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How to approach learning Gujarati

Gujarati is classified as a Category III language by the Foreign Service Institute, meaning learners typically need around 1,100 hours of study to reach professional working proficiency. This breaks down to roughly two to three years of consistent daily practice at one to two hours per session, or longer if you can only study part-time. Setting this realistic expectation helps you stay motivated and plan your learning trajectory sensibly rather than expecting fluency in weeks.

Since Gujarati uses its own Brahmic script rather than the Latin alphabet, prioritise learning this writing system early in your journey, ideally within the first few weeks. Doing so pays dividends quickly: you'll read street signs, menus and written materials faster, and it reinforces pronunciation patterns. The good news is that the script is phonetically consistent, making it learnable with focused daily effort.

As an Indo-Aryan language within the Indo-European family, Gujarati has structural similarities to English, which helps with grammar concepts. However, building conversational confidence requires early and regular speaking practice, not just listening or reading. Combine consistent daily study—even thirty minutes beats sporadic longer sessions—with regular opportunities to speak aloud and interact with native speakers when possible. This combination of steady input and active output accelerates genuine progress.

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