>1. I will never be as fluent, as perfect an Irish speaker as a native speaker and that is okay, I like learning.
>2. Most people who speak Irish (like most people in life) are helpful and encouraging, but you will get the odd amadán who doesn’t appreciate you taking up space. Ignore.
>3. If you’re to succeed, you need to put the work in, just like everything else, and as Kim K says, you gotta get up off your tóin and work for it (it’s worth it, believe me)
2 comments
>1. I will never be as fluent, as perfect an Irish speaker as a native speaker and that is okay, I like learning.
>2. Most people who speak Irish (like most people in life) are helpful and encouraging, but you will get the odd amadán who doesn’t appreciate you taking up space. Ignore.
>3. If you’re to succeed, you need to put the work in, just like everything else, and as Kim K says, you gotta get up off your tóin and work for it (it’s worth it, believe me)
How far can Duo Lingo get me? Honest question.