frwl wrote:lol, surely you jest. verbs aren't easy. there are 17 tenses in Spanish, a number of which are rarely used in modern english.
Few languages make verbs easy -- Japanese is a great example. However, for most purposes, mastery of a couple basic tenses is enough for conversational Spanish. You aren't going to improve your vocabulary by mastering 17 tenses -- you're going to master Present, Preterite, and Future tense while learning the basics of sentence construction and 'proper' word use (such as the difference between
por and
para) -- and go on from there.
I've studied German, lived in Germany, never really caught on to the language. I've
tried studying Japanese, been to Japan, am still scared to speak anything beyond basic Pimsleur. For me, Spanish was the easiest to learn, the closest to English in structure of all the languages. I'd only had two years of Spanish when I traveled to Spain, and I was able to converse competently (e.g. make myself understood without having to resort to hand signals). I haven't studied it in over 20 years, yet I can still get the gist of a conversation on
Univision.
I think that's probably where our friend who needs help is now, and I want to encourage him that it's really not that difficult to start to speak. Yes, it is difficult to speak
well, and if you want to speak like a native speaker, you need to really work at it (and, honestly, unless you devote years to it, you will probably never achieve that goal). But you gotta start someplace...