How to approach learning Bengali
Bengali is classified as a Category III language for English speakers, meaning the U.S. Foreign Service Institute estimates approximately 1,100 hours of study to reach professional working proficiency. This translates to roughly two to three years of sustained effort at an average of one to two hours daily, or twelve to eighteen months of full-time intensive study. Setting this realistic expectation helps you plan a manageable schedule and avoid discouragement when progress feels gradual. Most learners find that breaking the target into smaller milestones—perhaps aiming for basic conversational ability in three to six months—maintains motivation while keeping the larger goal in view.
Since Bengali uses its own script (the Bengali-Assamese writing system) rather than the Latin alphabet, prioritise learning to read and write early in your journey. Spending two to four weeks on the script before diving into grammar and vocabulary pays dividends; once you can decode written Bengali, you'll build confidence faster and gain access to authentic reading materials. Although Bengali belongs to the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European family, it sits linguistically distant from English, so commit to consistent daily practice—even thirty focused minutes beats sporadic longer sessions. Speaking from week one, even to yourself, helps anchor unfamiliar sounds and grammar patterns in your mind and accelerates the transition from textbook learning to genuine communication.
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