I have been plodding along with Welsh for the last few years. I chose Welsh because my mother has ancestors who hailed from Wales (practically a rhyme!! See, the Bardic course has had some affect [or is that effect?] !). She also had some from the Isle of Man...but it seemed to me that with Welsh, there would be so many more people with whom to converse. I already speak American English and that is relatively close to the language of my great grandparents (they were from Kent, in the UK), so i figured I had that covered.
I had to deal with university for most of that - so language studies were regularly pushed to the side as they were not part of the official curriculum! However, I like a variety of sources and have found "Say Something in Welsh" to be useful, as are a few other programmes that I have found. For me, though, the best way to learn a language is to read it aloud. Therefore, a few years ago, I purchased a copy of
Harri Potter a Maen yr Athronydd. I am still working through the first chapter, "Y Bachgen Ddaeth Drwyddi." This method is how I learned French in my younger school days, though, that was using a very old French Christian Bible....But the principle is the same!
Another thing is to listen to the language as much as you can. I found some Welsh language pod-casts (the news, Nature, etc.) and just listen. After awhile, you start to be able to pick out individual words. Then best of all...find somebody with whom to converse! That makes a huge difference!
So, now, I've just got to practice what I preach, eh?
