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Letitiat

Hi all, I'm new to the forum :)

My husband and I just moved to Tel Aviv and we have almost no Hebrew (beyond basic greetings, a handle on the aleph-bet, and how to say "I don't speak Hebrew"), and I am eager to learn the language. I'm finding the most disorienting thing not being able to read signs or understand what people are saying on loudspeakers--it's actually more frustrating than the things people usually complain about in Israel!

For those of you that didn't know the language of your country before you arrived, how long did it take yo to become fairly fluent? I am almost thirty, so I'm afraid my skills at learning languages are not quite what they once where and I worry that I wont ever be fluent!

Any personal stories about learning language would be appreciated.

FeeAcer

Hi Letitiat,
I'll move your topic to Tel Aviv's forum for a better visibility :)
Cheers
Arlette

rendy

[moderated: off topic + ads]

gallifreyseven

I'm just 4 days away from moving to Barcelona and compared to the number of actual words in both the Spanish and Catalan languages I barely know either!

What I have found from previous visits to the city is that being constantly surrounded by a language, both written and verbal, gives you a better chance of picking the language up quickly as (although difficult at first) you are forced to work things out for yourself, then the repetition of the language in daily life cements it in your mind - for example: the first time I visited Barcelona, just by taking the train round the city for two days I learnt the Spanish and Catalan for "destination" and "next stop" and I've never forgotten them since!

What makes it harder for you though, is the fact that with Hebrew you cannot associate a spoken word with the written version. All I can suggest is looking online to try and find a Hebrew-English dictionary that provides you with phonetic spellings of words so you can look them up? Hopefully being able to associate the phonetic to the script will help.

With regards to age, although it is true that the younger you are the easier a language is to learn, it isn't impossible. I'm 33 so in the same boat as you, but as long as you accept you will have to try harder and persevere, it will come. Even at our age it shouldn't take more than a year to be able to hold a decent (if basic) conversation with someone. I've been told that within five years it is possible to become a native speaker and actually start dreaming in your new language!

Looking on the bright side though, just be grateful you weren't me in Germany a while back - the only German phrase I could remember translated into "Your mother is a grocery store". It was very helpful :/

cityblondechic

We are possibly moving to Israel in the next few months and I'm nervous about the language as well, since everyone I've spoken to says there is not as much English spoken as they expected. Our entire family is going to take immersion classes, maybe you can see if those are avail for you? And yes, an English/Hebrew/vice versa hand held device might help some. You are not the only worried one here!!

unitedstatesian

Hi,
I plan to sign up at the Ulpan. Classes are four days a week, and a few hours a day. It looks to be quite interactive and designed for adults.

Being in Tel Aviv and having a chance to practice will be a good thing.

It is not too expensive...I think that it costs about 1200NIS for two months. For people immigrating it is free I think.

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