, and Esperanto could be setting up a good network of contacts for your future okulumo.gif
Or some of us could just end up becoming bums. I wouldn't give that possibility to your dad though lango.gif

English is indeed everywhere, and it is indeed the international language at the moment. However, this is the current situation, not the future situation. See, there is something that people tend to forget about - Latin. Latin used to be just as widely used, but now, what do people in ex-roman nations speak? A whole bunch of new languages. The same thing will happen to English, and not even international communication can stop that. In about a century or 3, I reckon at this rate Australians and Americans won't be able to understand eachother with ease (I already find it hard outside of television and cinema).
What will most likely happen is that we'll end up with a Vulgar North American English (VNAE), Vulgar Southern Hemisphere English (VSHE) and.. European English (EE), or something like that. Of course it depends on immigration, cultural pressures (e.g. in Aus we have heaps of US and UK television), all sorts of things.
And to further argue my case if you don't believe my vulgurisation theory - dontche think tha woz pri'ee gewd yakka wiv aww the acronims? okulumo.gif

basically, my point is that Esperanto brings us together in the future, not necessarily now. And even if EO is kicked off by LFN or some easier creole type lingo, we've at least made good mates, learnt more about the world and contributed our part to international understanding and harmony.

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