Linguist blogs6/7/2023 ![]() Most adult native speakers have a large vocabulary–a large active vocabulary– in their own language. If you can only talk about the weather and very basic things, even if you do so fluently, to my mind you’re not fluent. But if you are an adult and you can only communicate with children, to my mind you’re less than fluent. Some people want to claim it’s possible to be fluent with a limited vocabulary, that someone could be fluent with a grade three vocabulary level. But to do that, to have meaningful conversations, you need a lot of words. ![]() You still have to practice speaking, in fact you need to speak a lot in order to speak well. If you have that level of vocabulary and good comprehension, you can build your ability to speak, just by speaking a lot.Ī reliable indicator of fluency, or at least potential fluency, is the number of words you know. Perhaps not literature, although that would be good, but certainly books of non-fiction on subjects of interest to you. In order to be able to call yourself fluent, you should also be able to read books. In fact you need a larger vocabulary than what is needed just to read newspapers in order to be really fluent, in my view. You need quite a large vocabulary to do many things, to understand newspapers, radio news, to converse on subjects of interest etc. The biggest limiting factor of any content is the vocabulary level. ![]() In English, newspaper English corresponds to a grade seven or grade eight vocabulary level. So, conceivably, you could be fluent and not be able to read a newspaper, but in most situations someone who is fluent in a language should be able to read a newspaper comfortably, enjoyably, without struggling. Now, in Chinese that might cause some difficulty because the writing system isn’t phonetic. To be fluent, you usually have to be able to read a newspaper. But reading is a big part of getting to that level. Of course, you need to speak in a way that is comfortable for you and for the person you are talking to. I think that to be fluent, you have to be able to do certain things. Can produce clear, detailed text on a wide range of subjects and explain a viewpoint on a topical issue giving the advantages and disadvantages of various options.Can interact with a degree of fluency and spontaneity that makes regular interaction with native speakers quite possible without strain for either party.Can understand the main ideas of complex text on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in their field of specialization.The key points of this level are as follows. It means you understand most situations, and can express yourself on a wide variety of subjects, albeit with mistakes. If you look at the summary description below you will see that this level, sort of advanced intermediate, is actually quite high. In my view, B2 is the level where you are fluent. Perhaps the best general reference point is the European Common Framework of Reference which divides proficiency into six levels from A1, A2, B1, B2, C1 and C2. There are different ways of measuring levels of proficiency in a language. This was supposed to prove that one doesn’t need many words to exchange pleasantries with shopkeepers, and thus one can be fluent with few words. I once saw a video which wanted to make the case that we can be fluent with just a few words, by showing someone walking around town in Prague with limited Czech. If you say ‘I speak the language quite well’ or ‘I’m quite fluent’, that actually suggests something less. It’s the same as saying I speak X language well. If you say ‘I’m fluent in a language’, this is usually interpreted to mean you are very fluent. Fluency is a bit like the word ‘good’ or ‘well’. ![]() This doesn’t make sense to me.įirst of all, let’s look at this word ‘fluency’. I sometimes hear people say, in YouTube videos on language learning and elsewhere, that even with a few hundred words you can be fluent in a language, in other words that you can be fluent in a language even at a relatively low level of proficiency in the language.
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