Your Native Language

One famous man used to say that if you aren't good with your native language, then you will hardly ever be able to perfectly master a foreign one. A very fair statement for it really is true that if you don't know your own language, you'll hardly ever learn a foreign one properly.
There are people who can't spell in their language, who aren't aware of their native grammar, syntax and even vocabulary. Being that disgracefully ignorant, they are still eager to learn a foreign language or two because it's prestigious and useful.
However, it's not at all useful when one is able to learn a few words from a foreign language and prove his or her fluency afterwards. Our world is full of specialists and under conditions of a strict competition new should either be excellent specialists of our special field or be especially ignorant about anything at all...
That's why in order your foreign language to be successfully and disgracelessly mastered in future, try to follow our constructive pieces of advice regarding the subject of our article below:
1. Make sure that you can spell in your own language before you go into a foreign language's spelling for if you can't spell in your native language, there's no sense in learning a foreign one at all for you will repeat one and the same global mistake 'there' too.
2. Improve your speech in your native language before you make any attempts to speak a foreign one. How? It's all simple, just try to read as much as possible, it will develop your flow of speech and make your stream of consciousness much more sensible.
3. Mind your grammar and don't make grammar mistakes on your own language before you start going into a foreign language's grammatical rules and regulations.
4. Don't hesitate to be attentive to detail regarding each and every aspect of your native language for in order to be perfect you should brush yourself up with respect to each and every tiny mistake of yours implying either speech or spelling.
5. Make sure you are well aware of your own culture implying history, literature, art, music, and many aspects before you start getting absorbed in a brand new culture of the foreign language you are eagerly beaverly planning to learn.
Believe us, your great effort and time spent on improving your native language first (before learning a new one) will be very efficient and will hardly ever possess 'in vain' character. When you are like a fish in water regarding your own language, learning a foreign one will demand you to stay in the same efficient professional shape – a true specialist in your linguistic field.