1 min readfrom Language Learning

Well, I feel like I'm stucked in intermediate plateau.

Our take

Feeling stuck in an intermediate plateau is a common experience for language learners, especially after years of dedication. Despite having a solid grasp of the language—reading articles, conversing fluently with non-native speakers, and understanding some spoken content—you may still struggle with native-level comprehension and nuanced expressions. The challenge lies in the multifaceted nature of language, impacting pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, and cultural nuances.

I've been studying my TL for decades. Well, I feel like my ability to the language is not bad. I can read articles I'm interested in, watch youtube videos and talk fluently in TL to non native speakers.

But there are still limitations. It takes more mental energy to use the language, it's hard to understand what native speakers say and watching a movie or drama for native is impossible without subtitle.

The problem is vague. All part of the language, like pronunciation, listening, vocab, grammer, expressions, etc is not enough.

I don't know what should I do more and it is hard to find enthusiasm to study more. it's quite useful for most of the usage. To progress more, it needs lots of effort but earning is relatively small.

Overall, the main problems are two.

  1. There's no one way to progress. I can't see it.

  2. Lacking passion.

What would you do If you were I?

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Tagged with

#creative language use#language evolution#philosophy of language#humor in language#non-verbal communication#language learning#intermediate plateau#progress#native speakers#language ability#non-native speakers#limitations#understanding#vocabulary#mental energy#pronunciation#listening#grammar#effort#expressions