Imagine you're a little kid who grows up in a house where everyone speaks Spanish, that's your first language. But if you go to school and learn English, you might pick it up just by listening to teachers and talking with friends. Language acquisition happens when we absorb a language naturally, like how kids learn to speak before they even go to school. You don't need books or lessons, you just need people around you who are using the language every day.
Examples
- Language acquisition happens when you grow up hearing people speak Spanish every day, even if you never took a class.
- Your friend learned English by playing with classmates who all spoke it, that's language acquisition in action.
- You pick up a new language just by living in another country and talking to locals, that’s how language acquisition works.
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See also
- Why Do Some People Find It Easier to Learn Languages Than Others?
- What Makes One Language Easier to Learn Than Another?
- What Makes a Language 'Difficult' to Learn?
- How Do People Learn to Speak a New Language?
- How Do People Learn to Speak Different Languages?
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