It is possible to have a basic understanding of a language without knowing its culture but to fully understand a language, one needs to have some understanding of the culture that produced it.
It is possible to have a basic understanding of a language without knowing its culture but to fully understand a language, one needs to have some understanding of the culture that produced it.
Learning a foreign language is an intricate task that involves numerous cognitive processes, such as memory, attention, and perception. The brain’s ability to adjust and reorganize itself in response to new information, experiences, or damage is known as neuroplasticity. This concept applies significantly to language learning, where structural and functional changes in the brain are seen.
Popular belief holds it that having a drink can help you to improve your performance in a foreign language — but is this true?
It is possible to have a basic understanding of a language without knowing its culture but to fully understand a language, one needs to have some understanding of the culture that produced it.
After about one month in Poland, I started dreaming in Polish. I was fascinated that my imaginary Polish native speakers in my dreams spoke naturally in terms of complexity of language, speech habits, prosody, and accent.