Why learn Italian?

Though it’s true a second language can help us find jobs, let’s also focus on the other reasons for learning a language. We spend so much of our lives having to serve the interests of an economy that doesn’t care about people or the world. It’s high time we were able to put the interests of each other ahead of those of CEOs and tax havens. Learning a language, in a variety of ways, can help us do this.

Society often funnels us down a career-path. Before we’ve had the chance to discover where our passions reside, we find ourselves scrambling from paycheck to paycheck on low or minimum wages. Worse still, the labour we provide either leaves us starved of inspiration, or in some cases even robs us of time to pursue our interests - all of which has damaging implications for our mental and physical health.

Learning a language can provide some relief, and even an escape, from these pressures. It can’t stop us worrying about bills or rent, but it can help us find other lines of work. Aside from potential career benefits, the process itself is rewarding, and a lot more fun than traditional methods have led us to believe. Far from being an unwelcome burden on our daily routines, learning a language can become an enjoyable distraction from life’s pressures. As well as helping our immediate mental health, it is also thought to aid cognitive function, and could delay the symptoms of dementia.

Learning a language may even help us tackle the problems facing the world. If we can communicate with and learn from each other, we stand a better chance of organising against issues as global as climate breakdown.

With almost 67 million speakers, Italian is the second most widely spoken mother tongue in the European Union. When second language speakers are included, this figure is thought to rise towards 85 million. Aside from Italy, it is the official language in San Marino and Vatican City, as well as being a co-official language in Switzerland. It is also spoken in former colonies and amongst emigrant communities throughout the world - particularly in Albania, Argentina, Australia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Canada, Croatia, Malta, Egypt, Eritrea, France, Germany, Libya, Liechtenstein, Paraguay, Romania, Slovenia, Tunisia, England, Venezuela, and the United States.

Although speaking a new language does not revolutionise how we see the world, the people and cultures it takes us to will. It’s almost like discovering the world again as a child, just in a different tongue. It refreshes the mind and can fill us with the impetus to experience different cultures and meet new people. This could be as conveniently as watching Italian films or reading an Elena Ferrante novel in the evening. It could be an experience as spontaneous as chatting with people at a bar in Bologna, or before a football match in Milan. It could even be a whole new life in Naples or Rome.

After learning any language, the prospect of learning others suddenly feels much more feasible, and with Italian being a Latin language, other languages from the same family become especially easier to learn, such as Portuguese, Galician, Catalan, French, Occitan, Corsican, Spanish, and Romanian.

If you’re interested in learning Italian, there’s a How to Learn Languages guide (eBook), and if you prefer the video format, How to Learn Italian is also available as an online course :

How to Learn Italian - eBook

How to Learn Italian - Course

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