Successful English <http://successfulenglish.com>
 
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A word every language learner should
know<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SuccessfulEnglish/~3/BqVXp1d2yd0/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 29 Jul 2010 05:37 PM PDT

*There’s no question. None at all. Fluency in any language comes from what
we read and what we hear. This is what **the research** tells us. And this
is what the experience of many language learners – like
**Adrian’s<http://successfulenglish.com/2010/04/frustration-to-success-how-he-did-it/>
** – tells us.*

The most important principle of language acquisition is very simple: we
acquire, or pick up, language when we read or hear interesting and
comprehensible, or understandable, input.

When you read what I have written on this page, you receive input – ideas
about acquiring language. If you understand what I have written, the input
is comprehensible. If that is true, something is happening to your English
now while you are reading. Maybe your vocabulary is growing. Or perhaps you
are picking up a new way to organize written ideas in English. There are
many possibilities, but it is changing or improving in some way. The process
is automatic and you don’t usually notice it when it happens.

*Now there’s a new word* to help us think and talk about this process.
The word is …

*com pel’ ling* (adjective) – (1) so interesting or exciting that you have
to pay attention; (2) input that is so interesting that a reader or listener
temporarily “forgets” that the input is in another language.

Example sentences:

   - *That article was so compelling that I forgot what time it was.*
   - *The book was so compelling that I didn’t realize I was actually
   reading in English!*

Why is compelling such an important word? It’s important because if what you
read or listen to is compelling, the conditions are ideal for acquiring more
language. So, if you want to be sure to acquire more English – or any other
language – find something compelling to read or listen to.
A compelling way to improve your English

There is another way to use the word compelling. When something is
compelling, we have to act or do something about it. So I encourage you to
take action. Find some compelling input – a book, story, article, podcast,
or video – and read it or listen to it. When you finish, do it again. And
again.

If you make this process a habit, your English will get better. And – if I
may use the word one more time – that’s a compelling thought.

Warren Ediger

Acknowledgement: The idea for this article came from a brief speech Dr.
Stephen Krashen gave at the International Forum on Language Teaching in
southern California on July 28th.

Related reading:

   - The Basics<http://successfulenglish.com/2009/10/the-basics-introduction/>–
especially
   *Only one way <http://successfulenglish.com/2009/10/only-one-way/>*
and *Inside
   the brain <http://successfulenglish.com/2009/10/inside-the-brain/>*
   - *The power of reading and
listening<http://successfulenglish.com/2010/01/the-power-of-reading-and-listening/>
   *

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