My Language Learning Resources-
Quenya-
Quenya is one of the languages Tolkien created, and the most developed one. I found that the site https://www.elvish.org/ contains most resources I could ask for, with good reviews of them and many in depth courses, all free. Right now I am studying with the following course (review is from the elvish site posted above):
https://folk.uib.no/hnohf/qcourse.htm
Quenya Course By Helge Fauskanger.
Helge offers the most up-to-date and accurate account of Neo-Quenya (that is, a synthetic and regularized form of Quenya formed by the selective piecing-together of evidences from across decades of Tolkien's successive versions and elaborations of Quenya) as a series of graded courses. The course is presented in a series of RTF (text) files. Highly recommended as an introduction to more rigorous and detailed study of Tolkien's own Quenya(s).
French-
I use Pimsleur, an audio course (available in many languages) to practice speaking and listening, and read simple books to improve beyond that. I find french to be similar enough to English for me to be able to learn a lot from just opening a book (with a dictionary open if needed).
Norwegian-
I use Pimsleur to work on speaking and listening, and “The Mystery of Nils“ by Sonja Anderle and Werner Skalla to improve reading and writing. It is a mystery book written in Norwegian (with vocab and grammer explained, and exercises in the book) and the language skills used to read it increase as you progress.
Japanese-
I use Anki to memories Kanji and general vocab (cannot recommend enough).
For grammar I use “A Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar” by Seiichi Makino and Michio Tsutsui, which has in depth explanation of over 200 grammatical points.
A post about the Japanese apps I use.
http://nihongoshticks.blogspot.com/ has very little information, but written in a fun, memorable way.
Latin-
Lingva Latina is an amazing book to learn Latin from. The entire book is in Latin, not a single English word (or any other language for that matter) and slowly teaches you all you need to know. There are complementary books with exercise and more information of grammar, but I usually create my own exercises.


















