Morgana
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GoingMobile, I'd narrowed it down to four options, the others being Indonesian, Samoan, and Miskitu (spoken on the border of Honduras and Nicaragua; I got hooked while watching travel videos during Covid, and I did meet one guy who spoke it.) Miskitu was just too obscure, I couldn't find lessons anywhere. Haitian Creole ended up seeming the most practical. Higher chances of meeting someone who speaks it. Might give me a better crack at a decent volunteer gig. And I would love to visit the Dominican Republic someday (and there's a slightly bigger snowball's chance in you-know-where that I could actually afford it, compared to Samoa or Indonesia), and Haiti is just around the corner from there.
Plus you don't have to conjugate verbs or memorize whether every single noun is male or female. And a lot of words sound vaguely familiar because they're based on French. (In fact, I keep thinking "yeah, why don't the French spell it this way? It makes more sense." Don't tell any French people that I said that though .)
Plus you don't have to conjugate verbs or memorize whether every single noun is male or female. And a lot of words sound vaguely familiar because they're based on French. (In fact, I keep thinking "yeah, why don't the French spell it this way? It makes more sense." Don't tell any French people that I said that though .)