No, it damages your ability to learn one well. Sorry
二兎を追う者は一兎をも得ず
if you run after two hares you will catch neither
No.
I’ll be waiting until I’m MUCH further in my Japanese, but I was thinking ASL or Swedish next.
Your native language, specifically how grammar works in your native language.
I would advise to stick to one until you feel like you have a good grasp of the language, then move on to another if you would rather start learning another language rather than become more fluent in the first language.
Once I feel like I’m at a good point with Japanese, I’m debating between going to Chinese or Korean (which imo are the more obvious languages to move to)
Maybe Korean or Chinese? They all have similarities. Especially, Kanji knowledge would be very helpful in learning Hanzi.
I think generally learning Spanish in school has helped me (irregular conjugations and grammar) but I’d say to only mainly focus on one (I settled on Japanese)
Chinese might be your best choice. Isn’t all you have to do is memorize how to say the kanji
No. I learned Spanish a couple years before Japanese and now sometimes my brain will give me words in Spanish instead of Japanese or vice versa
I can compartmentalise Vietnamese and English fine though
10 comments
No, it damages your ability to learn one well. Sorry
二兎を追う者は一兎をも得ず
if you run after two hares you will catch neither
No.
I’ll be waiting until I’m MUCH further in my Japanese, but I was thinking ASL or Swedish next.
Your native language, specifically how grammar works in your native language.
I would advise to stick to one until you feel like you have a good grasp of the language, then move on to another if you would rather start learning another language rather than become more fluent in the first language.
Once I feel like I’m at a good point with Japanese, I’m debating between going to Chinese or Korean (which imo are the more obvious languages to move to)
Maybe Korean or Chinese? They all have similarities. Especially, Kanji knowledge would be very helpful in learning Hanzi.
I think generally learning Spanish in school has helped me (irregular conjugations and grammar) but I’d say to only mainly focus on one (I settled on Japanese)
Chinese might be your best choice. Isn’t all you have to do is memorize how to say the kanji
No. I learned Spanish a couple years before Japanese and now sometimes my brain will give me words in Spanish instead of Japanese or vice versa
I can compartmentalise Vietnamese and English fine though