How to approach learning Georgian
Georgian is classified as a Category III language by the Foreign Service Institute, requiring approximately 1,100 hours of study to reach professional working proficiency. This realistic estimate should shape your planning—expect 18-24 months of consistent effort rather than a few months of casual learning. Breaking this into manageable chunks of 45-90 minutes daily makes the goal feel achievable while maintaining momentum. The exact timeline depends on your starting experience with languages and how intensively you can study, but treating this as a genuine medium-term commitment significantly improves success rates.
Since Georgian uses its own distinct writing system (Mkhedruli script) rather than the Latin alphabet, learning it should be a priority rather than something deferred. Spending a week or two on the script early—perhaps just 20-30 minutes daily—removes a persistent barrier to reading and builds confidence quickly. The writing system is logical and learnable, so don't treat it as optional.
Georgian belongs to the Kartvelian language family, with no close relatives to English, so approach it as genuinely different structurally. This makes consistent daily practice essential; sporadic study won't build the necessary exposure. Prioritize speaking early and often, even in simple exchanges, since your brain needs regular practice with unfamiliar sounds and grammar patterns. Combining reading, listening, and conversation weekly yields better results than concentrating only on one skill.
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