When I got to college, I had already learned complex grammar fairly well thanks to 3 years of High School Latin. At the University of Toronto during grad school, I took a history of the English language course, which helped tremendously when I later took a medieval drama course. It was very clear during that language course that a good portion of my classmates were hearing much of the grammar for the first time. One student who was copying rules from a textbook shook her head in disgust and said, “This is all alphabet soup.” I’m not quite sure what she meant.
English departments should require an interdisciplinary class with linguistics on the grammar of the English language. Literature departments should cultivate more scholars who focus on language itself rather than literature alone. Their academic research could focus on historical changes in English; how literary writers employ grammar devices; data-driven analysis of great English writing; the use of dialect and non-standard English; and so on. In exchange, linguistics departments should require their students to take an English department class, to let those scientifically minded students broaden their horizons with the close reading of literary texts. — The Economist.
I think 4 years in school isn’t enough for learning english especially when you have no one around to practicing.
Grammer is really hard for us Turks while learning English. Because the structure of the grammer is very different. That’s why we’re having a hard time learning.
Learning Enlish is too hard in Turkey as well..Aspect some gramatical differeincies,main problem is,many courses and teachers are trying to learn grammer at the begining.But it’s false ! First of all,people sholud speak.Yes,grammer is necessary,but it sholudn’t be at the begining…
Yes, I took German, too, and found the grammar portion very easy, since it was so much simpler than Latin. Equally rigid, but with fewer categories to manage.
I learned grammar through German classes. Four years in high school, three more in college. I’m still not able to articulate grammatical concerns all that well though.